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Jeff Hasen

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The Return of Notes From A Mobilized Marketer

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Those who go back with me may recall that I regularly wrote and posted Notes From A Mobilized Marketer following the publication of my first book, Mobilized Marketing, in 2012.

And for those who go back -- way, way back with me -- you likely remember that I’m a former journalist who have always sought to find the interesting, especially those things that matter, and to be provocative in my writing.

The column went on hiatus as life got busier and attention turned elsewhere.

The break is over.

Why?

There are so many thoughts, questions, doubts, fears, and, on the many good days, hopes that it’s time to write more regularly. I know for sure that this Notes phase will be more personal than ever, and I’ll surely look to spark conversation again.

We need each other more than ever and I’m starting this effort up again not to spew but to share and hopefully to hear from you if something strikes a chord.

Let’s go.

On any given day, my emotions run from overcome to optimistic but there are way too many days when the mindset goes in reverse. I don’t have a handle on my psyche and I’ll bet that there are loads of us in the same place. What does this have to do about marketing? Everything. We are nothing without consumer insights. But today more than ever, labeling someone this or that fails to account for the fact that in a pandemic, in lots of ways, someone – your customer or prospect -- is this and that. …

The auto insurers knew enough to offer rebates given the minimal driving that we are doing. My inbox tells me that the car service companies, including those that primarily change oil, either don’t realize that our patterns have changed or are too stupid or programmatic to make the necessary adjustment. …

Some of the wisest communications that I’ve seen have come from Alaska Airlines who have regularly informed customers of steps it is taking to keep everyone safe. That’s hardly unique for an airline, but what did get me to notice was a new and very human video centered on the idea that Alaska Airlines will be there “when you are ready.” https://blog.alaskaair.com/coronavirus/alaska-airlines-coronavirus-supporting-guests-team/. No hard sell. No false conclusion that people will take to the skies at the same time. Instead, it was empathetic and real. And smart. …

So much has changed during COVID-19, but what hasn’t is that I fail to listen. Marketer and wise man Seth Godin told me and us on March 20 to stay away from social networks all the time, but especially these days. https://seths.blog/2020/03/calm-also-has-a-coefficient/. “Twitter has been engineered to maximize panic. Calm is penalized, panic is amplified.” I’ve had way too many days feeling panic from what I’ve seen on Twitter. My weak defense is that I’m a news junkie – I have been since I was first able to read – and that I have to live life in real time. During the pandemic, for me at least, it’s been a path to being upset and defeated. And it’s self-inflicted. I need to do better. Now. And that includes time on Facebook. …

You’ll be snockered in no time if you down a shot every you hear the term, “We live in unprecedented times” in a commercial during a night of television watching. This is neither a news flash nor an original or compelling thought …

It’s always about clicks, never more so than today. Coronavirus may come back stronger in the fall is as definitive as a 100-item menu, yet this is positioned as news just about every day on CNBC and elsewhere.

I’ve long held the belief that you need to revisit your marketing playbook every six months. These days, the conversations need to happen weekly.

In about the time that it takes to fly from Chicago to San Francisco, Frontier Airlines reversed its plan to charge passengers who wanted to guarantee that a middle seat would be empty. https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/frontier-airlines-rescinds-middle-seat-pay-trnd/index.html. That the original idea saw the light of day is incredibly dumb. …

Until next time. Stay safe.

Tagged with Notes, Mobilized Marketing, Alaska Airlines, CNBC, Twitter, Seth Godin, Facebook.

May 10, 2020 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 10, 2020
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Notes
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Apps Over Websites Is Clear Winner in Time Spent Count

Purely on time spent, users of mobile apps are 20X more engaged than those who visit mobile web sites, per comScore. This came through a study of the top 1,000 apps and sites.

What should we take from this information? App makers are succeeding in catering to the more loyal customers with interesting, even personal experiences. Web sites remain a way to get reach but not necessarily to build loyalty.

Facebook overestimated average time spent watching video ads by between 60% and 80% for the past 2 years, according to the Wall Street Journal.

In other wonderful news, Mobile app marketers will lose $100 million to fraud this year, AppsFlyer reported.

8% of podcast listeners purchase a product/service after hearing an ad: IAB. This speaks to relevance provided to those who choose the programming.

There will be a huge void on Twitter after the election. Or not. iPhone 8 rumors will kick in nearly a year before the expected 10th anniversary revamp.

I disabled breathe notifications on my AppleWatch. I need help on many things. This one, I have covered.

More than two million people watched Week 2 of the NFL on Twitter, upping the audience by 34%.

Apple is said to be stepping up plans for an Amazon Echo-style smart-home device. It would use the same Siri that wanted to get me a Lyft when I told the watch to Start Elliptical.

Up to 50% of consumers who cancel a Netflix subscription eventually return, says the company’s CTO. How many other businesses can claim the same?

