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Jeff Hasen

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Seven Ways 2019 Will Change the Way We Market, Sell, and Live Our Lives

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For marketers in 2019, everything and nothing will change.

Ultimately, our businesses will still need to sell stuff. And that will surely be true again in 2020, even 2030, and every decade after that.

But, oh, will the how be different next year and beyond.

Rest assured, this isn’t another one of those predictions pieces that promises revolution and absolutes. No, cash won’t entirely go away in 2019. Voice won’t replace desktop or mobile search in 100 percent of the cases. Penetration of wearables won’t reach 100 percent despite increased interest in monitoring health as well as package delivery times.

Here are seven ways that emerging technology will affect how we market, sell, and live our lives.

The mobile phone and app will continue to be a linchpin and actually start to provide more information to other devices. For instance, with an iPhone and a HomePod, you can now turn on personal requests to your device. And because you don’t have to log in again, it’s a “next level of mobile device” value.

Key stat: Nearly one in five U.S. adults today have access to a smart speaker (Voicebot). You would be hard-pressed to find any study that offers a prediction of maturity in the market, or one that says that masses will stop using their smartphones. Use of both will be more prevalent in 2019 (TechCrunch).

For innovation areas such as augmented reality, brands will have success without having to go all-in. Some proof of concepts will take only one person and three days.

Key stat: Augmented reality experiences will be noticed and resonate with at least some consumers: 38 percent hope to see improved experiences in stores, while 35 percent want improved customer service based on individual needs, and another 35 percent seek improved ways to find and compare different products (GfK).

The most elaborate of experiences created for customers will only succeed if they are viewed as personal, or at least relevant.

Key stat: 79% of consumers say they are only likely to engage with an offer if it has been personalized to reflect previous interactions the consumer has had with the brand. (Marketo)

Brick and mortar, combined with mobile and digital experiences, will differentiate. Why? It’s what pure online commerce cannot match.

Key stat: 71 percent of millennials believe a significantly enhanced retail experience would increase their in-store visits and purchases (Roth Capital).

Voice interfaces will continue to gain share, but for many products in shopping categories, many will need to see as well as hear.

Key Stat: Voice commerce alone is not enough for most consumers: 89 percent said they’d like to see the product on a screen before a voice assistant orders it (Salmon).

While virtual reality won’t go mass in 2019, brands taking measured steps forward will see value by way of earned media, social mentions, and relevant articles.

Key stat: While no one can credibly argue that VR has gone mass, efforts tied to Oculus, Magic Leap, and others have seen considerable earned media and social media focus while spending relatively little on paid media.

Machine learning will lead to happier customers if used to keep shelves stocked with desired merchandise.

Key stat: 75% of enterprises using AI and machine learning enhance customer satisfaction by more than 10% (Capgemini).

I’ll close with a couple more pieces of advice. Review your 2018 marketing playbook (you have one, right?) and take note of what went as planned and what veered at least somewhat off the mark. For all the reasons mentioned above, by no means rinse and repeat your 2018 playbook for 2019.

Finally, the model of having a playbook for a full year is increasingly foolhardy. The world is moving that fast. Create your plan, then revisit it at least every quarter and make any necessary changes.

Just as your consumers are doing with their devices and behaviors.

(first appeared here - https://possiblemobile.com/2018/12/2019-will-change-way-market-sell-live/)

Tagged with machine learning, augmented reality, mobile.

December 30, 2018 by Jeff Hasen.
  • December 30, 2018
  • Jeff Hasen
  • machine learning
  • augmented reality
  • mobile
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A Fan Boy No More

I never have exhibited the obvious signs of being an Apple fan boy – getting the company’s logo cut into my hair or having a Mac Mini serve as my toilet paper holder, for instance – but any review of my writings or tweets suggest that I have had more than a passing fancy for what comes out of Cupertino.

And I’m hardly alone.

There is so much trust in the Apple brand that it ranks first on the prestigious Most Valuable Brand list created each year by Forbes.

Even in my hometown of Seattle, where Microsoft has created loads of job opportunity and upped housing prices, Apple is the standard. That’s on display every day in the Bellevue Square mall where traffic is brisk in and out of the Apple Store while the Microsoft Store can often record visits in a single hour on fewer than 10 fingers.

I’ve owned no mobile phone but an iPhone since V1 was introduced in 2007. I’ve rushed to buy a new version at exactly the time each year when my carrier contract allowed for one. More than once, I have committed even before I could eyeball or touch one.

In the last decade, my purchases just for me have included two iPads, four Macbooks or Macbook Airs, and an Apple Watch.

But something changed for me this year. Or maybe it’s the fact that something changed with Apple.

The company that has defined dependable underdelivered. And, worse, it has made no apologies about it.

