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Jeff Hasen

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How "Out With The Old" Can Leave You Out In The Cold

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Artificial. Virtual. Augmented. Machine-driven.

These and other words have entered the marketer’s lexicon.

Out with the old. In with the new.

Or not.

“There's going to be a lot more innovation and disruptors,” Stacy Minero, Head of Content Creation at Twitter, told me in an exclusive interview for my new book, The Art of Digital Persuasion. https://amzn.to/2KmpMz7

“I’m not sure how it will play out.  I do think that great stories that are rooted in human insight and strike a cultural chord will be sustainable forever.”

Of course, human insight has been key for marketers for generations. Minero appreciates the introduction of algorithms but sees them as an element in the modern marketing mix rather than a game-changing end-all.

“You're never going to take humans out of the creative process,” she said. “That’s because ideas come from understanding mindset and motivation and universal human truths. But I think technology will continue to up our game in terms of optimization, everything from understanding what hair color resonates in a video to the type of product and packaging you should showcase in a shot.”

Here are three more lessons learned during my half-year of spending time with a dozen digital marketing pioneers.

Participate Rather Than Only Observe

The decades-old concept of focus groups shouldn’t be dismissed even today. However, one expert strongly told me that we need to not just hear others talk about emerging technology, we should experience it ourselves.

“I've always been someone who likes to ‘live in the future’ and I’ve been fortunate enough to have roles where I’m working with cutting edge technology and then going out and speaking to others about what the impacts are,” explained Dave Isbitski, Amazon’s Chief Evangelist, Alexa & Echo.

“That means constantly looking at new technology trends, learning how they apply to our lives, and in the end teaching people what that future may look like. It helps generate people’s ideas and then they run with it.  For a marketer, tech adoption is no different than any other topic. Keep on top of the latest buzz and trends, look at what the community is saying, whether through social media or at networking events, and start to use the latest technology in your own life.”

The learnings, Isbitski told me, are invaluable.

“Not being a late adopter can have tremendous benefit here,” he said. “I’ve talked to marketers who have been using Alexa since 2015 and the ideas they have for what conversations are possible are very different than someone who has never used a device at all.

“Using early versions of technology today can give you a vision for what tomorrow may look like.”

Remember History When It Comes To Adoption

“Any transformative technology encounters challenges to mainstream adoption in its early lifetime, such as cost, size, comfort, and technical barriers,” Microsoft’s Lorraine Bardeen, General Manager Studio Manager, Mixed Reality, told me. “We’ve seen this all before with the very first computers, the Internet, and mobile phones.”

Bardeen said that B2B usage commonly precedes B2C acceptance. That is why she is bullish on Microsoft’s HoloLens progress that has come with business growth.

“Just like the evolution of other similar technology, we expect momentum for the technology to begin in the commercial space and then trickle outward to consumers,” she said.

Microsoft’s Bardeen forecasts a place for all flavors of reality, including mixed, augmented and virtual.

“We believe that these are not separate concepts, but rather labels for different points on a mixed reality continuum,” she said. “The reality is that if one succeeds, then the ecosystem succeeds, and we’re interested in further education and adoption of the spectrum as a whole.

“Specific to marketing, this technology allows marketers to engage with their audiences in new interactive and immersive ways. The possibilities truly are limitless.”

Think Experience Rather Than Technology

Google’s Jason Spero has a healthy respect for technology. He, however, sees it more as an enabler than a story in and of itself.

“The consumer doesn't see the technology,” the Vice President, Performance Media, explained to me. “What the consumer sees is that they should be able to continue their game from a tablet to a mobile phone. That is a logical, rational, human thought.

“And so the better we can do in our research of studying those expectations of consumers, of understanding the moments where they expect things of us, and then drag the technology along with us kicking and screaming, we need to build those experiences.”

 In summary, the digital leaders interviewed rely as much on the lessons of the past than the vision of the future. We would be wise to follow down that path.

-

(first appeared on Mobile Marketer - https://bit.ly/2X0AmgG)

Tagged with The Art Of Digital Persuasion, Microsoft, Google, Lorraine Bardeen, Jason Spero, book.

April 9, 2019 by Jeff Hasen.
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Now What?

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In 2015, I wrote The Art of Mobile Persuasion, a book about the relationships that people have with their mobile devices.