Appointment reminders are the top category in a list of the types of messages that U.S. millennials want to receive, per OpenMarket.

Twitter no longer counts photos, GIFs or videos toward the 140-character limit. Look for more pictures of lunches.

Buying "in-store" (33.5%) is still the most popular channel for holiday shopping, eMarketer said. But mobile surely has a large influence, even down aisles and at shelves.

Tagged with apps, mobile web, Apple Watch, Facebook, comScore.

September 25, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 25, 2016
  • Jeff Hasen
  • apps
  • mobile web
  • Apple Watch
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Ramifications of Bad Mobile Experiences

The rising expectations of mobile users have been well-documented and covered extensively in my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book. Now comes word that one third of mobile consumers would never purchase from brands that fail to deliver.

Alternatively, Sitecore reported, when a good mobile experience is achieved, 76% report that it has an influence on their loyalty to a brand.

Nearly one third of all mobile searches on Google are related to location.

Location-related mobile searches are growing 50% faster than mobile searches in general.

According to Nissan UK data, 6% of mobile ad clicks result in a trip to a dealership.

Nearly 1 in 4 people abandon mobile apps after only one use: Localytics.

Only 24% of mobile app users worldwide return to an app the day after they first use it: Appboy.

Another from Localytics: 62% of users will use an app less than 11 times.

Over 419 million individuals block ads on their smartphones, per PageFair. The number represents 22% of all individuals who own a smartphone worldwide.

Email is the most popular function of smartphone users (78%), followed by web browsing (73%), Facebook (70%) and looking at maps and directions (63%): IDC and Facebook.

Just 52% of small businesses had a mobile-optimized website in February 2016: Yodle, and Research Now.

More than one-third of US internet users said they first find out about small businesses when researching online, according to a survey by Vistaprint.

Nearly six in 10 mobile gamers watch an ad 10 times a week, via TapResearch.

Mobile sales growth exceeded desktop growth by nearly 10x last holiday season: comScore.

81% couldn’t go a day without their mobile device: O2.

Eight in 10 Twitter users are on mobile.

Four out of five 18 to 24-year-olds (81%) say that using mobile banking is helping them to actually save money: per Halifax’s Generation Save report. A further 65% of these young people say mobile banking makes them more likely to move money into savings accounts.

Tagged with Sitecore, The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Google, comScore, Facebook.

June 5, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • June 5, 2016
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Sitecore
  • The Art of Mobile Persuasion
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer: Floor Traffic Lights Installed For "Smombies"

The German city of Augsburg has installed floor traffic lights for smartphone addicts. According to a German newspaper that calls such addicts “smombies”, the move followed these accidents: a 15-year-old girl in Munich was run over by a tram while looking at her smartphone with headphones in; in nearby Augsburg, on two recent occasions, pedestrians have been hit by street trains while looking at their phones.

Facebook has passed 1.65 billion monthly active users with 54% accessing the service only on mobile. Meanwhile, the company reports $5.38 billion in revenue, 79% from mobile advertising.

Apple may be working on a way to show friends your autocorrect mistakes, the Verge reported. Apple’s autocorrect mistakes or mine?

DeWalt, known as a drill maker, has introduced a rugged MD501 smartphone.

Vendors shipped a total of 334.9 million smartphones 1Q16 up slightly from the 334.3 million units in 1Q15, marking the smallest year over year growth on record: IDC.

Amazon is liable for in-app purchases made by kids, a court determined.

Apple pointed to 451 research saying that there's "94 percent customer satisfaction for Apple Watch." They didn’t ask me, but I would definitely be in the other camp.

Despite a “down quarter”, Apple sold 395 iPhones per minute.

Unlockd raised $12 million to lower one’s mobile phone bill in exchange for viewing ads.

In 2016 mobile payment transactions could total $27 billion, up 210%, IBM reported.

Walmart Canada’s responsive redesign has boosted conversion by 20%, according to the company.

Interesting stats from Forrester: only 37% of brands use mobile paid search advertising; just 23% have unique mobile content; and just over one in five send push notifications.

comScore found that for every $6 spent online shopping in the fourth quarter of 2015, one of those dollars was spent viaa mobile device.

 

Tagged with Apple, smombies, Facebook, DeWalt, Walmart.

May 1, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 1, 2016
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Facebook Drives Mobile Video Growth

Robots and virtual reality advances aside, my SXSW experience was heavy on results and opportunities around mobile video.

On the live streaming side, we now know that last year’s SXSW darling Meerkat was forced to change its business model with the appearance of Facebook Live and the adoption of Periscope.

It was Facebook’s moves and associated metrics that especially caught my attention over the last few days:

As shared by a company executive, 100 million hours of video are viewed every day on Facebook. Mobile is a large driver.

Ninety percent of the views on Facebook for the Straight Outta Compton trailer were on mobile.

The trailer for Furious 7 had 100 million views on Facebook, with an undisclosed but high number on mobile devices.

