Posts tagged mobile web

Race is on for publishers large and small to get mobile

Think publishing. Think revenue generation. Think multi-platform. Or your future might look pretty bleak.

Going mobile is nothing new to publishers. After all, how many years has WAP been around, never mind the smart phone.

But the planned launch of the iPad and it’s potential to revolutionise media and publishing is encouraging on those publishers to take action.

The reasons are simple. Going digital – and mobile - opens up the door on alternative revenue steams.

It’s something we’ve touched on a few times, most recently with the launch of Skimkits, but as tech advances, so do the opportunties.

However while major publishers may have had the budget and resources to make the digital leap, it’s not been so easy for smaller players such as bloggers.

A new development may be set to change all that.  A new tool has been released that allows publishers to create and monetise a mobile version of their website, turning RSS feeds and web pages into mobile pages.

The best news is that Mobilizer, as developed by BuzzCity, is a free service, with no hosting fees, and free publisher support.

It allows publishers to start earning mobile display advertising revenue with a payout of up to 65 per cent of total ad revenues. Publishers are able to choose the type of adverts that will appear on their mobile website as well as the number of ads and their position.

“It is common knowledge that consumer behaviour is shifting. Reading habits evolved from print-based media to web-based media and now mobile media is really coming in to play,” explains KF Lai, CEO of BuzzCity.

“It is vital that publishers are making their content readily available on the mobile. Many have invested in apps for the iPhone but this will only serve a small section of the market.”

In addition, publishers receive a unique QR code to display on their website, newspaper or magazine.

Users with a camera phone equipped with the correct reader software can scan the image of the QR Code causing the phone’s browser to launch and redirect to the programmed URL.

The simple act of reading may never be the same again…

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Mobile apps could threaten Google, Yahoo and Bing’s search future

As the internet goes mobile, apps could be replacing the need for search

Applications that take users directly to e-commerce sites and other web service destinations threaten search providers such as Google, Yahoo and Microsoft’s Bing, according to BroadPoint AmTech.

Some retailers including Amazon and eBay are making it even easier for consumers to visit their site and make purchases by offering mobile apps that enable full browsing and purchasing functionality.

Consumers who download these mobile apps directly to their iPhones and other smartphones and can then go straight to the source website and buy what they need. So will the search box be a redundant feature of the internet in the future?

There are several opportunities to make money from pairing ads with search engines on smartphones and other mobile computing gadgets, but applications that take users directly to e-commerce sites and other web service destinations threaten search providers, says BroadPoint AmTech.

Mobile web search and queries are on the rise and will continue to soar once consumers begin to leverage more location-based mobile services. It’s no wonder Google swore its allegiance for the space by bidding $750 million for mobile ad maker AdMob.

BroadPoint AmTech said 10 to 30% of the mobile searches consumers trigger for Amazon.com, eBay and the like go through the Google, Yahoo or Bing search box on their iPhones, Google Android devices and other smartphones. Ads served with these navigational queries cultivate decent click-through rates.

But many vendors are making it even easier for consumers to visit their sites and make purchases and it isn’t just the big companies that are creating mobile apps to drive e-commerce to their websites.

This presents Google, Yahoo, Bing and other mobile search engine providers with an interesting quandary, or intriguing options, depending on how they choose to approach this new turf war.

These providers can secure search toolbar distribution deals with phone makers such as Apple and wireless carriers, grabbing the scraps from the tables of mobile app providers.

Or these internet companies can build their own mobile apps for prominent placement on smartphone decks. For example, Google has recently released two powerful apps, the Google Maps Navigation turn-by-turn GPS program and the Google Goggles visual search app.

Both are currently available only on Android. Google hasn’t discussed how it might make money from these free apps, but serving local ads with its GPS app and its visual search app seems to be such an intuitive task that it would be surprising if Google did not undertake it.

In any case, Google is headed in the right direction with the impending Nexus One smartphone, a fast-performing HTC device. The search giant seems to be focused on making sure it can guide the development of the mobile web while protecting and expanding its own business model.

Could other search companies follow suit to protect their online futures?


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iPhone apps boost mCommerce shopping experience

Big things are predicted for mCommerce. eBay’s recent ‘Deals’ app was launched on the back of predictions that by the end of this year it expects more than $500 million in merchandise to be purchased via eBay mobile.

Launched just a year ago, the eBay iPhone app has been downloaded more than five million times – making it one of the most popular iPhone apps.

The company also claims a purchase is made every two seconds via eBay mobile and that users from over 165 countries visit the eBay mobile website and use the iPhone application.

For mCommerce to be a success it’s all down to apps being easy for consumers to use and them then working cleverly to make lives easier.

Which is why a new one has caught our eye that uses high tech to make the most of an old tech device – the barcode.

‘StripeyLines’ allows shoppers to swipe the barcode on goods they are considering for a price comparison and then saves these goods and profiles as a wish list on the StripeyLines website for later research and evaluation.

It’s already got the backing of Iceland and Tesco through its TJAM initiative., with more retailers set to jump on board.

So in the run-up to Christmas or during sale events it could be used to allow visitors to affiliated retail stores to touch and feel products while on the shop floor then use their iPhone to scan the barcode of their desired products and collect them later at a “customer collection point”, or scan them and add them to online wish lists.

