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Jeff Hasen

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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Dolphins Are Mammals, But It Seems Something Fishy Happened At SeaWorld

Reversing the trend of lower tablet demand, a dolphin grabbed an iPad from a guest at SeaWorld Orlando.

Through the first week of the Olympics, males were posting on social media about Games’ sponsors about twice as often as females, according to Sprinklr.

I understand, but do not agree with, the rationale of NBC’s primetime delay of the Olympics on West Coast. But there is no doubt that delayed weekend day coverage in this era of real time info gathering is dumb.

The percentage of Apple Watch users who will buy the next version, especially sight unseen? There’s no way of knowing, but I'm in the “absolutely not” category. The first time produced nothing but anticipointment.

eMarketer predicts U.S. retail m-commerce will reach about $131B by year's end.

More than one-quarter of U.S. Internet users block ads, per the IAB.

For the seventh straight quarter, AT&T added more cars than phones and tablets combined, according to analyst Chetan Sharma.

Millennials are 3X as likely as Baby Boomers to use mobile banking, according to FIS.

Citing "limited effectiveness", Proctor & Gamble said that it will scale back on targeted Facebook advertising.

Fast Company wrote that "for now, Siri is as good as anything that’s out there." Parity has never been Apple’s aim.

76% of U.S. Internet users aged 13-24 say that they are “addicted” to their digital devices: CivicScience.

Unrelated, but the same percentage of U.S. online adults engage with companies on social, up from 68% last year.

There are three million active advertisers on Facebook with 70% outside the U.S.

Several more mobile payment deals were announced recently, but contrary to the hype, cash wasn't gone by Tuesday.

Apple’s App Store saw record-breaking numbers during July as developer payouts crossed $50B.

Tagged with dolphin, SeaWorld, Apple, IPad, Olympics, NBC.

August 14, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 14, 2016
  • Jeff Hasen
  • dolphin
  • SeaWorld
  • Apple
  • IPad
  • Olympics
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Facebook Is Finally Being Looked At For Real News

66% of Facebook users get news there, according to Pew. And, by news, Pew means something other than that the dog got a grooming and now looks like Dad. Or that Dad now looks like the dog.

Pokemon Go is the biggest U.S. mobile game ever. And, with that, it will soon get ads in the form of sponsored locations.

Smartphone use percentages by country: South Korea 88, Australia 77, Israel 74, U.S. 72, Spain 71, UK 68, Canada 67, Italy 60 and Turkey 59, and China 58 (Pew).

Turkey is second in Periscope usage behind the U.S. and led to real-time look-ins of the attempted coup.

The average mobile cost per click (CPC) for brand keywords rose 25-30% above where they were in early May, per Merkle.

A meteorologist won't fit in your pocket but the FEMA app will, according to a tweet from the National Weather Service. You don’t say.

Survey: One in four U.S. adults have refilled an prescription via smartphone, but 62% want to (Adobe Digital).

Smartphone video had a cumulative audience of 110.1 million adults in the U.S. in the first quarter, up from 85.4 million in the year-ago quarter, according to Nielsen. Those users consumed 5.69 billion gross minutes of video, a jump from 3.41 billion a year ago.

Video viewing on PCs declined. Cumulative audience was 77.7 million, down from 86.3 million.

60% of mobile users would have a more positive view of a retailer if they were provided with offers that could be saved to their smartphones: Vibes.

The television viewing numbers tell a convincing story that baseball is not a young-person’s must-see TV. The median age for the Major League Baseball All-Star Game was 54.6. There were 294,000 viewers aged 12-17, 1.2 million viewers 18-34, 1.5 million viewers 35-49, and 5.2 million viewers 50+.

We’ll get another high-profile viewership glimpse with the upcoming Rio Olympics. The amount of NBC Olympics broadcasting hours is equal to roughly 52 FIFA World Cups and nearly 1,700 Super Bowl telecasts.

Tagged with Pew, Pokemon Go, smartphone, Olympics, baseball.

July 17, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • July 17, 2016
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Pew
  • Pokemon Go
  • smartphone
  • Olympics
  • baseball
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Wee-Wee Pads? Rover Actually Wants An iPad

NPR said that soon we might be sharing our gadgets with our pets, too. My three spoiled (human fault, not theirs) dogs want high-resolution smartphone screens and an iPad to go next to the wee-wee pads.

My frustrations with Apple Watch are well documented. With word that all Apple Watch apps must be native apps (built for the device) starting on June 1, I’ll say great rather than it’s about time.

If you missed National High Five Day last week, rest easy. Next up is National Fist Bump Day in June. #ridiculousness

Nine in 10 US smartphone owners use location services on their phone, according to data from Pew Research Center.

Smartphone owners use on average 26 apps and 52 mobile sites per month, Forrester reported.

59% of consumers have higher expectations for customer service today than last year: Microsoft. It used to be that you can manage public opinion in two hours. Now it’s closer to two minutes.