Approximately 2.2 million people watched the Facebook Live stream of Peyton Manning’s retirement announcement. This came despite the fact that the event was shown on a variety of television and online outlets.

Facebook has long viewed mobile as its biggest growth opportunity. Clearly video is key to the company’s aspirations.

Elsewhere:

Of the gazillion people at SXSW, no one brought a better in-flight Wi-Fi solution. Damn.

In a panel on beacons, Clorox's Sarah Ortman said that a brand’s mobile outreach in store should solve a problem or delight a consumer.  Or both.

Despite the hype, I didn’t see many robots at SXSW unless you count those who stayed out until 4 a.m. and were forced to attend early morning panels.

The majority of McDonald’s U.S. business is via the drive thru, making mobile solutions more important. The company had a large presence in Austin.

In the UK this year, mobile ad spending will surpass TV spending as well as desktop spending, according to eMarketer

Half of all debit card holders don't believe it's safe to use their card for online purchases, Kantar reported. I wonder what these people would say about using a smartphone to make a purchase. Likely, no, thanks.

In 2015, Apple sold 441 iPhones per minute.

Tagged with SXSW, Facebook, Meerkat, Clorox, iPhone.

March 14, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • March 14, 2016
  • Jeff Hasen
  • SXSW
  • Facebook
  • Meerkat
  • Clorox
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Acknowledging A Gap In Personalization Results

One of big opportunities for Gap is personalization "but it may not be this year. It's the holy grail" -- Caroline Sheu, the company’s VP of Global Digital Marketing, said at the excellent Mobile Ventures Summit event in San Francisco.

More from Sheu - it's apps and mobile web, not one or the other. Be everywhere the customer lives, she said.

And one last one – the best foot forward for Gap is building an app for its best customers, not one that is for all. It’s about focus and working the funnel. Others like REI have said the same thing.

One in 3 smartphone owners have streamed video via a subscription service on their phone: Pew.

Mobile accounted for 52% percent of Google clicks (including ads and organic) in the fourth quarter of 2015, per Merkle/RKG.

40% of PepsiCo's Super Bowl budget is going to digital, including Snapchat, Adweek reported.

100 million hours of video are watched daily on Facebook, the company said.

Pinterest's mobile users exceeded desktop within a day of launching the mobile app, according to the company’s Kevin Knight.

RBC's Mark Mahaney said mobile became material when it reached 20% of revenue or traffic.

Visa will brings NFC (near field communications) to all the payment terminals at Levi’s Stadium for Super Bowl 50.

As much as the media makes it out to be a sprint, mobile payments is a marathon that will take decades -- Visa's Chris Curtin, Chief Brand & Innovation Marketing Officer.

Facebook earned $5,630,000,000 in Q4 in revenue from advertising, and about 80% of that came from mobile. Mobile ad revenue was up 82% year over year.

Leaders who measure impact of their online and offline spend will allocate up to 20% of their budget to mobile – Forrester.

Broadcast advertising spending jumped 13% to end 2015, while overall TV spending was up 9%: Standard Media Index. Take note, mobile and social hypesters.

Tagged with Gap, Visa, Facebook, Google.

January 31, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • January 31, 2016
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  • Gap
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Radio's Mobile Opportunity Is Now

Nielsen says that more than 90% of adults listen to the radio each week. Yes, it might be more and more via app or streamed over a computer, but the ears are there regardless. How come the majority of stations and groups fail to grasp mobile as a way to engage in 2015 and beyond?

The radio action plan for 2016? Start by building a mobile loyalty club. Increase time spent listening. Sell advertising with mobile calls to action using your shortcode. Get with the program.

Hard? Hardly.

There are more mobile subscriptions in the world (7.4 billion per Ericsson) than people (7.3 billion per the United Nations).

Google Wallet now lets you text money to your contacts.

1.4 billion people around the world will use mobile phone messaging apps this year, per eMarketer.

46.5% of online shoppers will pick up in store or ship to store this holiday season, according to the National Retail Federation.

Shoppers who use digital spend 33% in store: Point Inside. One more from the same source -- for pre-planning, 82% of shoppers use retail apps outside the store.

Only 9% of Facebook users worldwide say they're interested in using buy buttons on the site, eMarketer reported.

The average age of nightly news viewers is 61, CBS says. The average age for cable news is almost 70.

21% of Americans now report that they go online “almost constantly” – Pew.

Tweet from Sarah Silverman: “We have our differences but we all take our smartphones in with us to poop one leg at a time.”

For first time ever, the year's most popular @YouTube #video ads were viewed more on #mobile than desktop: Marketing Land.

Tagged with Radio, YouTube, Facebook.