Alternatively, in-store, or later over a coffee, shoppers can review what they’ve scanned to make an informed decision and perform further research before purchasing the items from their iPhone or desktop PC.

Scanned barcodes can be used to gain access to generic images and details via either the retailer’s adapted version of their catalogue or through look-up search engines such as Amazon, eBay, iTunes and Google.

Shoppers can choose to carry out a number of different actions on a scanned item including the ability to search for the item on Tesco.com and then add it to their online Tesco’s Grocery account shopping basket.

It opens up a world of additional possibilities. What if having scanned a product the user plans to eat or drink, the application could update how much the nutritional value of that product contributes to their daily allowance and calculates the number of calories they have remaining? Such a development is already in planning.

Retailer specific barcodes (the shorter 8 digit barcodes found on own brands) are being added to the StripeyLines search as retailers make them available. The first retailer to provide this data is Iceland Foods with data also being made available from Tesco.

The flip side are the advantages for retailers who don’t want to developing their own iPhone application.

The StripeyLines app enables them to develop simple plug-ins that are beamed to shoppers’ iPhones and highlight certain lines and promotions when related items are scanned.

It allows them to integrate their stores with a product show room on an iPhone where shoppers can ‘touch and feel’ items and use capture/scan technology to deliver enhanced product data, access the website, create wish lists, receive recommendations, and cross sell suggestions - limited only by the retailer’s vision.

Following the launch in July 2007, sales of the iPhone and iPod Touch had reached 43 million units globally in 81 countries by April 2009, with over 35,000 applications hosted in the Apple store. Recently 30,000 iPhones were sold in the UK on the Orange network on the first day of sale, according to the operator.

“iPhone users are early adopters, technology savvy and are eager to embrace new lifestyle options and services,” explained Paul Tough, CTO of Portaltech, the company which has developed StripeyLines.

If it takes off, the StripeyLines iPhone app has the potential to change the face of shopping for consumers, making it possible for retailers to deliver enhanced mobile shopping services in store to implement a true multichannel strategy with minimal development and investment.

“As it’s a plug-in extension to their existing web technology, retailers don’t have to learn about a new technology and they can update and disseminate information in a true multi-channel environment, enabling them to merge the online and in-store experience so it is seamless and convenient, added Tough.

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Why you need to create ‘made for mobile’ websites

Having a website isn’t enough for brands. You need to go mobile!

Mobile web browser Opera Mini has said that usage around the world has jumped 11% in just a month, highlighting the importance of brands having a presence of the web.

Data transfers have gained 16% as around 40 million people used Opera Mini in October.  That’s an 11.3% increase from September 2009 and more than 155% compared to October 2008.

As mobile web use is clearly growing rapidly, it is important that your site has not only a good, usable mobile presence, but it is also essential that it be visible in mobile search.

These days, as a marketer, you can’t ignore mobile users. The rate at which consumers are accessing the web via mobile devices is growing rapidly, largely thanks to the increasing popularity and production of smartphones. This opens up a whole new platform from which to reach people with ads and it is certainly not enough to just get by with banners, search and display as they’d appear on the ‘normal’ web.

Many companies and brands have spent the last couple of years or so redesigning their web pages to fit the mobile screen. The introduction of apps has meant these brands and companies can have a completely new product available for the web and it’s made to size.

Just having a mobile site isn’t even enough anymore. Users have to be able to find it and just because you have a good ranking in Google does not mean that your mobile site has a good ranking in Google’s mobile search engine, or is even indexed at all.

Google recently shared a few important tips for making sure your mobile site is being indexed in Google’s Mobile Search:

1. Create a mobile sitemap and submit it to Google so Google knows it exists. This can be done using Google Webmaster Tools, just like with a regular sitemap.

2. To make sure Googlebot-Mobile can access your site, allow any User-agent to access it (you should also be aware that Google may change its User-agent information at any time without notice, so it is not recommended that you check if the User-agent exactly matches ‘Googlebot-Mobile’).

3. Check that your mobile-friendly URLs’ DTD (Doc Type Definition) declaration is in an appropriate mobile format such as XHTML Mobile or Compact HTML.

Also, keep in mind that if you run both a regular site and a mobile version of it, there is a possibility that the wrong version will show up in the wrong search results.

Another way you can make sure a user is pointed to the right version of your site is simply to provide a link. That’s what Google does (if you access the mobile version of Google, you will find a link to the desktop version).

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Where smartphones are falling short

shopping-on-iphone Technology is with us no matter where we go. We carry it around in our pockets, in our ears, in our handbags and around our necks. Smartphones have provided a new channel for marketers to reach us while we’re on the go and even retailers are cashing in on this space.

New research from ATG this week has revealed 1 in 3 of us have tried shopping using the web on our mobile phones.

But while 28% of us that have tried it find it a difficult way to shop, 24% think offering mobile-only offers and incentives will encourage adoption.

With the growing popularity of mobile applications, 15% of consumers feel that developing specific commerce-related applications would entice them to shop using their mobile.

But 27% as still deterred by the slow network speeds of the mobile web.

Consumer interest is rising so mobile operators and handset operators need to work together to address concerns for m-commerce adoption to rise, then this marketing channel can really open up and who knows what the limits are.

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