It’s safe to describe them then and now as intimate, engrossing and integral.

The central questions in The Art of Mobile Persuasion were whether brands have opportunities to get in on that action or is three a crowd?

Since then, some businesses have muffed the chance, taking an approach that has been deemed as invasive, impersonal, and/or offering no value. But others large and small have knocked gently, ingratiated themselves, brought something that was welcomed, and seen resulting increases in awareness, loyalty and sales.

To the former group, what were you thinking?

To the latter, we’re good now, right?

Well, no.

Why? The playing field has changed.

Our nurtured customers and prospects are now being wooed by other means.

Though voice interfaces.

And wearables.

Smart appliances, even toilets.

And OTT (over the top) devices.

Virtual and mixed reality software and hardware.

And the list goes on. There’s every reason to believe that the pulls for attention will grow this year, next year, and every year after that.

Of course, this brings with it all sorts of complications.

·      Where will we find our customers and prospects?

·      Where we do want to lead them and what must they find when they get there?

·      How does all of this innovation affect the customer journey?

·      If personalization is the so-called North Star, how do we deliver this on the screens and interfaces of today – and the ones surely coming behind those?

And how does the relationship that your brand has steadily built with customers via the mobile phone survive, evolve, and thrive when eyes and ears are drawn to even more places?

In my new book The Art of Digital Persuasion, the conversation broadens to today’s interfaces, devices, behaviors and technologies.

I again have had the pleasure and privilege of visiting with some of the sharpest marketers and other business leaders that one can identify. I sought out real-world experience, perspective, and advice to give us the knowledge, skills and confidence that we all need to do our jobs -- and, in many cases, to reimagine our current outdated positions given these upended times.

I share what leaders from Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Twitter, ESPN, and others are doing and thinking to address the core question of the new book:

Now what?

The book is now available on Amazon. https://amzn.to/2G4CrCu

 I hope that you’ll give it a look and take the time to learn from these experts just as I have.

Tagged with The Art of Mobile Persuasion, The Art Of Digital Persuasion, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Twitter, ESPN.

April 8, 2019 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Short-Sightedness of a 4 a.m. Text Message

The easiest way to betray trust on mobile? Follow the lead of my eye doctor’s office and send a text message at 4 a.m. to remind someone about an appointment 13 days later. Is it that hard to see the stupidity in that intrusion?

For every $1 spent on a mobile device, $30 of retail sales are influenced by mobile, per Forrester.

65% of Spotify's global streams are now on mobile devices. This covers 70 million users and 30 million subscribers.

More than 40% of the top-selling smartphone apps have no privacy policy, per Forbes.

This is the longest stretch since 2007 where I haven't felt compelled to visit an Apple Store to engage with a new product. How about you?

83% of consumers prefer a talk with a person rather than digital interaction for customer service issues: Accenture.

Marketers need to move from “measuring and marketing to devices, to marketing and measuring people,” according to ESPN’s David Coletti. I devote a section of my The Art of Mobile Persuasion book to ESPN’s moves toward even more personalization.

Apple Pay is coming to mobile websites later this year, according to several reports.

Starbucks says that it is within "30 to 45 days" of releasing a Windows mobile app.

Google has added ride-sharing tab to Maps for iOS.

We might have to start a drinking game every time we hear the term mobile moments. It is the new The Year of Mobile repeated-by-all phrase.

I asked my 22-year-old niece if she knows anyone who owns an Apple Watch. "Only some parents. No one my age," was her response.

Juniper Research predicts app advertising will top $44 billion by 2020, up from $13 billion last year.

CBS plans to sell one of its radio division. Several of the stations ran pioneering mobile campaigns that tapped into listener loyalty.

Tagged with CBS, Forrester, Spotify, Microsoft, The Art of Mobile Persuasion.

March 27, 2016 by Jeff Hasen.
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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.
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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
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Why Responsive Design Can Lead To Unresponsive Consumers

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Coca-Cola's mobile chief Tom Daly chastises those who've considered their work done at the completion of a responsive design project.

“All responsive does is make the content show up on the screen, as if all screens were the same, as modality was the same, as if context was the same,” he said at Mobile FirstLook.

Lose weight or use the “wide selfie” mode? Samsung is marketing the feature available on Galaxy Note 4. Careful who you suggest needs one.

