Sunday, June 21, 2009

The Growth of Mobile Marketing

With marketers all a twitter about Twitter and other social networking sites, an additional communications segment is growing quickly that will provide the same opportunities for business outreach.

The mobile marketing industry has seen exceptional growth over the past year. Increased partnerships between brands, wireless carriers and digital advertising and marketing agencies has led to numerous mobile success stories.

One of the major remaining challenges for the mobile industry, however, is building faith among consumers that mobile marketing is a positive way to engage with their favorite brands. Since the consumer is solely central to the mobile marketing experience it becomes a very individual way to communicate.

Because mobile devices are so highly personal, to make marketing messages powerful and valuable, there must be an underlying element of trust; otherwise, marketing messages get diluted and could be viewed with suspicion and mistrust. Consumers must have confidence in the mobile marketing experience. One small blip and a consumer will react to mobile messaging like they respond to unsolicited phone sales calls.

Brands and advertisers must be able to provide positive and valuable experiences. If consumers don’t truly buy into and understand the rules of engagement for the messages and marketing programs they’re receiving, chances are they’ll hit the delete button without even looking at the content.

Brands using mobile as a marketing channel need to project and deliver messages that consumers believe are positive, highly relevant, somewhat entertaining and of specific value to them individually.

Recently, Mike Wehrs, president/CEO of the Mobile Marketing Association released his “6 C’s” of mobile marketing -

The 6 Cs for a positive experience

The trick is knowing how to build and develop this level of trust, and developing a true dialogue of interaction with customers. Education of both consumers and marketers is crucial. Marketers must make customers aware of all the policing mechanisms in place to ensure that the mobile marketing experience they receive is a positive one, and provide them with a way to report any behavior that they question.

Most of all, marketers need to move away from traditional push — or interruption-based — advertising and adopt the six central tenets of a positive consumer experience: choice, control, customization, consideration, constraint and confidentiality. These form the basis of the Mobile Marketing Association’s global Code of Conduct and Consumer Best Practices. Here’s a more detailed look at these tenets:

1. Choice - Consumers must opt in to mobile marketing programs. Once that’s done, include clear directions on how to unsubscribe from communication should it become unwanted. This ensures consumer pull rather than consumer push.

2. Control - Consumers should have control of when and how they receive mobile marketing messages, and must be allowed to easily terminate or opt out of unwanted programs.

3. Customization - Any data supplied by consumers must be used to personalize content — such as restricting communications to categories they specify.

4. Consideration - If consumers allow you to communicate with them on their mobile devices, offer them something of perceived value, such as product and service enhancements, requested information, entry into competitions, discounts, and more.

5. Constraint - Manage and limit mobile messaging programs to a reasonable number of campaigns.Confidentiality. Make and clearly communicate a commitment that you won’t share consumer information with nonaffiliated third parties.

6. Confidentiality - Make and clearly communicate a commitment that you won’t share consumer information with nonaffiliated third parties.

The ideal ambassadors for the mobile marketing cause are consumers. So brands trying to reach them via this medium should make sure their communications are interesting, relevant, valuable and, above all, requested

If you want to find out more about mobile marketing - email us on office@imageandprofile.com with your contact details

Source: CEOWORLD Magazine

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