Yesterday we found a very interesting article a bout the MobileNet on
Advertising Age.
Advertising Age is a well-respected, preeminent source that influences digital trends in business, culture, media and marketing. Some quotes:
If the Mobilenet is a new mass medium, what would you call the
receiving device? The logical name is "MobiPhone," to reflect the
millions of dot-mobi websites sure to come.
Companies that want to take advantage of this new medium will quickly
register their company and brand names as dot-mobi domain names.
Furthermore, each dot-mobi website should be considered separately from
the company or the brand's dot-com website. Two different media demand
two different approaches. (You wouldn't run a radio advertisement on
TV, so why would you run a dot-com program for a dot-mobi audience?)
Hopefully, next year we'll check DQ.Mobi instead.
Here is the link:
http://adage.com/columns/article?article_id=126880
Mobilenet Promises to Be the Next Big Medium
But Don't Get Sidetracked Into Third-Screen Thinking
By
Al Ries
Published: May 06, 2008
We are on the verge of witnessing the birth of a new
mass-communications medium. It's the second new mass medium to appear
in the last two decades.
The internet arrived in the 1990s, joining the other four mass
media: 1) The book 2) The periodical 3) Radio 4) TV. Each new mass
medium has created enormous upheavals in society.
- The book ignited the knowledge explosion.
- The periodical furthered the growth of democracy.
- Radio created a celebrity-oriented society.
- TV homogenized the culture.
The internet, the latest and newest mass medium, continues to make
waves. "We are not witnessing the beginning of the end of old media,"
Advertising Age's Bob Garfield wrote recently. "We are witnessing the
middle of the end of old media."
"Both print and broadcast -- burdened with unwieldy, archaic
and crushingly expensive means of distribution -- are experiencing the
disintegration of the audience critical mass they require to operate
profitably," Mr. Garfield continued. "Moreover, they are losing that
audience to the infinitely fragmented digital media, which have
near-zero distribution costs and are overwhelmingly free to the user."
Fasten your seat belts. On the horizon, there's another
profound shift in media, consumer behavior and technology coming. In
the near future we are likely to welcome the arrival of a sixth
mass-communications medium.
And what is this earth-shaking new medium? It's the Mobilenet.
The what? Surely you are joking, Al. The Mobilenet is just a
subset of the internet. Just another way of going online. Just another
way of surfing the net without using a computer. That's why mobile
devices are commonly called the "third screen."
Third-screen thinking is going to cause you and your company
to miss the boat. Which big brands were created by moving content from
one medium to another? Very, very few.
- Moving The Wall Street Journal online didn't save Dow Jones from the clutches of Rupert Murdoch for just $5 billion.
- Moving ESPN onto cellphones didn't take it to the big leagues.
- So far, moving TV shows to the internet hasn't created as much
value as one internet site, YouTube.com. Less than 20 months after its
launch, YouTube was bought by Google for $1.65 billion.
Google can afford to splurge. In the first quarter of this year, Google
had net income of $1.3 billion. In the same quarter, The New York Times
Co. lost $350,000. Moving the Times to the internet didn't solve the
company's financial problems. Last year, NYTimes.com had estimated
revenue of $27.6 million, pretty small potatoes for a site that was
launched more than 11 years ago.
In spite of its dubious record, the content movement continues
to gain momentum. The telecoms plus the TV industry are making massive
efforts to move TV to cellphones, in spite of surveys that show,
according to Yankee Group analyst Linda Barrabee, only 5% of U.S.
consumers are willing to pay for mobile TV.
The software industry is also spending a fortune developing
programs to permit these inter-medium transfers. Two weeks ago,
Microsoft unveiled "Live Mesh," a software program to link all
internet-enabled devices. "Not just PCs and phones," reported Ray
Ozzie, the company's chief software architect, "but TVs, game consoles,
digital picture frames, DVRs, media players, cameras and camcorders,
home servers ... our car's entertainment and navigation systems and
more."
That's the wrong approach. A new medium calls for new brands,
not for extensions of existing brands. The internet didn't reward
traditional brands like The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times,
ABC, NBC, CBS, Barnes & Noble and Hallmark. It rewarded new brands
created especially for the net. Dot-com brands like Amazon, eBay,
Yahoo, Expedia, Netflix, MySpace, Facebook and AOL.
The Mobilenet will also reward new brands created especially
for the medium. Like Loopt, a service that lets people with
GPS-equipped phones share their real-time locations with friends.
A slimmed-down, warmed-over dot-com brand isn't going to make it on the Mobilenet.
Laying the foundationThe Mobilenet, of course, isn't going
to become an overnight success. (The internet didn't either.) A number
of developments need to come first.
On the sending side, the missing ingredients are the dot-mobis
that will make the receiving device a universal, carry-everywhere
product much like the cellphone.
On the receiving side, the missing ingredient is a gadget that
integrates telecom service with three technologies in an attractive and
convenient package: 1) GPS, global-positioning-system receiver; 2)
scanner; and 3) voice-recognition software.
Oddly enough, the most heavily hyped new product of the 21st
century (Apple's iPhone) doesn't include any of those three
technologies. Too bad. With all of Apple's brilliant design and
technology skills, the company could have pioneered and dominated the
Mobilenet for decades to come.
Instead, Apple perfected the smartphone, a convergence device
destined to remain a niche product. The first smartphone (the Nokia
9000) was introduced 12 years ago. Yet today the smartphone accounts
for only 10% of the global cellphone market.