I asked Siri how much grass should you let a dog eat. Twice, she returned with "I found 15 restaurants. Tell me the one you are looking for"

The Yankees are offering a food-purchasing app, but only 20% of Stadium patrons can use it.

One-fifth of millennials don't use a desktop PC, per comScore.

It has come to this – a "smart mattress" will tell you if you're being cheated on.

The average mobile gamer is 36 years old, Nielsen says.

Approximately 10% of internet users are mobile-only: Accenture.

84% of mobile time spent is on just 5 apps, according to Facebook.

Cracker Jack has replaced its toy prizes with digital codes for games.

This year, mobile game revenue will surpass console and PC gaming, per new study: Newzoo BV.

92.5% of internet users in China had downloaded music apps to their smartphone, per Tencent Penguin Intelligence.

Tagged with NPR, iPad, Apple Watch, smartphones.

April 24, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
  • April 24, 2016
  • Jeff Hasen
  • NPR
  • iPad
  • Apple Watch
  • smartphones
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - On Mobile Procrastination For The Holidays

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A tweet begins with "starting to think about your holiday mobile strategy?” Hello. Try to get going over a red Starbucks cup. And make it for 2016, but start now.

Speaking of which, mobile payments now account for 21% of transactions at Starbucks.

Adobe said that, for the first time ever, the majority of online holiday shopping visits in the U.S. – 51% -- will be on mobile devices. Adobe forecast almost a third of all sales taking place on mobile devices.

Digitally mature firms are three more likely to drive double digit revenue growth than other businesses: Forrester.

Mobile video ads are getting 66% of the total mobile ad spend, per AppLovin and AppsFlyer.

68% of adults now have a smartphone, nearly double the share in mid-2011, according to Pew. 92% of all U.S. adults own a cellphone of some sort.

According to Strategy Analytics, global shipments of smartphones grew by 10% from Q3 2014 (323.4 million units) to Q3 2015 (354.2 million). However, the 10% figure marks the slowest growth rate within the past six years since the global recession in 2009.

Amazon's Rich Koehler: "If it takes more than three taps to reach any part of your product catalogue, it basically doesn't exist.”

Apple has sold about 1.22 billion iPhones, iPads and iPod Touches, says VC Benedict Evans. Roughly 725 million are in use.

Fitness trackers and smart watches will make up two-thirds of wearable device shipments next year: eMarketer.

My diet must be taking.  I haven't seen a promoted tweet about gut bloat for two days.

The iPad tops the Best Buy survey of most desired tech gifts. Whoa, aren't tablets on decline given popularity of larger smartphones, and perceived "good enough" previous purchases?

Another tweet said that mobile is the operating system to our lives. I guess the "remote control for life" descriptor is old news.

 

Tagged with Starbucks, Adobe, Forrester, iPad, iphone.

October 31, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 31, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Starbucks
  • Adobe
  • Forrester
  • iPad
  • iphone
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Answer To Mobile's ROI Is A Shrug?

About half of marketers and agencies are not measuring mobile ROI, eMarketer said. A shrug of the shoulders is the answer to the question by the clients or senior management of how we're doing? My question for you – what will you do next after you are moved out?

Half of Pinterest’s users are outside the U.S., the company says.

58% of customer service teams view social media inquiries as their top challenge, Forbes reported.

44% of U.S. online shoppers start the buying process with Amazon, per BloomReach.

Nearly 8 out of every 9 minutes occurs within a user’s top five apps: comScore.

On Twitter, videos are retweeted 6x more than photos. Also, 90% of video views on Twitter are from mobile devices.

More than half of all Google searches now happen on mobile devices.

CEO John Chen said that BlackBerry may quit the handset business if it the company is not profitable in a year.

eMarketer says that approximately 2 billion people have smartphones today. Another 150-200 million will buy their first in each of the next 3 years.

Americans spend 2+ hours a day on smartphone apps: comScore.

A headline proclaimed that mobile is "marketers' magic bullet". We haven't gotten more sophisticated than that hype nonsense?

54% are willing to end a relationship with a brand if they are not reached with personalization, according to Razorfish’s Jeremy Lockhorn.

Several more from Jeremy:

-- 46% of consumers will purchase more if you personalize across channel

-- 83% of consumers expect you to know them across channels and devices

-- there is a 1% conversion rate for smartphones, a third of the PC rate

-- 55% of marketers are using cross-channel technology to create single view of customer

Microsoft says that Surface is now a $3.5 billion business. Still, NFL announcers mistake them for iPads.

Tagged with emarketer, Pinterest, Twitter, BlackBerry, Surface, Microsoft, iPad.

October 11, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 11, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • emarketer
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • BlackBerry
  • Surface
  • Microsoft
  • iPad
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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 - Keeping "Modern Family" Modern

ABC’s ‘Modern Family’ shot an episode using only an iPhone and iPad. The attention for the Feb. 25 airing has been significant and, as the Associated Press wrote, keeps “Modern Family” modern.