December 13, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • December 13, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Radio
  • YouTube
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Selfies and the Long Arm of the Law

To “hide” a selfie stick, an author named Mansoon purportedly bought two prop hands on Amazon, modified them and his clothes, and went into the world with the most ridiculously-looking selfie enabler that you will find. Since selfies are illegal in London, South Korea and elsewhere, I wonder if Mansoon will escape the long arm of the law.

Brands spend $3.04 to drive a single download of their mobile app; consumers use 70% of their downloaded apps once if ever, per Forrester.

Today, 90% of young adults use social media, compared with 12% in 2005.

Tweet from Fast Company: “In honor of #WorldToiletDay, how the most successful people poop at work: http://buff.ly/1MEGBKP”. I read that as how many people successfully poop at work.

eMarketer says that businesspeople are looking for short bursts of info on smartphones they need right then. Me – businesspeople or all people?

38% of job-seekers using smartphones had trouble entering a large amount of text on applications: Pew.

Also, 47% of people who used a smartphone in a job search accessed content that didn't display properly. Hello. It's 2015. A web site optimized for mobile is a must.

The YouTube Kids app hit 10 million downloads and expanded overseas.

Selling smartphone data that connects consumer demographics with locations will be a $79 billion business by 2020, according to Accenture.

850 apps are downloaded ever second from Apple’s App Store.

Dunkin Donuts has introduced mobile ordering.

The stat is a bit old but telling even today -- four apps in Google’s Play Store had been downloaded between 1 billion and 5 billion times as of September 2014 — Google Maps, Gmail, Google Play Services and YouTube, according to Pew. All four of these apps, however, are required downloads for all Android devices.

Seven apps — Facebook, Google Play Books, Google+, Google Search, Google Text-to-Speech, Google Street View and WhatsApp — had been installed between 500 million and 1 billion times. All were required downloads except for Facebook and What’sApp.

Tagged with selfie stick, Facebook, WhatsApp, Google, Pew.

November 22, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 22, 2015
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  • selfie stick
  • Facebook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - An Alarming Number of Apps Share Personal Data

In a study of the top 110 apps by leading researchers from MIT, Harvard and Carnegie Mellon, 73% of Android apps shared personal information, such as email address with third parties. 47% of iOS apps shared geo-coordinates and other location data.

Transparency alone won’t satisfy mobile device owners. The Pew Research Center found that 54% of users decided to not install an app after learning about how much personal information that app planned to capture.

The majority of Americans say the latest technology is “totally necessary” to their daily lives, per CTIA. 69% believe that it’s personally necessary to have modern and up-to-date devices. 

Only a quarter of businesses have a coherent digital strategy to create customer value: Forrester.

Consumers may be spending as much as 6 hours each day multiscreening -- that's half their total media time, according to eMarketer. So stop creating a “mobile only” strategy.

Researchers from Duke wanted to see if utilization of a low-cost weight-loss app might help the 35 percent of young adults in the U.S. who are overweight or obese. A study showed that it doesn’t. The smartphone app didn't help young adults lose any more weight than if they hadn't been using the app at all.

There has been a 16% increase in the number of people in the U.S. using a smartphone and a tablet daily, eMarketer reported. The figure stands at 112 million.

Apple Watch sales have reached 7 million, more than all rivals combined. By that yardstick, it has been a hit. I use a different measuring method, one that puts the product in the disappointing category.

Google Maps for iOS now have spoken traffic alerts.

Facebook sees 8 billion daily video views from 500 million users. That’s double since the view numbers were reported in April.

Meanwhile, Facebook now gets 78% of its ad revenue from mobile.

Mobile accounts for more than 1/3 of Estee Lauder’s overall ecommerce business.

Tagged with Pew, CTIA, Apple Watch, Facebook.

November 8, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 8, 2015
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Is Facebook Going Face Down?

The naysayers will tell you that Facebook is losing its popularity and will soon go face down. New numbers tell a different story.

72% of online American adults use Facebook, a proportion unchanged from September 2014, per Pew. In addition, 82% of online adults ages 18 to 29 use Facebook, along with 79% of those ages 30 to 49, 64% of those ages 50 to 64 and 48% of those 65 and older.

Few are more bullish on text-message driven mobile loyalty clubs, but even I have to question these stats from MarketLive: 78% of shoppers are likely to visit a store as a result of a text promotion, and 62% will make a purchase based on a text notification or offer received while in-store. If you cut those percentages in half, I could believe the study. There are so many variables in such campaigns, like the offer, frequency of deals, and timing of messages sent.

I received another promoted tweet suggesting that I have an extended belly and gut yeast. I'd like the company more if it led with my movie-star looks.

Radio took 38 years to reach 50 million people. It took Angry Birds 35 days, according to Brad Jakeman of Pepsi.

Wal-Mart’s CEO says the average in-store only customer spends $1,400 a year. An e-commerce only shopper spends $200. Customers who do both spend $2,500.

43% of consumers expect companies to have their own mobile apps: Forrester.