The mobile industry generated $3.3 trillion last year and created 11 million jobs, according to Qualcomm.

Google will stop selling the current version of Google Glass this week. In three days at CES, the largest gather of tech pros, I saw only two people wearing the spectacles.

56 percent of consumers expect brands to respond to their tweets within an hour, per Twitter research.

Time Inc. generated 100 percent revenue growth in mobile in 2014. It has 72 million mobile unique users a month, which is 80 percent growth year over year.

Tablets and mobile phones are not interchangeable for marketers, according to Forrester’s Julie Ask. Only 15 percent of tablets are always connected.

More from Forrester: 21 percent of U.S. consumers have an expectation of anything, anywhere, anytime. Another 29 percent are transitioning there.

Also, more than 40 percent of consumers are tired of pulling their mobile device out to see what happened. It’s an opportunity for tactile technology and signals.

Coca-Cola’s app strategy is a work in progress. Only two apps have ever had more than one million downloads.

Mobile is still a single digit percentage spend of Coke's overall global digital budget.

How’s $2,499 for a gold Apple Watch? For some, it will be about buying fashion and function.

Holiday shoppers tweeted more than 28 million mentions about their gift purchases - up 8 percent year over year, per SAP.

Just 11 percent of U.S. digital retail dollars are spent via mobile, eMarketer reports.

A London phone booth has been turned into a solar-powered mobile charging station.

Mobile app usage grew 76 percent year over years, Flurry research showed.

Google Play now has more apps than Apple's App Store, appFigures said.

Tagged with selfie, twitter, Time Inc, Google, Google Glasses.

January 18, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
  • January 18, 2015
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - From Coins To Bitcoin For NYC Meters

New York City is weighing bitcoin and Apple Pay for parking meters. I grew up there needing quarters to fill ‘em so I could put my dimes in the Zerox machine in the library. Despite what you see from my pretty website picture, I'm as old as dirt.

Facebook is now operating at a $10 billion revenue run rate from mobile, per industry analyst Chetan Sharma. Twitter and Yahoo also exceeded $1 billion in mobile revenue for 2014.

Also from Sharma, Amazon led in mobile commerce with over $15 billion in revenues from mobile.

Holiday SMS promotions by major retailers dramatically plummeted year over year, BDO said. One third of marketers asked went the text message route in 2013. Only 7 percent said they would do so in the just concluded shopping season.

Kodak is reportedly back at CES with a cell phone. Given how late it is entering the game, Kodak isn’t likely to even be in the picture by the end of 2015.

After a long break, I resumed using Twitterific recently. Since, I’ve been getting daily short-lived “connection errors” on my Mac. At that point, it loses its “ificness”.

Tweet of the week - @helpareporter was “looking for burlesque stars to give ‘regular’ women tips on performing their own private dances”. Two comments: that story again? And how does one define a regular woman?

According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, cellphones are involved in 1.6 million auto crashes each year.

In 2014, U.S adults spent 23% more time on #mobile during an average day than in 2013, says eMarketer.

Ericsson: "90% of the global population over 6 years old will own a mobile phone by 2020.

Companies that allow users to submit expenses via mobile have 28% shorter cycle times: Concur.

Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas Cowboys, is worth $3 billion and he still uses a flip phone, reports Business Insider. So does Indianapolis quarterback Andrew Luck.

Tagged with bitcoin, Apple Pay, CES, Kodak, Facebook, twitter.

January 4, 2015 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Will "Text Neck" Be As Common As A Selfie?

A text neck “epidemic" due to excessive lowering of the head to look at our mobile phones? A medical researcher told the Washington Post that “it is an epidemic or, at least, it’s very common.” The web and Twitter went wild with the hype. Most of us read it with our heads down.

22% of men made a purchase on their smartphones last year, compared to 18% of women, per SeeWhy. Will that change this holiday season?

Square says the company will begin accepting Apple Pay next year.

Stop the madness – I heard a new mobile term “beacosystem” for players in campaigns involving beacons.

Another “say it ain’t so” mobile finding– Motorola says that spice isn’t just for your pumpkin latte anymore. MotoX has spice colored backs.

1 in 10 mobile ad impressions in retail leads to a store visit: iAd.

People are now spending more time with mobile devices than with television, according to Flurry.

Not just for newbies: 76-year-old retailer Nebraska Furniture Mart has deployed beacons.