In the last quarter, Apple sold 1,703,000 iPhones, about 6% of the
global smartphone market. Not exactly earth-shaking results. In the
same quarter, Apple sold 10,644,000 iPods, about 70% of the MP3-player
market.
Besides market share, there's another striking difference
between the two products. The iPod, a divergence device, pioneered a
new category. The iPhone, a convergence device, was not designed to
create a new category, but to improve on an existing category, always a
risky strategy for a would-be market leader.
Dawn of a new deviceIf the Mobilenet is a new mass medium,
what would you call the receiving device? The logical name is
"MobiPhone," to reflect the millions of dot-mobi websites sure to come.
Names don't always describe what a device is really used for.
Most people do little "computing" on a computer. (I do my computing on
a printing calculator.) A MobiPhone may not necessarily include a
cellphone. Many people might like a separate device to make telephone
calls.
Obviously some people are thinking along similar lines. To me,
the most interesting news item of the month was Nokia's purchase of
Navteq, a firm that collects map data from around the world, for $8.1
billion.
Eight-point-one billion? That's one and a half Wall Street
Journals for a company with revenue of just $853 million last year.
That mind-boggling number tells you what the folks in Finland are
thinking about. It ties in with the thought that the GPS receiver will
be the key function of future telecom devices.
The global positioning system, like every technological
change, creates the conditions for a product or a medium to diverge in
the same way that environmental changes create the conditions for a
species to diverge.
Mobile marketing would snowballFirst the internet; now the
Mobilenet. That's how divergence works. Furthermore, the Mobilenet
promises to make the dream of mobile marketing a reality.
Up till now, mobile marketing has captured a trivial slice of
the advertising market ($708 million last year) even though the
cellphone predates the worldwide web.
The potential Mobilenet marketplace dwarfs the internet. Last
year more than 1.15 billion mobile phones were sold worldwide, compared
to only 271.2 million personal computers. In other words, more than
four times as many mobile phones were bought than PCs. And, in my
opinion, most consumers will find a GPS-equipped MobiPhone to be a
device they can't live without.
The MobiPhone is not just another device, of course. It's the
receiving end of another medium, one that is unique and different from
the internet. And one likely to be larger and more universal than the
internet. Companies that want to take advantage of this new medium will
quickly register their company and brand names as dot-mobi domain
names.
Furthermore, each dot-mobi website should be considered
separately from the company or the brand's dot-com website. Two
different media demand two different approaches. (You wouldn't run a
radio advertisement on TV, so why would you run a dot-com program for a
dot-mobi audience?)
Long-term, "mobile" is going to become a very important part
of the overall marketing environment in America. What kinds of
advertising approaches are best suited to the new mobile medium?
Consumers empowered
In my opinion, there are two types of advertising: one that might be described as "passive" advertising, the other as "active."
Passive advertising is conventional advertising found in
newspapers, magazines, radio and TV. It interrupts the reader, listener
or viewer in order to present "a message from the sponsor" of the
medium.
Active advertising, on the other hand, is initiated by the
consumer. Search advertising on the internet is a typical example. But
there's active advertising in conventional media, too. In particular,
classified advertising in newspapers and telephone directories. Roughly
40% of all advertising on the internet is "active." This is what has
made Google such a big success.
The Mobilenet is going to be an even bigger medium for active
advertising than the internet. That's why there is a golden opportunity
for a Google-like brand specially designed to search dot-mobi websites
and coordinate with the user's exact location.
But that's only the beginning.
A MobiPhone with a 2D barcode scanner will enable consumers to
get a wealth of information by scanning products in supermarkets,
drugstores, clothing stores.
MobiPhone users might be able to arrange to be notified when
certain things occur; for example, when a celebrity shows up at a
restaurant or nightclub.
It's easy to visualize what a useful device a MobiPhone could be if it is served by appropriate dot-mobi websites.
- What's the speed limit? (Maybe we can avoid those huge pileups that
sometimes occur in heavy fog by automatically lowering speed limits
when visibility is impaired.)
- How far is the next exit and what facilities can be found there?
- Without stopping to read them, what do those historic markers actually say?
- Location of the nearest hotel/motel and the price of a room?
- Location of the nearest gas station and the price of gasoline?
- Location of the nearest restaurant by type and price level?
- What's the Parker number on that bottle of wine? (One of the many facts that might be available by simply scanning a label.)
What
consumers can do with the receiving device is not the most significant
aspect of the Mobilenet. More significant are the changes in structure
the new medium will facilitate.
For example, taxicab dispatch systems are likely to disappear,
since a consumer will be able to see the location of the nearest
available cab and call one directly. Similar changes are likely in all
types of dispatching systems.
Consumers will find many other ways to use a MobiPhone. Every
August for the last eight years, my wife and I have driven around the
scenic areas of the Southwest. Every afternoon on those trips, we would
keep an eagle eye out for a Dairy Queen in order to snare a couple of
their chocolate-dipped cones.
Hopefully, next year we'll check DQ.Mobi instead.
~ ~ ~
Al Ries is the author or co-author of 11 books on
marketing including his latest, "The Origin of Brands," which discusses
how the Darwinian concept of "divergence" applies to the world of
business. He and his daughter Laura Ries are partners in the marketing
strategy firm Ries & Ries. Their website: www.ries.com.