Specifically, in a bad way, its Apple Watch turned back time, producing an experience for me that was vintage BlackBerry 2004. Tasks have timed out. Buffering has felt as long as an Alaska summer day and night. Notifications have come at inexplicable times, like the requests to stand up while I was barreling down the freeway at 65 miles an hour.  

Some apps, including OpenTable’s, will not update. Even worse, on one occasion, I suspect that an effort to communicate with the app caused the battery on my Apple Watch to be depleted in less than an hour.

This isn’t the Apple that I know or want.

It was with through that lens that I listened in on this week’s Apple announcements.

--  Live Photos that have been positioned as a reinvention of the way we take and view pictures

-- 3D Touch that will change how we get in and out of mail, messages, apps, and more

-- Claims about the “revolutionary”Apple TV that reminded me of HBO’s ad campaign of several years ago. It’s Not TV. It’s HBO.

-- Even more dependence on Siri, which had been Apple’s biggest miss until Apple Watch came on the scene

-- A pencil that looks, smells, and writes like a stylus, yet is supposed to be so much more.

I’m not buying any of it. The age of innocence is over.

In the hours after Apple’s event, T-Mobile CEO John Legere texted, “Pre-order for the new #iphone starts at 12:01am on September 12. #getready #setyouralarm”

Ummm, nope. Those of you taking to his site or to apple.com at that hour will have one less competitor to be first with a new device.

Apple has built up so much good will, and has risen to the occasion much more often that not, that it certainly remains in the lead position when I’m considering new products.

But it has no lock on my thinking or my money. If that puts me in the former fan boy category, so be it.

Tagged with Apple, Apple Watch, iphone, Macbook.

September 11, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 11, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Apple
  • Apple Watch
  • iphone
  • Macbook
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - An "App To Stop The Tears" Edition

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Researchers have created an app that decodes a baby's cry. It’s for doctors to identify potential issues.

ESPN now lets iPad users call up scores and clips while watching live video. More evidence that the passive has become interactive.

In buyout, BlackBerry is said to get little premium per share. It’s a lesson on how things change in mobile.

Facebook says it has 101 million daily mobile U.S. users. Also, one out of three people in the U.S. check Facebook via mobile app at least once per day.  I like.

Groupon revenues now nearly 50 percent from smartphones. It is capitalizing on location-based opportunities.

Apple is pushing its new MacBook Pro via movie theater ads. Who wudda thunk it?

More change in the car - Audi's augmented reality app decodes your car dashboard so you know what the light on is telling you.

Per industry analyst Chetan Sharma, in the third quarter, the U.S. mobile data market grew 4 percent quarter over quarter and 14 percent year over year to reach $21 billion.

Hautelook says that 40 percent of its transactions are coming from mobile.

Google recommends that mobile websites load in one second or less. More on building mobile web sites in my Sept. 25 Market Motive online workshop.

We get so America-centric here, but it’s interesting that 5 billion of the 6 billion mobile phones are in developing countries. India remains one of the world’s largest mobile markets with over 825 million subscribers.

Time spent shopping on mobile devices has increased 385 percent since 2010.

One last stat - Nearly 80 percent of smartphones shipped worldwide during Q2 of this year ran the Android OS, says IDC.

Tagged with app, Apple, augmented reality, Macbook, Market Motive.

August 18, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 18, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • app
  • Apple
  • augmented reality
  • Macbook
  • Market Motive
  • 1 Comment
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "Wife Again Had It Figured Out" Edition

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An augmented reality app for the two minutes it takes for Haagen Dazs to "temper"? A certain wife cuts that to 10 seconds with a microwave.

Time spent visiting retail sites on tablets and smartphones has eclipsed that of time spent shopping via desktop. And the reason why you haven’t optimized your web presence for mobile is what?

A Wall Street Journal headline said Best Buy Works To Get Its Website Up To Snuff. Wow. Snuff is me-too. Snuff-plus is called for here.

The iPhone 5S event is reported to be Sept 10. I'm unlikely to bite for an upgrade from the 5 because of the incremental change. Someone in the Apple Store told me that it would be wise to wait for the next version.

Meanwhile, a report says that one third of new smartphone owners buy an iPhone. Also, half of previous iPhone owners buy another. The repeat buyers’ number seems low.

A story asks if we check our mobile device before we go to bed and as soon as we awake. You think?

Thirty-five percent of mobile owners do mobile banking, according to a new Pew report.  Thirty-five percent of more than 330 million is a big number.

Three more top executives have left BlackBerry. It’s about three years after many of us did.

Ninety-four percent of mobile payments in the U.S. are at Starbucks. Not only are they moving their business, they are moving the mobile industry along.

A tweet says The Hackable Japanese Toilet Comes With An App To Track Poop. Finally. It's the Year of Mobile.

Two hours into a flight last week, my new MacBook Air had 9:08 of battery life left. Certainly more battery life than I had.