Holiday web spending will rise 16%, comScore projects, with mobile growing 25%.

100% adoption of mobile payments? Ha. The day that there are no bank tellers.

ESPN has 94 million unique users via mobile — 76% of its digital users come through phones, tablets; 40% through apps, and 17% through ESPN Fantasy Football.

19% of shoppers plan to increase Cyber Monday shopping despite shipping costs and online security concerns: Kelly Scott Madison Holiday Shopping Study.

Over 50% of YouTube viewing happens on mobile.

Google is now highlighting mobile friendly websites in search results.

90% of the global population will have a mobile phone by 2020, says Ericsson.

Target has included product inventory search functionality into its mobile app.

In 2015-2016, the percentage of digital travel researchers using mobile will rise from 54.6% to 62.2%: eMarketer.

97% of fantasy football players make weekly changes to their teams using a mobile phone or tablet, according to Thinknear.

53% of Thanksgiving Day online shopping will take place via mobile: IBM. Because we’ll be too bloated to move to our computers?

Tagged with Apple Pay, twitter, iAd, smartphone.

November 23, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Assessing An App That Predicts The Second That You Will Die

The new Deadline app guesstimates your death day for you. I’m not sure why anyone would want this, but similar “forecasting” has been available online for years. But with this app, you can set up notifications to view a countdown clock to the second of your supposed departure from Earth. Just ate French fries? Whoops, there went another 12 minutes.

In Virginia, cops can force you to unlock an iPhone with Touch ID, but can't ask for your passcode, according to Engadget.

83% of U.S. consumers now stream TV, up from 74% a year ago: Magid.

Tweet of the week – from @jefftiedrich: Instagram is down. Can I come over and look at your food?

Half of YouTube's traffic is now from mobile.

A third who bought a wearable in the past year no longer use the device regularly, according to PwC. Is it a success that two thirds still do? I’d say so.

Facebook now makes 66% of its money from mobile.

“Expose” on bgr.com says that Tim Cook works hard at Apple and expects other to work hard, too. News here?

70% of consumers delete an email immediately if it doesn’t render properly on their mobile device, per Blue Hornet.

Mobile offers are redeemed 10 times more frequently than print offers, according to eMarketer.

Saying that it is not moving fast enough, Twitter has replaced its CFO, COO, and VPs of media, engineering and product — all in the past six months.

Dubbed Shazam for birds, an app called Warblr is able to identify a bird’s species by comparing sounds that users record to previously recorded birdsongs.

According to CEO Howard Schultz, the Starbucks app processed $1.17 billion in 2013, and the company has already processed nearly $1.4 billion in 2014. It is expected to reach $2 billion by the end of the year.

Next year should be even better - in the second half of next year, customers in select markets will be able to use the mobile ordering and payment app to have food and drinks delivered.

China has 600 million mobile uses (2X the U.S. population).

Tagged with Facebook, twitter, Instagram, iphone.

November 2, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Renee Zellweger As Spokesperson For "Not Your Selfie" App

Celebrity endorsements have flopped in mobile, but how can Renee Zellweger not be the face of Loosery, a video chatting app that supposedly makes one look more attractive? Renee can build the “Not Your Selfie” category.

Mobile offers are redeemed 10x more than print, Hubspot says.

A TiVo study reports 51% (vs. 36% last year) of TV viewers multitask every time they watch TV.

A study by American Express says that fewer will use mobile device this year vs. last for holiday shopping. I’m not buying it.

82% worry that wearables would invade privacy, according to PwC report. That’s a hurdle beyond the issue of wearables not solving problems.

After a week with the iPhone 6, I have to say it is borderline too big for me. I’m coming from a 5 and really feel of that one in my pocket. I realize that it’s a to each his/her own thing, like most things in mobile.

81% of U.S. online consumers say they're likely to avoid websites that have left them dissatisfied, per Forrester. Are the others just gluttons for punishment?

I see where Moms find tracking family health via smartphone too time consuming. Quick, ease of use are musts in new iterations.

Yahoo shared mobile sales for the first time: $200 million last quarter, 17% of the total. It says that mobile revenues for 2014 will exceed $1.2 billion.

The iPhone 6 "caught fire" allegation was as predictable as a new Apple rumor starting within 5 minutes of a product release. Exploding phone stories, too, are almost always hoaxes.