PepsiCo is working with a licensing partner to market a line of mobile phones and accessories in China in the next few months. But the food and beverage company has no plans to get into the mobile phone manufacturing business, a PepsiCo spokeswoman told Reuters.

"Available in China only, this effort is similar to recent globally licensed Pepsi products which include apparel and accessories," the spokeswoman said.

Mobile programmatic display ad spending expected to surpass desktop this year: eMarketer.

Tagged with Facebook, Pew, Pepsi, Walmart.

October 18, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 18, 2015
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - How Expanding Twitter Beyond 140 Characters Will Work Against Us

Twitter is looking to expand the 140-character limit with a new product, according to multiple reports. Sigh. I’m gearing up for 900-word essays on morning runs and lunch sandwich selections. Psst- here’s a lesson that I learned as reporter: "They settled World War II in 600 words". Stick to 140 characters. Or fewer.

Digital channels will influence 64% of holiday purchases, per Deloitte. In a year with only minor upgrades, Apple sold 13 million iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s units on its first weekend.

From Apple CEO Tim Cook -- “There’s no doubt in my mind the best companies will be the most mobile.”

Those 35 and younger are three times more likely to consume video on smartphone, PC or tablet than on an actual TV, according to Tout.

More than 20 percent of Americans use wearables – Forrester.

Gartner: 89% of marketers say they expect to compete primarily on the customer experience by 2016.

“Ad blocking is a definitive sign that marketers have to get our butt in gear" -- AOL CEO Tim Armstrong.

Sheryl Sandberg told TV ad buyers that Facebook has a “Super Bowl on mobile” every day.

Facebook says it now has 2.5 million advertisers, up a half-million in the last six months.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Adblock Plus will allow an independent board to decide which ads are “acceptable” and allowed through its filter. Should be called “Adwesortablock”.

The average American spends almost 80% of time in their top three mobile apps: comScore.

Amazon, believed to know more about us than any other entity, sent me a burger offer. I haven't had one in over 20 years.

Pfizer introduced a smoking cessation research app.

Selfies have caused more deaths this year than shark attacks.

WebMD users can see their daily medication schedules right on their AppleWatch wrists.

Radar has turned the smartphone into a baseball speed detector: Engadget.

Tagged with Twitter, Apple, iphone, Facebook.

October 4, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 4, 2015
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  • Twitter
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Takeaways From An Eye-Opening Report on E-Mail Opens

The migration to mobile has resembled a stampede, but when it comes to email, many more that we have been led to believe rely on the desktop than the wireless device.

North American data from Experian Marketing Services for the second quarter of 2015 showed that overall, 48% of all emails sent by Experian clients were opened on the desktop, while 40% were opened on mobile phones or ereaders, and 12% on tablets. eMarketer said.

A deeper drive showed these numbers: in the business products and services industry, 73% of emails were viewed on the desktop—and the tablet open share was just half the average. Publishers, media and entertainment companies and travel firms all had slightly higher-than-average open shares on the desktop, while publishers and travel firms reported lower-than-average open shares on mobile phones.

On average, 62% of clicks came on the desktop—14 percentage points ahead of the desktop share of opens. Mobile phones saw 30% of clicks, as opposed to 40% of opens. The desktop was the biggest source of email clicks for every industry.

That’s all a bit eye-opening.

Facebook is working with schools on a personalized learning app that may be offered for free, Engadget reported.

Any Apple Watch owners even a bit less excited about this week's Apple announcements given their experience with the watch? I am in that camp.

A tweet said that fitness trackers may catch on with cows. I wonder how many units will moo-ve.

Ericsson says that the number of consumers watching video on smartphones is up 71% since 2012 across all ages.

Picture this: a couple took a “divorce selfie” and President Obama snapped one during an Alaska trip.

I’m touched every time that I see an automated thanks for the Twitter follow.

I received this advice in a promoted tweet - stop messaging women and start meeting women. It was my nominee for dumb-ass targeting.  Why? I’ve been married 25 years and plan to be married 25 more.

Tagged with email, emarketer, Apple Watch, Facebook, Twitter.

September 7, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 7, 2015
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  • email
  • emarketer
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - What A Dog Can Do Better Than An App

An app to tell you to feed or walk your pet? Isn’t that already covered by Fido begging at the dish or going to the door?

In Marietta, GA, cops are dressing as road workers to catch drivers checking their phones. Violators, even stopped at red lights, are receiving $150 fines.

Advertisers shifted $1.5 billion From TV to digital year-over-year, per Standard Media Index. Advertisers spent $25.5 billion on national TV and $6.4 billion on local and syndicated TV from October through June, vs. $22 billion spent on digital.

Tweet of the week from @chrispirillo: “Bison attacks woman taking selfie with it. Man tries selfie with rattlesnake, gets a $150,000 doctor's bill.  Smartphones.”

78% of retailers are planning to make a new mobile POS decision by mid-2016: IHL Group.