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

Swatch is reportedly working on a smartwatch you'll never need to charge.

90% of YouTube mobile views are less than 5 minutes.

Nearly 50 percent of consumers used a mobile phone to make a purchase in 2014, up from 30 percent two years earlier, per PwC.

By 2016, Deloitte says, mobile will be responsible for as much as 21 percent of in-store spending, or $752 billion.

Seeing someone use the "word" phygital on Twitter is grounds for an unfollow.

Staples reports that 30% of iOS sales are now driven through Apple Pay.

I’ve needed 50 shades to block eyes of 50 Shades tweets and headlines.

Is it too much to expect a conference that focuses on personalization to stop sending you invites to register weeks after you've done so?

New York Times C.E.O. Mark Thompson said the following at the Code/Media conference: “The battle will be won on the smartphone”.

The U.S. Treasury will now accept PayPal.

The NBC iPhone and iPad app has been updated to include live streaming in some markets.

There have been lots of “mobile malware on the rise” headlines. Can you name one person who did something because of it? Nor can I.

Flip phones are selling again– in Japan.

Decades after "hold the pickles, hold the lettuce”, Burger King is delivering on personalization through mobile.

46% of mobile device owners will shop elsewhere if a mobile site or app fails to load within 3 seconds, according to 451 Research.

REI’s Jeff Klonkowsi is one of the thought-leaders I interviewed for my upcoming book. Smart guy. Here’s what the director of digital retail, mobile and business development said last week at eTail West 2015:  “If we’re standing still, someone is going to eat our lunch, and we need to be aware of that.” 

Tagged with Modern Family, YouTube, iPhone, iPad, Swatch.

February 22, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • February 22, 2015
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Modern Family
  • YouTube
  • iPhone
  • iPad
  • Swatch
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Have the 2015 Black Friday Sales Started Yet?

Have 2015 Black Friday sales started yet? One day turned into one week in 2014. Why not one year?

Seriously, merchants can call them what they want and try to convince us that the deals are as good as those offered the day after Thanksgiving, but it’s going to take more than words to change behavior patterns. The stats show that we made record Black Friday purchases on, ummm, Black Friday.

Safari only holds a 5% share of the desktop browser market, but 45% share of the mobile browser market thanks to iPhone and iPad usage.

For the first time on Thanksgiving, mobile drove more than 1/2 of all online retail traffic, says IBM.

Several studies show that half of mobile users abandon a page if it doesn’t load in 10 seconds, and three out of five won’t return to the site.

People are now spending more time with mobile devices than with television.

80% of mobile retail research ends with a purchase, per Telmetrics.

41% of millennials will make mobile purchases while shopping in brick & mortar stores this holiday: Dynatrace.

Around the globe, the most popular tactic for the 40% of marketers using mobile this holiday season is SMS, according to Experian.

70% of retailers invested significantly in a mobile-optimized site in time for the holidays: shop.org.

By 2020, 90 percent of the world’s population aged 6 years and over will have mobile phones: Ericsson.

Stop the madness – I heard the term beacosystem for players in campaigns involving beacons.

Amazon was set to release new deals every 10 minutes on Cyber Monday with exclusive offers for mobile app shoppers.

Stupid tweet and headline on TheStreet.com – “Black Friday made it crystal clear -- mobile shopping has emptied our malls AND outlets.” Repeat after me – there are no absolutes in mobile or most anything else.

Twitter is reportedly experimenting with a mobile tool to help you determine the quality of your tweets. Isn’t that the job of your followers and others who look in?

Apps drive the vast majority of media consumption on mobile, accounting for approximately 7 out of every 8 minutes: comScore.

 

Tagged with Black Friday, iPad, tablet, smartphone, comscore.

November 30, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 30, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Black Friday
  • iPad
  • tablet
  • smartphone
  • comscore
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Why A One-Channel Marketing Strategy Will Fail You

Here are words of caution to those marketers who live in a one-channel world. Consumers aren’t anything like you.

The latest evidence comes from the automotive industry. While smartphones and tablets accounted for 40% of total Web traffic for the car space in October (Dealertrack), a large portion of consumers migrated to a computer to fill out a form. This led to a 32% increase in lead captures.

Meanwhile, 1-800 Contacts has advanced in mobile due to the simplification of the form fill, as well as the ability for a consumer to take a picture of a prescription, according to Google’s mobile lead Jason Spero (@speroman).

Stride Rite has introduced an iPad app that measures a kid’s shoe size. It’s a smart and efficient way to solve a parent’s problem.

Nearly 50% of consumers believe their personal mobile devices are more efficient than store associates in helping them make buying decisions, Motorola reports.

Approximately 456 million Facebook members only access the network via mobile.

U.S. online adults are three times more likely to visit your website than engage with your brand on Facebook, per Forrester.