Tagged with augmented reality, iPhone, Macbook, Starbucks.

August 11, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 11, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • augmented reality
  • iPhone
  • Macbook
  • Starbucks
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Notes From a Mobilized Marketer - The All-Knowing Wife Edition

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I saw a story titled Apps That Know What You Want, Before You Do. Duh - I have a wife for that.

Mobile ads with four words or less supposedly receive 28 per cent more clicks. Of course, they need to be relevant words.

BlackBerry was asking for a retweet if you have had one of its devices for at least two years. Careful what you ask for. That can’t be pretty. BlackBerry’s share of U.S. smartphone sales is now 1.1 percent. Too little, too late.

I had a range of Apple experiences within 24 hours. I need a “Genius” to spend nearly half hour syncing my calendars (and, without me know until later, screwing up my MacBook Pro mailbox). I set up a new MacBook Air in 10 minutes.

Power chargers that will hack an iPhone? Security is not on most mobile users' minds, much like PCs early on.

Great tweet from CNET’s Maggie Reardon – “Not sure why people get bent out of shape about "plastic" smartphones when these are the same people who put plastic covers on them. #MotoX

Samsung is readying a new flip phone. Will the masses go wild for it? No, this isn't 2004.

Nielsen says Facebook attracts more 18-to-24-year-olds than the four major TV networks during primetime.

With Google speeding up Starbucks Wifi speed 10X, how about tackling in-flight next? Please. Pretty please.

Samsung’s Galaxy S4 reportedly burns down home. Beware - these type stories are almost always hoaxes.

I asked Siri to remind me to print a boarding pass. The reminder came back as jacket. This is acceptable all this time later?

Google has one fourth the mobile users of Facebook, but is said to have 4 times the mobile ad share.

Another calendar app is hardly news, except there is one coming from a 14-year-old who received funding.

 

Tagged with Apple, iPhone, Macbook, Samsung, Starbucks.

August 4, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 4, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Apple
  • iPhone
  • Macbook
  • Samsung
  • Starbucks
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "Charge It" Edition

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“Juice” with your coffee? DuPont has introduced Corian Powermat wireless charging countertops.

Mobile use during sex stats were interesting the first time. 8,674 surveys later and yeah, so?

BlackBerry's marketing aside, the market has spoken on the company's flagship Z10 - price dropped 75 percent to $49. The company’s CEO says that training issues and problems with getting buyers to "move from the pack" are the reasons for the sales woes. Also, a new report says that BlackBerry now accounts for just 2 percent of mobile traffic.

South Africa mobile stats nearly a year after I visited – 68 percent of email are sent/received on a cellphone; 3 times more text rather than email

One more - there are 4.6 times more households with a mobile device than a computer.

The New York Times is creating a digital long-form magazine. How will it do? Content wins pre-digital times and now.

eMarketer has slashed its 2013 U.S. mobile payments forecast in half. The day will come. Just not tomorrow or next year.

Univision's Hispanic audience avidly consumes content, ads on mobile. No surprise. Hispanics continue to over-index on mobile use and activities.

Another mobile made-up word - apportunity. Stop. Now.

For most outside of us geeks, having two mobile phones in a year is more hassle than a thrill. Agree?

More than 25 percent of organic search visits came from mobile devices in Q2.

How Not To Get Fired For Choosing The Wrong Mobile Strategy is the topic of my July 25 Market Motive webinar. You in?

Cripes. Just saw someone say 2013 is the Year of the smartwatch. It was the Year of mobile something like 9 straight years.

There are supposedly two ways to hit “print” on a mobile device. I can't even get my Macbook Pro to print wirelessly.

Tagged with BlackBerry, Macbook, Market Motive.

July 14, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • July 14, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • BlackBerry
  • Macbook
  • Market Motive
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Caesars Does More Than Roll Dice On Mobile

Caesars guests roll the dice all the time and leave a lot to fair Lady Fortune. But the casino’s admirable approach to mobile marketing leaves little to chance. During an hour-long webinar earlier this month, a senior executive from Caesars Entertainment said that mobile will sit at the center of the company’s strategy to move the business a giant leap forward in 2013.

Eric Petersen, director of new media, Caesars Entertainment, sees “four components” to mobile.

First, mobile Web is used to get consumers to Caesars’ properties — allowing them to make reservations.  Second, SMS is mainly used to reach consumers that are in market — sending them exclusive offers, deals and reminders. 

Third, mobile applications are “hotel-specific to enhance customer experience” — and these apps deliver value by enabling customers to access and use concierge services, room service and make dining reservations.

“Finally, Petersen noted, “we use QR codes on print advertising and on-site signage to increase the level of interactivity consumers can have with our brands.”