While no breakout was given, it is believed that more than half of Facebook’s $3.8 billion in Q2 2015 ad revenues came from small businesses.

Half of American adults had their personal information exposed to hackers last year alone, per a New York Times report.

Tom Brady's mention of switching out a Samsung for an iPhone was a negative value of $617,000 for Samsung in the 1st 2 1/2 hours, according to Apex MG Analytics.

15% of Americans still do not go online. They must obviously get enough of DeflateGate and the Kardashians elsewhere.

The average person under 25 sends in a day the same number of texts that a 55 year old sends in a year, Creative Strategies reports.

Mobile payments account for 20% of Starbucks revenue. There are 10.4 million active members in its loyalty program.

On Saturday, Apple Watch told me I reached the achievement of completing my first elliptical workout. The problem is that was about No. 71, all "recorded". Hello.

Tagged with Facebook, Pew, smartphones.

August 2, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 2, 2015
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  • Facebook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Where "Mobile Addicts" Turn 60 Times A Day

Despite unfettered access to the mobile web, 280 million smartphone users around the world turn to an app or apps at least 60 times a day, Flurry reported. The top category is messaging, followed by utilities, games, finance and news and magazines. Certainly Facebook’s popularity is a big part of this story.

On Disneyland's 60th birthday, it’s important to note how innovative Disney remains. It’s MagicBands, used by tens of millions of park visitors, show how consumers will give up their location in exchange for value – shorter lines, faster restaurant reservations, and more. Much more on this is in my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book.

Spam has fallen below 50% of all email for the first time since 2003, per Symantec.

On mobile, the average viewing session on YouTube is more than 40 minutes, up more than 50% year-over-year.

One-in-3 parents say they've had concerns or questions about a child's tech use, according to Pew. I would’ve guessed the number to be significantly higher.

Also, Pew told us that 47% of parents on Facebook are friends with their children.

Angry Birds 2 will launch on Apple's iOS at month’s end. My soon to be 86-year-old mother in law will be among first to get this.

A gentleman likely in his 60s, who was wearing an Apple Watch, approached me recently in a mall. "I see you are wearing an Apple Watch. Have you been able to figure yours out?" I told him, "Not really". His watch was given to him by his son, who works for Apple.

Google confirmed a buy button is coming soon to mobile search results.

More Google news – it introduced Eddystone, an open source, cross-platform Bluetooth LE beacon format.

Nine of 10 always keep their mobile device within arm’s distance, IBM reported.

While the number of apps used has been flat for two years, the time spent on apps has risen 63%, Nielsen said.

Companies that weren’t ready for the over-hyped Mobilegeddon lost up to 10% of traffic: Adobe.

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion, Disney, YouTube, Google, Facebook.

July 19, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • July 19, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • The Art of Mobile Persuasion
  • Disney
  • YouTube
  • Google
  • Facebook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - A Reality Check On The Dollars Spent On Mobile

In the midst of an important trend-identifying presentation at last week’s Integrated Marketing Week event in New York, an audience member tweeted that mobile will soon eclipse television in U.S. advertising spend.

I and most others disagree, given the scale that television brings even today (and for many tomorrows to come), plus a general reluctance from traditional marketers and media buyers to make a large bet on mobile so soon given issues of measurement, attribution and unproven (to some degree) return on investment.

However, several important stats were offered by a Google executive about YouTube. Among them:

-           On mobile alone, YouTube reaches more 18-34 year olds than any cable network

-           50% of global viewership on YouTube comes via mobile. Plus, viewership is growing 50% year over year

-           Millennials are 2 times more focused on video on mobile than online

-           Over 500 years of video are shared every day on YouTube

The television ad spend for 2015 was forecast to be a leading 40% of the overall $187 billion, according to Strategy Analytics. Mobile advertising was projected to grow 20% this year to reach $7.4 billion.

For the first time, U.S. advertisers will spend more on mobile search than desktop search, according to eMarketer. Mobile is forecast to become dominant in 2016 and 2017, with the spend more than 2 to 1 two years from now.

Mobile usage during shopping trips in the U.S. drives $970 billion in brick-and-mortar sales: Deloitte.

More than 7 in 10 mobile ad dollars are spent in apps this year, per eMarketer.

Mobile ads boost physical store visits by 80 percent in first day of viewing: NinthDecimal.

I learned that TGI Friday’s ran an America's Next App contest. No, not a mobile app. An appetizer. Duh.

Mobile data usage is 16% more for Hispanics in the U.S. than non-Hispanics, Nielsen reports.

An average of 8,796 photos are uploaded to Snapchat every second.

The average iPhone user has 119 apps, according to Apple.

Some of Apple's first partners for its new News app: CNN, Condé Nast, ESPN, Hearst, The New York Times, Time Inc., and Bloomberg.

I see the value of Periscope but a view of letting people in to Apple’s WWDC developer conference in California? Who cares? Shots of the grass browning weren't available?