35% of holiday email click-throughs will happen on mobile, IBM forecasts.

Wal-Mart will match Amazon's prices in stores this holiday season.

The lack of smartphones held back Shazam pre-iPhone, according to a company executive appearing at the M1 Summit. You used to request and get an SMS with the name of a song.

75% of Pandora listening is on mobile, the company says.

The gap increases between mobile leaders and laggards in 2015, Forrester forecasts.

A new Usher song is available via download with info at the bottom of a box of Cheerios.

Folks with incomes lower than $100,000 a year plan to do more in-store shopping, according to Deloitte.

75% of HR managers say mobile HR can build satisfaction, per ADP.

Tagged with Google, Jason Spero, Motorola, Stride Rite, iPad, iPhone.

November 16, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 16, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Google
  • Jason Spero
  • Motorola
  • Stride Rite
  • iPad
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer: The "Just Shush Already" Edition

Twitter is testing a mute button to quiet your follows. This would be for temporary silence rather than a more final unfollow. Will hashtag be #shushalready?

I want a weather app to be simple. The latest ones are visually nice but make it harder to get basic info. Or is it just me?

Apple has 800 million iTunes accounts. The 800 million credit cards on file are more than any other company in the world.

And Apple says two-thirds of iPad registrations and one-half of iPhone registrations came from new users in the last quarter.

We're supposed to view wearables as inexact but needed? I don't understand that.

Sephora's mobile, online and in-store shoppers are 4X more valuable than single-channel shoppers, according to the company.

The reason why in-store mobile interaction is important to Walgreens? There are 45 million weekly in-store shoppers compared to 14 million online visitors.

More than 119 million people in the U.S. will watch video on tablets this year, eMarketer says.

Nielsen: The U.S. radio audience has hit an all-time high; 244 million (age 12+) listen to radio each week. The dummies said it was dying.

But the world is changing, of course – the average U.S. adult spends 5 hours 46 minutes with digital media - 2 hours and 51 minutes of that with mobile - per day, according to eMarketer.

80 percent of Twitter's advertising revenue now comes from mobile ad buys.

More from Nielsen: for the first time, a majority of Americans of all age groups own smartphones.

18-24 year olds are over 20% more likely to log onto Twitter via a mobile device.

70 percent of U.S. consumes will use a mobile device to redeem a discount in 2014, Accenture projects.

89 percent of mobile devices aren't recycled, according to Verizon.

Tagged with Twitter, Apple, iPad, Nielsen, smartphones.

May 4, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 4, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Twitter
  • Apple
  • iPad
  • Nielsen
  • smartphones
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "Monkeys Flying" Edition

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NBC received the highest Opening Ceremony ratings in 20 years. I’ve loudly complained that we should be able to see it live on mobile, online, or elsewhere. Given the numbers, that will happen when monkeys fly out of our “you know whats”.

NBC not-withstanding, we live in a real-time world. Imagine if Twitter delayed tweets the way NBC delayed coverage.

Samsung reportedly gave Olympians phones because it didn’t want to see the Apple logo at the Opening Ceremony.

Amazon has updated its iPhone app to enable users detect and buy products using the camera.

In Starbucks, I observed a woman in her 70's sitting with girl under 10. Both were on iPhones. What generational technology divide?

Despite the hype, doctors still turn to desktops for most work purposes, ahead of smartphones or tablets, according to eMarketer.

Mobile advertising was more than 75 percent of Twitter’s total advertising revenue in the fourth quarter of 2013.

60 percent of mobile users expect a website to load in less than 3 seconds.

14 percent of people captured “naughty” content on a mobile device, according to McAfee. That depends on what your definition of “is” is.

Worldwide mobile data traffic will grow almost 11 times the next 4 years, Cisco says. Also, monthly mobile data traffic jumped 80 percent year-over-year in 2013.

25 years ago, half of the world's population had never made a telephone call, much less played Angry Birds.

70 percent of mining executives believe mobile devices have prevented accidents, according to SAP.

iPhone and iPad thefts alone accounted for 18 percent of all grand larcenies in New York City last year, according to the New York Police Department.

One billion people have tried Twitter and three quarters of them have stopped using it, according to multiple reports.

Tagged with Olympics, NBC, iPad, iPhone, Samsung, twitter.

February 9, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • February 9, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Olympics
  • NBC
  • iPad
  • iPhone
  • Samsung
  • twitter
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer: Aspirin Tablets To Handle Tablet Ad Blitz

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 With a tablet advertising blitz coming between now and Christmas, we will need aspirin tablets. Microsoft is said to be coming big with Surface ads, but not quite to the Samsung spending level.

Despite those who want to convince you otherwise, Twitter is gaining in popularity among teens.  So is Instagram.

HTC will donate $1 for every Movember HairstoChange picture posted to Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

T-Mobile's “free” tablet data plan costs $10 a month.