Microsoft reportedly plans to launch a wearable device within weeks.  Supposedly it will work with iOS and Android, unlike the Apple Watch.

Tweet of the week? From sportswriter Rick Reilly: “Cowboys' RB Joseph Randle steals underwear, gets an underwear endorsement deal. Lesson? Next time steal a Mercedes.”

Tagged with Renee Zellweger, iphone, app, Yahoo, Microsoft, Android, ioS.

October 25, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • October 25, 2014
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Beware of Self-Destructing Picture Apps

Have you heard about Xim from Microsoft, a so-called self-destructing photo app? It’s because the picture goes away over time, not because the images are of an act leading to one's downfall. I suppose that it could be both.

Download an app called Rest Room Gallery designed to show your artistic side while on the toilet. Then explain that to your wife. Ready. Go.

Is there bigger proof of the iPhone's allure than millions waiting for supply rather than buying something else? Last week, I went to an Apple Store that had received two units to sell for an entire day. And that was typical, according to an employee.

Tweet of the week? This one from @levie aka Aaron Levie, CEO of Box – “Jeff Bezos is opening a retail store and owns a newspaper. Turns out everything we thought about the Internet is wrong.”

As for my reaction to Amazon opening a physical store in NYC – the company is about selling stuff. The what remains the same here. This is just another how that will work out or won’t.

Over 65% of users use Facebook in a language other than English, the company says.

Half of the traffic on AT&T Wireless comes from YouTube & Netflix, the carrier reports.

With 7 billion mobile phones and a war chest to get things done, there is plenty of room for Google to create a messaging app that it hopes will rival WhatsApp.

Forrester says that mobile will be 40% of the online ad spend in 2015.

37% of SMBs claim that print newspaper ads are the best source for attracting customers, Borrell Associates tells us.

It has come to this for BlackBerry - Wall Street cheered an $11 million quarterly loss.

Digital video and mobile now make up 20% of Mondelēz's global spend, according to Adweek.

Tagged with Xim, Microsoft, Apple, iphone, Box, Amazon.

October 12, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Do QR Codes Have Better Prospects Than The New York Giants?

QR codes have more doubters than the New York Giants, but they may have a better chance than the football team of having a successful fall season.

According to a new Adobe report, 76% of consumers asked said that their QR code scans brought them to a mobile-optimized experience. It provides a lesson about staying current on mobile activity. Report after report in the last 18 months or so put QR codes in the “can do without” pile.

My takeaway from Pew’s expert predictions that, by 2020, most people will adopt smart-device swiping for purchases? Maybe. Even so, will the payment companies and Apple, among many others, be patient for this to grow over a half-decade?

As Yahoo’s David Pogue tweeted, “This business of paying with your phone won't be real magic until it works everywhere (not just the 200K stores with receivers).”

More than three-quarters of the leading brick and mortar department stores use push notifications. Of course, that’s a tactic, not a strategy.

Customers are eager to share their location if you give them something in return, says Ryan Craver, who leads mobile for Lord & Taylor.

I’m not promising that I won't get an Apple Watch (I know myself and, ummm, time will tell), but I’ve been living with the feeling that I'm too connected at times. More often equals bad. Or at least stress that isn’t welcome at what could or should be off-times. I know, I know, it's all about self-control, right? Easier said than done, especially with the expectations of others.

I see that Rolex is advertising on the BBC homepage. Do you think that company feels breath on back of neck with Apple Watch. Probably just a little for now.

Even with an intuitive interface, education needs to come with Apple Watch and health apps. With my now departed Fitbit (it went back due to a recall), I was surprised to know that I was burning calories sleeping.

Speaking of education, the same goes for Apple Pay. My wife's first questions were around unintended purchases while walking by a terminal.

Is it wise for Apple to compel Apple Watch owners to also have an iPhone? Or does that limit sales by shutting out too many who carry other devices?

An app lets women call taxis driven only by women.

Twitter suggests that I follow Karl Rove. It is as clueless as TiVo suggesting poker matches for me, a non-card player. Recommendation engines leave a lot to be desired.

Tagged with QR codes, apple, Apple Watch, iphone, twitter.

September 14, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • September 14, 2014
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The Smartphone Turns 20 And No Longer Connects To Fax Machines

The world’s first smartphone just turned 20. Yes, there was a smartphone before the iPhone.