65% of the U.S. mobile population does not use their mobile device for banking activities: comScore.

Tagged with YouTube, Google, Facebook.

June 14, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • June 14, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • YouTube
  • Google
  • Facebook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Does It Pay For A Retailer To Offer Apple Pay?

It may not pay to carry Apple Pay. Twenty-eight retailers told Reuters that lack of access to data about customers and their buying habits is a key reason why they don’t accept Apple Pay. But an Apple rep told the news organization that it expects half of the top U.S. merchants to feature the service by the end of the year.

Meanwhile, Kantar says that only 13% of U.S. iPhone 6 owners have used Apple Pay. What has held the other 87% back? Not enough locations, not enough consumer education, not enough benefit? Something else? I say that it’s all of the above.

Tweet of the week – from Rebecca Lieb ‏@lieblink: Smart jeans that tell you if you gained weight? My stupid jeans have done this for years.

Facebook Messenger now lets you send friends a map with your location.

True or false, fellow Apple Watch owners - if I left it at home, I'd make a special trip to retrieve it. I'm in the false camp.

Consumers are willing to trade personal info for value, per Forrester. 41% for cash rewards, 28% for loyal points, 15% for a better consumer experience.

Walmart announced new mobile programs that include a geofence feature that alerts associates to gather pre-ordered merchandise, saving time for the customer.

Periscope now offers a map view of active broadcasts.

Yahoo reportedly paid at least $20 million to stream October's Buffalo Bills – Jacksonville Jaguars game.

BlackBerry settled a legal dispute with Ryan Seacrest's Typo Products.

Expedia's Spanish-language mobile web site is part of an initiative to test and learn.

What irony: Gogo launched a "generous" customer loyalty program for airlines, not paying users who suffer with the service.

Seventy-four percent of people 55 and over in America used the mobile Internet in 2014, a 14% jump from 2013: comScore.

Fifty percent of people uninstall a poor app, IBM says.

Tagged with Apple Pay, IBM, Facebook, Walmart, BlackBerry.

June 7, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • June 7, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Apple Pay
  • IBM
  • Facebook
  • Walmart
  • BlackBerry
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Live Más, Spend Más With Taco Bell's Mobile App

Taco Bell tells it customers to live más. It turns out that its mobile app users are spending más, too. Mobile app orders are 20% higher on average compared to in-store, according to BI Intelligence. These mobile shoppers in large numbers are adding more toppings and making group orders.

As expected, Mary Meeker’s annual look at the web and mobile brought significant learnings.

Among the best:

- In America, mobile has eclipsed the desktop in time spent in digital media - now 51%.

- Spending on mobile advertising in the U.S. is up 34% year over year.

- Only $13 billion of $50 billion total U.S. Internet ad spend is on wireless.

- User-shared and curated video is rising rapidly. There are 4 billion video views per day, up 4x in six months on Facebook.

- The next new Internet users are likely already non-smartphone ‪mobile users and most likely to onboarded via messaging platforms.

If your app fails, 47% of your customers will switch to the competition, according to IBM.

74% of people 55+ used the mobile Internet in 2014, per comScore.

On a related note, my wife and I were sent a selfie from my soon-to-be 86-year-old mother-in-law.

General Motors’ Chevrolet brand will offer Android Auto and Apple CarPlay compatibility in 14 vehicles for the 2016 model year.

Over eight in 10 interested in wearables want such devices to enhance in-store experience: PowerReviews. For these, such devices are more than health and fitness tools.

Through a partnership with Shazam, Target is giving app users the ability to scan any of its print or television ads to access “shoppable” content.

75% of Google mobile search revenues come from Apple devices.

Friday was National Biscuit Day? My appreciative dogs have a ruff life.

Google and Apple have adjusted their strategies on mobile payments. We’ll see more tie-ins with loyalty plans, but still need consumer education. Much more, in fact.

Native Apple Watch apps are coming this fall. Not a minute too soon. The current experience is exasperating.

Tagged with Taco Bell, Mary Meeker, Google, Apple Watch, Facebook.

May 31, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 31, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Taco Bell
  • Mary Meeker
  • Google
  • Apple Watch
  • Facebook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Reaching The Toddler Through Devices

One in seven uses a mobile device for at least an hour a day by age 1, according to the Einstein Health Network. Additionally, a third touch or scroll the screen before walking or talking, per the Pediatric Academic Societies. Somewhere there is a marketing plan being developed to influence this group. It is probably happening in multiple somewhere’s.

I found wording worse than phablet and appsolutely - calling Apple Watch marketing wrist-y business.

Apple Watch diaries? Aren't we taking this a little too far, even for an Apple product?

A new version of Google Glass is coming soon, according to Luxottica’s CEO.

Last quarter, Microsoft had Surface revenue of $713 million. The iPad sold $9 billion over the same period. And that's with iPad and tablets in decline due to the popularity of larger smartphones.