As my friend and keen industry analyst Ross Rubin says about early holiday sales, “If every day is Black Friday, no day is Black Friday.”

The strength of the Apple brand? I bought two iPad Airs for holiday giving sight unseen.

Almost half of Facebook's daily users are mobile-only. Please tell those who still view mobile and social in silos.

Facebook's mobile ad revenue was 49 percent of total ad revenue during third quarter (up from 14 percent in Q3 2012).

Home Depot approaches 100,000 mobile point of sale transactions per week.

For the first time ever, ESPN mobile properties saw more unique visitors than http://ESPN.com in September.

Yet another rumor of larger iPhone has me wondering whether I'm in small group that doesn't want size changed to bigger or smaller.

Heard about a tanning salon that had its best-ever Monday after sending out its first mobile blast. Mobile success doesn’t necessarily need scale – it needs customers.

How do you feel about this one? 38 percent of children under 2 use mobile media, a new study says.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Google’s smartwatch will launch in the next few months. Marketers, please take a measured approach to wearables. It’s very early days of adoption.

Free registration for the Nov. 14 webinar with the Mobile Marketing Association, Mobivity, and Valley Yellow Pages - enabling local business to thrive with mobile https://www3.gotomeeting.com/register/851664870.

Tagged with tablets, Instagram, Facebook, twitter, Apple, iPhone, iPad.

November 3, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • November 3, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • tablets
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • twitter
  • Apple
  • iPhone
  • iPad
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Mom, Baby and Phone Make Three

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New moms spend more time on smartphones than other adults, an AOL survey says. Researchers found that new moms turned to their phones as a “lifeline”  - namely personal assistant to manage schedules, social hub, personal shopper, “informer” to get educated on a slew of new topics, and escape route to get away from the pressures of motherhood.

Wikipedia will start texting info to users in Kenya who don't have Internet access.

I haven't talked to one person who said “Great, BlackBerry BBM is on Android and iPhone”. Timing is everything.

Amazon fired away at Apple's new iPad with an ad that says the Kindle Fire HDX is "Lighter than Air".

With limited supply expected, positioning to get an iPad Air or Mini will be like going after Springsteen tickets.

It’s smart for Apple to call the new thin iPad Air. The Air laptop is beloved and considered by many – including me - as best out there.

I was asked if there is a reason for a business with 40 percent of its traffic coming from mobile to not have a mobile optimized site. None.

SMBs should look further than Foursquare ads for marketing - think permission-based databases.

By 2017, 83 percent of retailers expect to have in-store wireless and 56 percent envision having guest Wi-Fi, a new report claims.

Devices with voice recognition will top 1 billion units in 2013. I recently met someone in that space. Advancements are coming, including voice authentication like “fingerprinting”.

The U.S. healthcare industry reportedly will spend $539 million on mobile marketing by 2015.

Four years ago, less than 4 percent of emails were read on mobile. It’s now near 50 percent.

New York City, the country's largest metro area, has the lowest adoption rate of smartphones -- 48 percent. That’s a surprisingly low number.

 

Tagged with iPad, iPhone, BlackBerry.

October 26, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 26, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • iPad
  • iPhone
  • BlackBerry
  • 1 Comment
1 Comment
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Impact of Mobile On The NFL Edition

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My friend Peter Knox has a four-screen NFL experience: Red Zone on the TV, Eagles on the iPad, fantasy tracking on the iPad Mini, video/chat on the iPhone. And some think that the Vince Lombardi era was the NFL’s heyday?

News that BlackBerry is pulling back from the consumer market was met by an “or vice versa’ comment by tech journalist Colin Gibbs. Exactly. Four years ago, BlackBerry had 51 percent of the North American smartphone market.

I was intrigued by a tweet on a "fully flushable toilet". I prefer one that flushes only 35 percent.

Tired of iOS7 and iPhone 5 and iPhone 5C comments? Judging by history, we're minutes from the rumor churn on iPhone 6. Maybe seconds.

Separate turns to desperate in iPhone auto-correct. I nearly gave someone a heart attack. WTF?

Several stories are out that seniors are now the growth opportunity for mobile. Yes, the technology generational divide is shrinking. 50-64 year olds spent more on tech than 18-29's over the last 12 months, according to Adobe.

End of television? Yeah, right. According to eMarketer, the TV ad spend grew 6.4 percent in Q2 2013 compared to 4.1 percent for digital display.

A mobile trend from Pew - Less "checking in"; more "here's what's near you". Yes, we’re talking about Foursquare, which now has Yelp aspirations.

Only 15-20 percent of Africans have bank accounts but 60-70 percent have mobile phones.

NPD says that over half of children in the U.S are now using smart devices.

The use of mobile news apps on smartphones and tablets has increased from 30 percent to 50 percent since 2012.

Forrester says the recipe for mobile marketing success includes big helpings of analysis. You think?