The IBM Simon wasn’t called a smartphone, but it did feature software apps. It could also be linked to a fax machine. Young ‘uns, consult Wikipedia or a history book if you have never heard of a fax machine.

It was amusing to see some tech sites diss TMZ for showing and hyping supposed bogus iPhone 6 photos. Of course, hunting for clicks, the same sites went that route themselves.

Headline: Researchers Say They Can Charge a Phone With Ambient Sound. Me: consumers need a compelling reason to upgrade. A device that constantly has power is meaningful to many.

Half of Facebook and Twitter users get news on those sites, Pew reports. It was on Twitter that I learned about the deaths of Robin Williams and Michael Jackson, not to mention the ultimate fate of Osama bin Laden.

More than one in three seniors in the U.S. will make a digital purchase this year, eMarketer tells us.

Travel "deals" on Twitter remain a head-scratch - who do you know who will head to Ho Chi Minh on Friday as result of Wednesday night "offer"?

How many times are Promoted Tweets repeated? I wasn't interested the first, fifth or 20th time.

Real value - Google Now for Android shows alternate flights when yours gets delayed.

Lookout Mobile Security nabbed $150 million in funding. As was the case with PCs, consumers will be slow to protect their devices. This is an Enterprise play for now.

Apple supposedly wants to be a “hub” of health data and is in talks with top hospitals. Tracking will soon be more robust than calorie counts and steps taken.

More than half of 18- to 24-year-olds say they "never" unplug from technology, according to eMarketer. We at least have that in common.

 

Tagged with smartphone, apple, Google, twitter, Facebook.

August 17, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • August 17, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • smartphone
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer: Wanna Pay To Experience My Life? Didn't Think So

An app on Google Glass will let people pay to watch a livestream of everything that you do. Name one person who would do that. In my case, neither my mom, wife, nor anyone else would.

I recommend that we get the basics right – location, device type, personalization and attribution - before we consider scented mobile ads.  This one smells like a gimmick.

Notifications via twitter.com rarely are accurate. When you look , nothing was retweeted and there is no new follower. What am I missing? Probably nothing.

Consumers choose brands that engage their passions 1.5 times more than those that just urge them to buy, Google says. That sounds low to me.

Another one that appears to be lacking? 62% of customers looking for a company on their smartphone expect a mobile-friendly website, according to Forrester.

In related news, 79 percent of mobile users who find a site difficult to use will leave and never return.

Kobe Bryant is reportedly among those pro athletes testing the capabilities of Apple’s  iWatch. Do you think that he put in a request to slow Father Time?

To those who believe all mobile rumors, remember that speculation about Amazon Fire pricing and supposed customer access to free data was dead wrong.

More evidence of convergence - SportsCenter now has a social media producer within ESPN’s control room for each show.

Too many pings or consumer value created? iBeacon has rolled out in 100 stores on one street in Europe.

What planet does this tweeter live on? “Can Facebook retool itself and dominate mobile or will it run its course?”

Gartner: 75% of mobile security breaches will be the result of mobile application misconfiguration.

Globally, the number of people who own use smartphones monthly is expected to increase more than 25% this year.

Tagged with Google Glasses, iPhone, Google, smartphones, twitter.

June 21, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • June 21, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Google Glasses
  • iPhone
  • Google
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Twitter Vs. SMS For SMBs

Regular readers know that I’m bullish on text messaging for small or medium-sized businesses needing to bring more customers more often.

There are tens of thousands of examples of SMBs seeing value in the development and nurturing of a permission-based database. One that I heard about recently is a tattoo shop in Utah that fills open appointment slots by sending out offers to opt-ins that get viewed and acted upon within minutes.

There are dozens of other examples in my Mobilized Marketing book. 

Of course, SMBs have alternatives. One is Twitter, a service that promises that it can help an SMB “connect with potential customers and increase your follower base.”

Follower bases are good, but what about the more customers, more often need?

Let’s take a look:

Twitter encourages SMBs to create a presence on the social network, then to integrate it across all marketing channels.

It recommends that businesses feature their @username on their website and ask customers to follow them. Further, Twitter suggests SMBs import an email contact list to follow and interact with customers. Also, it encourages businesses to join industry-related conversations and connect with influencers through hashtags.