Millennials are nearly twice as likely as Gen Xers to use a smartphone when car shopping, per eMarketer.

Mobile is now 73% of Facebook’s ad revenue. Also, the number of daily active users is now 936 million, up from 890 million at the end of 2014.

Tweet from Fortune Magazine: What businesses want from workplace wearables: happy customers. My reaction? Imagine that.

Judging by the Web, Google's new limited wireless service is either "game-changing" or a relative non-event. I’m glad that we figured that one out.

For first time, New York Times editors are choosing stories specifically for smartphone readers to be delivered via app.

Apple Pay has added more than 30 additional banks and credit unions. There are now more than 200 institutions included.

I keep seeing Promoted Tweets from a company selling two watches for $60. Hello, it's not a timepiece that we're after. Duh.

Over 3 billion hours are spent playing mobile games each week around the globe, according to the Global Games Initiative.

Tagged with Apple Pay, Apple Watch, Microsoft, Google Glasses, Facebook.

April 26, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • April 26, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Apple Pay
  • Apple Watch
  • Microsoft
  • Google Glasses
  • Facebook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Now We Need To View Minutiae Via Live Video Apps?

I’ve long asked why we need to know via Facebook minutiae like a school bus caused a delay in someone's commute. Now we're supposed to watch live video of it on Meerkat or Periscope?

In a related note, 85% of mobile sharing happens on Facebook, per ShareThis.

I’m a couple of weeks away from saying that I was so unconnected before Apple Watch. Well, not exactly.

According to Nielsen, 146 million watched video on the Internet, and 164 million people used an app/web on a smartphone in the fourth quarter of 2014.

An unwanted promoted tweet says "goodbye to clutter". What irony.

Mobile devices generate 25% of all digital travel transactions in the U.S., Criteo says.

Drexel University has installed an iPad rental vending machine for students, library card holders.

Slightly over a third of smartphone buyers in the past three months were first-timers, Kantar reports.

The activity that more smartphone users do than any other? Apps? No. Web? No. Picture taking? No. Text message? You got it, per Pew.

61% of ESPN’s visitors are mobile only. There will be tons on the ramifications of this for marketers in my upcoming book, The Art of Mobile Persuasion. 

The New York Times will publish “one-sentence stories” on Apple Watch.

To those who readily lead with mobile first, advertisers spent $1.13 billion on TV ads during March Madness.

Only 27% of marketers have bought mobile ads programmatically: IAB.

An eMarketer report estimates that global mobile ad spending will rise to $100 billion by 2016, a 400% increase from 2013.

For every $1 spent on the mobile web, $3 is spent via apps.

I appreciate the Facebook-suggested post from seniorpeoplemeet.com. She needs a boyfriend. I need better targeting.

Tagged with Periscope, Meerkat, Facebook, Twitter, Pew, iPad.

April 5, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • April 5, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Periscope
  • Meerkat
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pew
  • iPad
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - This Just In: Size Does Matter

The No. 1 factor for Millennials and Boomers in determining which screen to use for an activity is its size, reports Millward Brown Digital. But, according to the new survey, for Gen Xers, it is speed and performance.

Japanese schoolgirls ages 10-18 spend seven hours a day on their mobile devices, according to security firm Digital Arts. It’s four hours for male counterparts.

A separate study by the University of Basel said that teenagers who used digital media at night had an increased risk for poor sleep and depressive symptoms.

Every hour, 148,400 smartphones are sold around the world, according to CTIA. For those challenged with math, that’s 41 smartphones moved every second.

There was a 15% increase in sales via tablets during recent East Coast snowstorm, per IBM.

This year, Groupon reportedly will launch a targeted deals product powered by beacons.

CBS forecasts 2016 Super Bowl ads to cost more than $5 million. No word on whether mobile will make the big game in any meaningful way.

iPhone 6 Plus owners consume twice as much data compared to other iPhones: Citrix.

JetBlue announced that it will soon accept Apple Pay at 35,000 feet.

73% of mobile searches result in an additional action such as a call, store visit, or purchase: Google.

How many knew this before Valentine’s Day? More than 60% of mobile dating apps put the users at a potential risk of cyberattacks, reports IBM.

Mobile now accounts for more than 60% of all digital media time spent: comScore.

Facebook delivers three billion video views per day, with 65% coming on mobile devices.

82% were likely to get a Valentine's Day restaurant recommendation or make a reservation via mobile, a Verizon survey says.

Mobile firms raised $4.2 billion in venture capital globally in January: Rutberg.

Seven in 10 mobile users would stop using an app if it uploaded personal info without permission, according to eMarketer.

Tagged with Valentine's Day, Facebook, Google, IBM, tablets, iPhone 6.

February 15, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • February 15, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Valentine's Day
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • IBM
  • tablets
  • iPhone 6
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Jeff Hasen

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