Mobile shopping is expected to take 16 percent share of holiday e-commerce says eMarketer.

 

Tagged with BlackBerry, iPad, iPhone.

September 22, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 22, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • BlackBerry
  • iPad
  • iPhone
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Mobile Generation Edition

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Surprisingly by about 70 percent, 90 percent of kids 8-17 say it’s OK for parents to set rules on how they use their cellphones, according to CTIA.

Meanwhile, Pew reports that 78 percent of teens have a cell phone and 23 percent have a tablet. Also, 58 percent of all teens have downloaded apps to their mobile or tablet.

I’m bored with gold iPhone stories. It's about personalization. If you don't want it, don't buy it.

eMarketer revises numbers upward to say that the U.S. mobile ad spend will rise 95 percent this year to account for 20 percent of all digital ad spend and 5 percent of total media ad spend.

Advertising Age asked if the iPad era is already coming to an end. My observations all across country loudly say otherwise.

Another from eMarketer: 86 percent of U.S. healthcare practitioners use a smartphone for professional purposes.

28 million will use Twitter on a mobile device at least monthly this year. The number is big but still under under 10 percent of subscribers.

It's not about channels, but about consumers, said a Gap mobile executive at last week’s Mobile Insider Summit. No gap in solid thinking there.

A report says that 3 percent of U.S. Internet users are on dialup. My experience says about 83 percent of hotel biz centers are, wasting our time as we wait for boarding passes to print.

The main in-store mobile activity is comparison shopping with 59 percent showrooming, new numbers say.

How much of Steve Ballmer’s resignation had to do with Microsoft’s mobile missteps? Lots.

Apple wins three times more customers from Samsung than Samsung does from Apple. Speaks to the loyalty shown by Apple users.

Tagged with Apple, iPhone, iPad, CTIA.

August 25, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 25, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
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starbucks-different-cup-sizes.jpg

Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "Venti" Edition

starbucks-different-cup-sizes.jpg

More than 10 percent of all Starbucks sales in the U.S. are now paid for with a mobile phone. The impact is Grande and headed toward Venti.

The words “elusive & disappointment” were included in the New York Times story titled “I’m Still Waiting for My Phone to Become My Wallet. They ring true to me.

My appreciation for mobile ends when I'm accused of "butt dialing" - by my wife.

In a victory for common sense, some mobile app makers agree to additional disclosure about data collection.

Social sharing behavior is twice as high on mobile devices than desktops, according to the ShareThis network.

More numbers? Two-thirds of U.S. kids between 14 and 17 years old have their own smartphone, eMarketer says.

Prediction - "hysteria" over the recent iPad sales drop will be a distant memory when new versions hit and holiday buying arrives.

From Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg: "Reaching 1 billion users was great ... but there's nothing magical about a billion. The real goal is to connect everyone in the world."

Text messages have a 98 percent open rate, says mobile automation startup Gigabark.

Headline: Kids Who Grow Up Using iPads Have Restricted Vocabularies. Is there an argument that tablets aid in the education process?

Texts spiked 40 percent in the UK when the royal baby was born. Surprised it wasn’t 10 or 100 times more.

Wise words from John Costello of Dunkin Brands -- "consumer insights drive mobile priorities. The key is to balance high tech and high touch."

90 percent of App Store apps are free, up from 84 percent last year. Freemium is the upsell answer for many developers.

I hate "set to explode" stories but I agree that mobile is giving TV a much-needed reinvention. It’s turning a passive activity into an interactive one.

Tagged with Starbucks, Facebook, iPad, iPhone, Text messages, Social.

July 28, 2013 by Jeff Hasen.
  • July 28, 2013
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Starbucks
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Saluting The French Fry Edition

McDonalds was added to Apple’s Passbook but you can only purchase in France. Is this to honor the French fry?

Speaking of calories, here’s the obesity problem as seen through offers - why do I need to buy SIX cupcakes?

Did you hear that digital tipping coming to Starbucks apps next year? Better latte than never. Sorry.

It takes 41 cents a year to charge an iPhone? Imagine if the battery was what we need it to be.

61 percent of Facebook femaie members engage mostly on mobile, 10 percent more than men – report. They polled 15-25 year olds. Representative?

I’m dizzied by conflicting Foxconn accounts.  Did workers get three times pay to work on a holiday to produce iPhone 5s? Or is it true that "quality control inspectors fell into to conflicts with workers and were beat up multiple times by workers"?

According to industry guru Tomi Ahonen, the mobile handset market 2012 is $250 bilion. There will be 1.75B new handsets sold with an average price of $143. 41 percent will be smartphones.

Headline: The Only 7 Tablets To Buy. Me: are there really seven deserving choices?

Ironically I was on a Macbook Air at 35,000 feet a year ago when I heard about the death of Steve Jobs. How far we've come in tech.

There was news that HP CEO confirms no new smartphones coming in 2013. Who will notice? Or care?