Through a lead form, it offers a marketing “kickstart” with supposed easy tips, templates and a content calendar.

Twitter has dedicated account for SMBs (@TwitterSmallBiz) as well as a blog

https://blog.twitter.com/small-business.

Have you followed an SMB on Twitter?

Have you gone into a brick and mortar or bought on line after seeing a tweet from an SMB?

Do you know an SMB that is using Twitter and seeing success?

Is there an SMB that replaced a permission-based SMS club with Twitter and grew sales and loyalty?

Twitter says that it has 255 million active monthly users with 77% of the accounts outside the U.S.

There are 326 million mobile users in America, according to CTIA – The Wireless Association. comScore says that 75% text on a regular basis. Multiple studies report that approximately one-third of mobile subscribers are interested in joining a text club from a brand or business.

There just doesn’t seem to be any rationale for using Twitter and not text.

--

This post was written as part of the IBM for Midsize Business program http://Goo.gl/t3fgW, which provides midsize businesses with the tools, expertise and solutions they need to become engines of a smarter planet. I’ve been compensated to contribute to this program, but the opinions expressed in this post are my own and don't necessarily represent IBM's positions, strategies or opinions.

Tagged with twitter, text messages.

May 28, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • May 28, 2014
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Focusing On the Unfocused Two-Year-Olds

Thirty-eight percent of toddlers 2 or under are using a smartphone or tablet, according to Common Sense Media. Try doing a “focus” group with this crowd.

Declaring jet lag “fundamentally a math problem,” researchers say they have devised a mobile app to overcome it. Entrain tells you when to get more exposure to light and when not to do so. I use the old-fashioned method – I have three dogs to tell me when to open my eyes. They never forget.

The American smartphone user spends 30 minutes a day updating social networks.

The spend on location-targeted mobile ads is expected to increase 55 percent from $2.9B to $4.9B in 2014 & reach $15.7B in 2018, Mediapost says.

The average U.S. mobile consumer spent 86 percent of time on apps, only 14 percent on mobile web, according to Flurry.

Half of U.S. millennials own a laptop, smartphone and tablet.

CNBC and others report that Amazon will announce its first phone, with a 3D screen, by June.

Meanwhile, the Amazon Appstore hits 200,000 apps, almost tripling in one year.

The $1,500 price tag, plus the use of technology that we know is evolving, are reasons to not buy Google Glasses during public sale this week. Still, there is some temptation.

Gaming apps accounted for 41 percent of downloads from the Apple and Google stores in February.

Twitter has 580 million inactive users.

A prototype charger can power up a smartphone in 30 seconds. The question is whether it can be mass-produced.

I see that Klout has redesigned its iOS app. I would be more excited if it redesigned Klout.

Turner says video streams of March Madness were up 42 percent.

There are now more mobile-only or mobile-centric homes in the US (55 percent; 133 million adults) than those with landlines, industry analyst Greg Sterling reports.

 

Tagged with smartphones, apps, twitter, social networks, Google Glasses.

April 13, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • April 13, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • smartphones
  • apps
  • twitter
  • social networks
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "BlackBerry Find" Edition

Nothing says that there are differences in mobile phone usage better than a photo that shows a teenager in England stuck in a storm drain trying to retrieve her BlackBerry. In America, a teenager would head down there and find hundreds of the less-than-popular device. Actually, he or she would never make the effort.

Eighty-five percent of time Twitter users spend on Twitter happens on a mobile device, comScore says. Also, mobile Twitter usage in big cities primarily comes from iPhones, according to a separate report.

Within days, there were 12 million downloads of Microsoft Office on iOS devices. As industry analyst Chetan Sharma points out, it was the most success Microsoft has had with mobile.

Forty-one years ago this month, the first cell phone call was made. The first mobile phones cost $3,300 each and had a battery life of about 20 minutes.

An Apple touchscreen patent shows the company supposedly has figured out when we’re mad at our iPhone. But what if we are mad at something else?

Are you marketing to older folks? Pew is out with a new report – 59 percent of senior citizens use the Internet; 77 percent have cell phones; 47 percent have broadband at home.

One third of wearable device wearers are ditching them, a new stat from Endeavor Partners says.

By the end of the year, there will be more active mobile devices than the population -- 7.3 billion.

The majority of global mobile video viewing in Q4 2013 was content more than 30 minutes.

