| Article: Exploiting the mobile channel |
| Wednesday, 24 October 2007 | |
The mobile device has, unfortunately, been one of the more over-hyped
and disappointing marketing channels of recent times. Thankfully the
situation is changing and the greatest barriers to successfully
marketing via this channel are being removed.
Nevertheless, only a minority of organisations are truly in a position to exploit this channel effectively. Marketers need to take action now to ensure that they can cost-effectively market to their customers’ mobile devices. If they do not, they risk not being able to effectively utilise a channel that is almost anywhere, all of the time, with their target markets.
So what has really changed in the last 18 months?A number of big shifts in the Australian market place have made mobile a real engagement opportunity for marketers:
This is a scale opportunity.We are in a unique market given the Australian love affair with the mobile phone. Already the marketplace has reached saturation with over 20 million active devices. In this market the mobile phone is the device that one cannot be without. You are in the minority if you are past your early teenage years and do not have one. Consumer phone usage is also changing as improvements in usability, content availability, and education accelerate. A good indicator of this change in consumer behaviour can be found in the “The Australian Mobile Phone Lifestyle Index, Third Edition” published by AIMIA in March this year. This report observes that content purchases are still dominated by games and tones, but notes encouragingly that music downloads and video are the fast movers–having increased by 600% and 400% respectively, survey on survey.
What is the problem?To put it simply, many organisations do not have the mobile phone numbers of their customers, or if they do, they do not have permission to use it as a marketing channel. Since legislation regarding spam was introduced many organisations in particular have been gradually growing their opt-in databases for email. There has been a move to minimise the information that requested from a consumer to maximise the potential of an opt-in. This has resulted in many organisations collecting merely an email address, a first name, and perhaps a postcode. Even if you are a progressive organisation that is building its opt-in database of consumer mobile numbers, chances are you do not have a co-ordinated communication strategy to harvest and protect this asset. The immediacy and pervasiveness of the mobile device means that a mobile-number database requires special consideration regarding how it is utilised–and most importantly, when it is utilised. An opt-in database is an asset that requires active management.
Steps you should take today.The best first step you can take is to put together a strategy for the collection and use of opt-in mobile numbers. You need to consider how relevant this channel may be today and in the future for communicating with your client base, and you need to consider what systems and resources may be required to adequately manage and access it in a meaningful way within the context of your overall contact strategy. There are some immediate steps that you may wish to take and questions that you may wish to ask:
Some final considerationsThe mobile channel offers individual conversations with consumers in an immediate and accountable environment. It is a channel that needs to be used wisely, with significant consideration given to the context of any message–including time of day, day of week, etc.–to avoid a negative consumer experience. Mobile is a channel that is best used within an overall media mix. Ensuring your other media appropriately utilise this channel as a glue to identify an individual consumer will maximise your results. The marketing potential of this channel is accelerating as the current crop of mobile consumers migrates to new 3G networks and more usable handsets. As a marketer acting now within your organisation will ensure that you can cost-effectively exploit this channel and understand its role in the lives of your target market. Article by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer – supplied courtesy of Marketing magazine. |