Facebook “Goes Old-School With Metphor Ad”. Seems like I'm in minority – I, ummm, like. A lot. But the spot won't monetize its business.

A report says that the percentage of shopping sessions that convert to purchase falls more than 75 percent without a mobile optimized shopping and purchasing experience. Makes sense – beyond price and availability, it’s about ease and convenience.

People have 70 apps on average on their smartphone; but use less than 12, according to SAP. That is consistent with other accounts.

34 percent who watched Olympics on mobile device were 50 years old or over. You still think it's only a young person's device?

25 percent of American adults own tablet computers as of August 2012, according to Pew. That shows phenomenal growth in a category that wasn't around all that long ago.

Tagged with Apple, Mac, Olympics, Starbucks, facebook, foxconn, iphone, passbook, smartphones, tablets.

October 7, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 7, 2012
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Apple
  • Mac
  • Olympics
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  • iphone
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Gauging Our Real-Time Expectations

As long as there have been televised sports, there have been fans’ unmet expectations. Whether it was the infamous “Heidi” game — and NBC cutting away from an exciting Raiders-Jets game (and almost unbelievable comeback by the Raiders) to broadcast the film at its scheduled starting time way back in 1968 – or the recently completed 2012 Olympics, fans have certain expectations of how and when their favorite programming is aired. Most recently, NBC dug itself an Olympic-sized ditch in the way it handled broadcasting the games in “unreal” real-time.

I understand there are certain realities at play here. NBC paid a lot of money for these games and needs viewership numbers to achieve positive ROI. But broadcasters need to remember that it’s not 1968 any more. (It is fun to imagine what the reaction to the “Heidi” game would have been like on Twitter, though.) Twitter and Facebook erase the illusion of “live,” and NBC had further egg on its face when it was revealed that even the live streaming events were slightly delayed.

We can learn a lot from these mistakes. Broadcasters know that there are many mediums at play; it’s a matter of blending and complementing them in a way that matches the activity of consumers. For instance, Yahoo Sports, once the king of fantasy football, fell behind in some aspects due to a lack of mobile availability. Yahoo Sports now offers branded mobile experiences from Citi, Miller Lite, Snickers, Toyota and Visa to celebrate the company’s 15th football anniversary. Fantasy Football fans have access across PC, TV, phone and tablet.

The entire industry must follow suit if it wants to offer consumers the ability to interact and build brand loyalty in real-time, as the only true way to offer that is to make sure that all screens are included and that coverage of the event is live and engaging.

Real-time interaction in and out of the venue enhances the event, and your fans will appreciate that they have the ability to stay connected wherever, whenever. ESPN’s Michael Bayle says that the convergence of mobile and social changed the time-shifting model almost as fast as it appeared. “Unless someone is terribly blind or deaf, it precludes any chance to go and rewatch a game safely. You now have to have a live environment,” he said.

Bayle is on to something: Social, mobile and the fan are forever linked, so marketers must react to that marriage in order to be successful. Bayle sees more interaction between fans and ESPN personalities, providing more opportunities for marketers to be part of the bond that only sports bring.

Real time. It’s a binary concept – either it’s real, or it’s delayed — and there is a lot of opportunity out there to build true, loyal communities that impact a broadcaster’s success.

(article first appeared at digiday.com http://www.digiday.com/publishers/building-loyalty-on-the-go/)

Tagged with NBC, Olympics, espn.

September 4, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 4, 2012
  • Jeff Hasen
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Where Do We Go With Olympics After #NBCfail?

Rather than consider the following a delayed analysis of the much tweeted-about NBC Olympics London telecast, think of this as a preview of the Rio Games four years hence.

NBC would certainly spin it that way.

By now, you know that members of the “loudmouth minority” have railed against NBC for delaying the airing of the Summer Games despite making promises that all but the ceremonies would be shown live somewhere.

I was especially aghast after seeing on Twitter the result of Usain Bolt’s 9.63 second 100-meter win before what NBC presented to us as a live stream was sent to American viewers on computers, or in my case, an iPad.

Former President Bill Clinton famously said, "It depends upon what the meaning of the word 'is' is.”

In so many words, NBC said “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘live’ is.”

Recently, Today executive producer, Jim Bell, who also was the Games' executive producer, dismissed the criticism, again incorrectly stating in a Hollywood Reporter interview that “everything was live.”

Why is it such a big deal? Why can’t I be content with 5,500 hours from London, unprecedented as far as Olympics are concerned?

Because we live in real time. Even a delay of 9.63 seconds matters.

If you think I’m wrong, imagine the uproar if the results of the Academy Awards were shown somewhere 10 seconds before the announcements were made on the telecast.

In my house, if I shouted out the winners 10 seconds early, my wife would kick me out in Olympic record fashion. And she would be right.

Live is live. It is 2012.

Which brings us to 2016 and Rio.