Petersen is wise to provide consumers choice and let them decide how (mobile, Web, on-site) they want to interact with his properties. He also correctly assumes that his customers have a certain level of sophistication and mobile savvy.

But there is a bar to reach. Brands have to deliver their customers a mobile-optimized website and experience. “Without it,” he argued, “you will give the consumer a bad experience and risk that they will never return.”

What’s more, with search being one of the most popular activities on a mobile device, it is imperative that search results lead to an optimal user experience. “This is why brands must optimize their sites for mobile, and [why] mobile Web will still lead as the main channel next year,” he said.

Petersen may work in glitzy Las Vegas, but the lights don’t blind him to what works in mobile — and what fails.

This is why Caesars’ mobile strategy is squarely focused on delivering user experiences that provide value.

“Mobile is making things easier for consumers,” he said. “You can deposit a check, book a flight or make a dinner reservation. As marketers, we need to keep this in mind. Mobile is here to solve problems.”

And it shouldn’t just be about solving the problems of a select group of individuals (distinguished by their high-end devices or huge appetite for apps). This is why Petersen has purposely included tried-and-true text messaging in his marketing mix. Unsexy, yes. But it is effective. “SMS is an important factor for engagement,” he said. “It’s the only medium that offers 100-percent reach.”

HOW I SEE IT: As I’ve written before, the travel and tourism vertical gets mobile. Marketers in this industry are among the most active — and most effective.  From enabling people to make last-minute bookings using only their mobile phones, to driving on-premises customers to nearby restaurants and shows, companies in this vertical have proven mobile provides convenience and immediacy.Caesars is another great example showing the way forward.

As we look to 2013, you have to wonder whether Augmented Reality (AR), a technology gaining serious traction in mobile marketing, might not also hit it big in Vegas (and elsewhere) in 2013. After all, Las Vegas is surely a great fit (can you think of a place more distant from reality?). Granted, usage is small. But next year might be the time for AR to get its day in the big lights.

(first appeared here http://www.mobilegroove.com/mobile-more-than-roll-of-dice-for-caesars-las-veg...

Tagged with SMS, augmented reality, mobile web, smartphones.

December 17, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • December 17, 2012
  • Jeff Hasen
  • SMS
  • augmented reality
  • mobile web
  • smartphones
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "Items May Appear Larger" Edition

A study says augmented reality apps will generate $300 million in 2013. Put on special glasses and it will look like $300 billion.

Unable to deliver iPhone 5s to satisfy demand, word comes that Foxconn may build 130-inch Ultra HDTV panels. Rest assured fewer will want them.

I will remember 2012 as year Twitter became my number one news source. You?

47 percent of 18-34 year old smartphone owners have reportedly clicked on a mobile ad in the past three months. How many have “fat fingers” causing unintentional clicks?

It’s $60 for TomTom's new North America Android app - cheaper than a standalone unit, pricier than Google Maps.

There were 66.8 million viewers for at least a minute of TV election coverage between 8 and 11pm. It was 71.5 million in '08. I expected a bigger dropoff.

Meanwhile, Mitt Romney's "victory" speech was written on an iPad. Was it autocorrect or the nation that changed it to a concession? Or both.

The tablet market is now nearly 32 percent the size of the traditional PC market. It happened in LTE speed, so to speak.

"It's gonna be raining tablets," said AT&T’s CEO on shared data plan growth. To me, it’s first about consumers understanding usage, then making decisions.

Nearly 40 percent of U.S. mobile users accessed social media networks on their device in Q3, according to comScore.

We're in a smartphone frenzy, but feature phones have 80 percent share worldwide, according to new stats from Mary Meeker.

If history of inaccuracy is a guide, Siri will sell you tickets to the wrong movie through the Fandango tie-in.

An analyst said that Facebook will "disappear" in 5-8 years. The better bet is that analyst will vanish.

A headline asked, “Who Will Be Disrupted By The Rise Of Mobile?” The better question is who won't be?

Tagged with AT&T, Mary Meeker, Siri, TomTom, augmented reality, facebook, foxconn, iphone, romney, smartphones, tablets, twitter.

November 10, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 10, 2012
  • Jeff Hasen
  • AT&T
  • Mary Meeker
  • Siri
  • TomTom
  • augmented reality
  • facebook
  • foxconn
  • iphone
  • romney
  • smartphones
  • tablets
  • twitter
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Jeff Hasen

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  • Jeff Hasen
    RT @jeffhasen: The post-COVID 19 digital & #mobile experiences consumers value most - my new post on gaps between services custome… https://t.co/GjVD6TRgmM
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    The post-COVID 19 digital & #mobile experiences consumers value most - my new post on gaps between services custome… https://t.co/GjVD6TRgmM
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    RT @wearesinch: COVID-19 has changed the rules of mobile engagement - maybe forever. We just released our brand new report reveal… https://t.co/xSyg5PO600
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