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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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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Discovering A Worse Term Than Phablet

Phablet was my least favorite term in mobile – until Huawei started calling “group selfies” groufies. Help us.

Yahoo had 60 mobile engineers when Marissa Mayer arrived as CEO. It now has more than 500. She says that Yahoo’s mobile traffic will soon surpass that coming from desktop.

U.S. advertisers now spend just 7 cents per U.S. adult per hour spent on mobile. Far below 12 cents for online, 17 cents for TV, and 93 cents for print.

Four in five U.S. smartphone users believe search ads should be customized to their location, according to Google.

The mobile travel audience is 60% male, 40% female overall, skewing to 62% male for smartphones, Millennial Media says.

Most global consumers will soon get a smartphone experience for $25, Coca Cola’s Tom Daly predicts.

"Only" 6% of passengers purchase #Wi-Fi on equipped flights .I bet at least 80% of those are disappointed with quality.

Fifty-five percent of mobile search conversions occur in one hour of a mobile search, a study from Bing concludes.

BlackBerry continued to slip in U.S. market share last quarter. Not much room left to fall.

Three of four smartphone owners have downloaded a Facebook app. Twitter? One in five, according to comScore.

Talk about a niche – rumors of an Uber-like service for jets.

Oh, great. Responsive 2.0 is here, at least that’s what the tweet says.

About 13% of TD Ameritrade trades come from mobile. It is expected to double in the next year.

Mobile video is a niche of a niche, but will see triple digit growth, Vonage’s Kathryn Szumowski said at the Mobile Marketing Forum.

Tweet from the Abilene Baptist Church – “Worshipping with us this morning? Follow along with @PastorBradWhitt's sermon on your smart phone or tablet! » http://bible.com/e/1Q.

Tagged with phablets, smartphones, Yahoo, mobile.

May 11, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 11, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • phablets
  • smartphones
  • Yahoo
  • mobile
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Leftovers From A Brimming Mobile Insider Summit Notebook

According to Travelocity’s Beth Murphy, VP of Global Product Marketing, younger consumers want to do everything on the handheld as opposed to a tablet. She says one reason there is no iPad app yet is that “we want to do something groundbreaking”.

More from Travelocity: the handheld “basket size” is higher than online because people use mobile to buy.

24 Hour Fitness gets 12 percent of its revenue via its web site with upsells like personal training sessions. For now, mobile is just for memberships and is providing no, pardon the pun, lift. It sees no cannibalization by way of loss of web traffic or sales. “But a bit of it is anecdotal”.

Kelly Blue Book gets paid by individual dealers for driving calls tracked by a separate phone number.

Reasons why Century 21 is seeing success via mobile: high profile launch at a realtor convention, weekly training webinars at the start, personalized apps and keywords for brokers.

Tagged with mobile.

August 17, 2011 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 17, 2011
  • Jeff Hasen
  • mobile
  • 1 Comment
1 Comment

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
    Oct 5, 2020, 7:39 AM
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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 @harrison3: "About half of us don’t trust public spaces ... And that’s not changing any time soon. But there’s more bad news. T… https://t.co/2hlqn64NVt
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    RT @MattLockmon: My friend @206andrew is looking for a community specialist to work on his team and manage @tableau's community hub… https://t.co/10Evg95bhS
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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
    Sep 29, 2020, 7:52 AM

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