According to the Associated Press, NBC chief researcher Alan Wurtzel says that two-thirds of people who knew the results ahead of NBC's tape-delayed telecast said they would watch the events anyway. People who watched the events earlier in the day via computer stream watched the tape-delayed broadcast for a longer time than those who hadn't.

Hello. This presents some pretty obvious implications for the industry.

ESPN, which knows a bit about sports programming, uses tape only for highlights – or so it seems.

“Sports are all about live,” John Kosner, who leads all of ESPN’s digital media properties, told me in my book, Mobilized Marketing: Driving Sales, Engagement, and Loyalty Through Mobil Devices http://www.amazon.com/Mobilized-Marketing-Engagement-Loyalty-Through/dp/11182... “You have to watch and experience the game live. You want to talk about it while it’s happening. You want more information about the game or other games taking place at the same time. That’s all central.”

Real-time interaction in and out of the venue enhances the event, according to Kosner.

“The development of these social networks and utilities like Twitter take it up a level because it makes it apparent that much more is possible. Location-based content, the sharing of photos, the ability to watch video, and more.”

Michael Bayle, now Senior Vice President and General Manager of Mobile at ESPN, says that the convergence of mobile and social changed the time-shifting model almost as fast as it appeared.

“I would argue that’s the biggest interruption that has happened is because of the success of mobile,” he says. “One to three years ago, one could comfortably record their favorite NBA game, baseball game, what have you, and then relax and come home at night and watch it—and choose if you wish to forward through the commercials and just get to the highlights. That’s almost impossible now because of mobile and the instant access to Twitter and other means of social media.

“Unless someone is terribly blind or deaf, it precludes any chance to go and rewatch a game safely. You almost now have to have a live environment.”

Bayle, who has been in mobile so long that some consider him a lifer, believes that social, mobile, and the fan are forever linked.

“Social is critical to be successful in as much as fans by nature will be social, either touting or taunting their friends or loved ones or even finding new friends just by the nature of how people rally around teams so to speak,” he says. “I think there’s a concept here . . . of the concept of the ‘game around the game.’”

Bayle sees more interaction between fans and ESPN personalities, providing more opportunities for marketers to be part of the bond that only sports bring.

“The goal with our mobile teams is to improve the access to fans and to real-time interact with that content,” he says.

Real time. It’s not a nebulous concept despite what NBC wants us to believe.

(first appeared on imediaconnection.com http://blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2012/08/22/what-the-industry-and-rio-o...

 

Tagged with NBC, Olympics.

August 22, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 22, 2012
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Loudmouth Thoughts On NBC and London Olympics

Pointing to the large number of viewers via television, PCs and mobile devices, NBC considers Olympics critics the loud minority. Count me in the unhappy camp.

By the way, it is not the first nor will it be the last time that I’ve been called a loudmouth.

My beef?

Broken promises, the biggest one being that all events but the ceremonies would be shown live.

The Olympics are nothing if not memories.

In my previous professional lives, I was a sportswriter for the 1984 Los Angeles Games, and was project director of the “look and feel” program for the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City, UT. I was all over the Atlanta competitions in 1996 and on the stadium floor in Nagano, Japan, in 1998.

Every one of them fits in the unbelievable experience category. Which takes me to my biggest takeaway from NBC’s London coverage.

I will tell you what live is not – seeing on Twitter the result of Usain Bolt’s 9.63-second 100-meter win before what NBC presented to us as a live stream was sent to U.S. viewers on computers or, in my case, an iPad.

Former president Bill Clinton famously said, "It depends upon what the meaning of the word 'is' is.” In so many words, NBC said, “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘live’ is.”

Why is this such a big deal? Why cannot I be content with 5,500 hours from London, unprecedented as far as Olympics are concerned?

Because we live in real time. Even a delay of 9.63 seconds matters. An estimated 2 billion people saw the race before NBC gave us the “live” look.

If you think I am wrong, imagine the uproar if the results of the Academy Awards were shown somewhere 10 seconds before the announcements were made on the telecast.

In my house, if I shouted out the winners 10 seconds early, my wife would kick me out in Olympic record fashion. And she would be right.

The ceremonies were delayed first to the East Coast of the United States, then three more hours before those of us on the left coast got a look.

I saw live coverage via tweets and blogs, then another round of commentary from East Coasters long before I settled in for the NBC airing.

Easy, you say. Turn everything off. Stay away from the news. It is not happening. It is not how we choose to live.

I have one word for those who are hoping that the International Olympic Committee will intervene and prevent future disappointments – please.

IOC spokesman Mark Adams said, "It's certainly not for us to tell them how to reach their audience.'' Of course it is not. That is the job of the loud minority.

NBC, have you ever considered the fact that we may be right?

(article first appeared on Mobile Marketer - http://www.mobilemarketer.com/cms/opinion/columns/13512.html)

Tagged with NBC, Olympics.

August 15, 2012 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 15, 2012
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