Do you think March Madness took mobile users away from their devices? Hardly. Over half of U.S. smartphone and tablet users were using mobile to stay current.

In Nigeria, over 500 facilities are using mobile to diagnose and treat tuberculosis.

SMB mobile website adoption in America is now 23 percent, Hibu says.

YouTube gets 50 percent of time spent on mobile entertainment apps.

I wonder if my wife will be OK if I opt in for Hooters offers via SMS in the name of research.

Tagged with BlackBerry, Microsoft, iPhone, twitter.

April 6, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • April 6, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Of WhatsAppitis and More Pictures of Little Jimmy

Can tapping out mobile messages damage your health? A Granada doctor diagnosed sore wrists as WhatsAppitis. The treatment was "complete abstinence from using the phone to send messages," along with anti-inflammatory drugs.

Twitter now allows picture tagging, up to 4 photos per tweet. Did you see my kid in his hat. And with his sister?

50 percent of users say mobile is the first and last thing they touch when awake. There are punchlines galore. Just not going there.

By 2015, 43 percent of business tablet users will print from mobile devices, HP says. What’s taking so long?

Mobile advertising and search investments by marketers are forecast to increase an average 55 percent annually in 2014, according to Jack Myers.

Millennial Media ‏says that mobile rich media can increase click-through rates by as much as 350 percent over standard banners.

Nineteen percent of Google’s ad revenue came from mobile search ads in 2013 with eMarketer projecting that it will rise to 30 percent over the next three years.

Rankings are subjective by nature but Amazon is only No. 18 on Fast Company’s most innovative list?

My Fitbit Force is being returned due to recall. Actually, that’s great news since innovation is happening fast in the wearables category. Will get more for less.

BlackBerry beat quarterly expectations and made progress on its turnaround. Who expected that?

LinkedIn profiles with images are 11 times more likely to be viewed than those without. I would’ve guessed 50-1.

Headline asked if sales of high-end smartphones have peaked. You get more today for less. That’s not hard to understand.

Report: Sprint to launch HD Voice nationwide by July. Voice is the killer app? In 2014?

Instagram now has 200 million users, including 50 million in the last six months.

Tagged with twitter, Instagram, whatsapp, BlackBerry, Fitbit, amazon.

March 30, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • March 30, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • twitter
  • Instagram
  • whatsapp
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Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - Swiping at NFC Hype

7-Eleven and Best Buy stopped Near-Field communications (NFC) initiatives, delivering a blow to those who have hyped the heck out of the concept for years.

The White House is testing Samsung and LG phones. BlackBerry may be thrown out of Washington like an under-producing congressman.

Twitter is experimenting showing how many people saw your tweets. My guess is we overestimate how much of our content is seen in such a noisy digital world.

Apple may improve your iPhone's battery life by understanding your habits. Personalization rocks in mobile.

PayPal is working with mobile location tracking firm Placed to connect mobile ads to in-store visits.

I’m betting that you’ve seen many recently recount their first Tweet. I feel like it’s akin to sharing my lunch from today. Neither my mom nor wife cares. And neither do you.

Now you can tip in Starbucks mobile app through an iOS update.

Tribune's Newsbeat app lets robots read you the news in the car. As opposed to the human robots who read the news from your local station.

People in the U.S. are now spending almost an hour more per day on mobile devices than watching traditional TV, according to a Millward Brown survey.

Nielsen says most people have heard of wearables, and that one in six use one. That seems very high to me although it surprised me that Pebble sold 400,000 smartwatches in 2013.

Facebook will grow its share of worldwide mobile internet ad dollars to more than one in five this year--behind only Google, eMarketer says.

Amazon will soon begin shipping a video-streaming device.

Apple's iPhone 5c, described by many as a failure, outsold Blackberry and Windows Phone last quarter.

The mobile health market will top $49 billion by 2020, SAP forecasts.

Tagged with Best Buy, BlackBerry, LG, Samsung, iPhone, Windows, Microsoft.

March 23, 2014 by Jeff Hasen.
  • March 23, 2014
  • Jeff Hasen
  • Best Buy
  • BlackBerry
  • LG
  • Samsung
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Unknown-6.jpeg

Notes From A Mobilized Marketer - The "Monkeys Flying" Edition

Unknown-6.jpeg

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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Jeff Hasen

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