Marketing-mobile.ca
Marketing-mobile.ca

Archive pour décembre 2009

décembre 07

Depuis cette semaine,  la licence de Luc Besson “Arthur et les Minimoys” est intégré  dans les menus Happy Meal de McDonald (Joyeux Festin au Québec) , et propose aux “enfants prescripteurs” et aux parents une première expérience dans le monde de la réalité augmentée.

En plus goodie classique -un personnage du film- la packaging Happy Meal, une fois filmée par une webcam, permet du faire apparaître  à l’écran des personnages du sur l’écran et de les faire évoluer dans l’univers Mc Donald.

Cette opération vise les 6-8 ans  le segment le plus âgé de la cible du Happy Meal. Un vrai pari pour l’avenir chez Mc Donald France, Suisse et Belgique qui marque le début de la réalité augmentée opération de grande consommation francophone.

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Mathieu Sirot, Directeur de Création, Piranha Agence Tactique

décembre 06

Square est le nouveau bébé de Jack Dorsey, le fondateur de Twitter. Cela fait déjà quelques semaines que tout le monde parle de cet outil de paiement mobile, mais hier, Dorsey en a révélé un peu plus sur les ambitions de sa nouvelle entreprise, qui vient de lever 40 millions de dollars lors d’un premier tour de table d’investisseurs, comme le révèle TechCrunch.

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Concrètement, Square va nous permettre d’utiliser notre carte de crédit partout là où un commerçant équipé de l’outil le voudra.

Square is a small plastic device that plugs into a gadget’s headphone jack. Buyers swipe their credit cards through the device, which then transmits the payment data to an application running on a connected iPhone or iPod Touch. (Android and Blackberry apps are in development, and computer software will be available later.)

Once the company begins producing the hardware, people will be able to sign up for an account, enter a shipping address on the site and receive a device in the mail. Like PayPal, profiles are tied to a bank account.

Fini les tickets de caisse et les frais cachés. Mais encore mieux : l’outil est gratuit, et le prix de l’application ne devrait pas dépasser 1$. On est bien loin des transactions bancaires via SMS et autres technologies de transfert d’argent mobile de banque à banque. Nous ne sommes plus dans la « banque mobile », mais dans un réel paiement instantané et fluide. C’est cela dont le marché a besoin. De l’interaction directe entre consommateurs. Pas de demande de transfert d’établissement à établissement.

The feeding frenzy around Square isn’t just because of its celebrity founder, say our sources. This is a bold foray into a huge, and complicated, market: physical payments. “What PayPal was to eBay, Square is to the real world,” said one person close to the company. 

Là ou d’autres technologies comme RFID auraient pu être de supers alternatives pour le paiement mobile, l’aspect sécuritaire (certainement le point le plus touchy du secteur)  aura pris le dessus. Signature requise et photo affichée. Personne à part votre jumeau ne pourra utiliser votre carte.

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La véritable innovation tient évidemment à la mobilité poussée à son comble. Fini le terminal branché à une prise téléphonique. On va pouvoir payer nos bières à 11$ au Centre Bell par carte. On va pouvoir revendre le canapé de mémé pendant la braderie. On va pouvoir revendre nos tickets de concert deux fois leur prix devant le Zénith. Les gens de Greenpeace pourront vous demander de l’argent et vous ne pourrez plus répondre « désolé, j’ai pas de cash »… Et si quelqu’un essaie de vous voler votre caisse…

The payment system is secure, Dorsey said. Transactional data is safely encrypted, and the credit card information is never stored on the device, only passed along, he said. Signatures are drawn with a finger on the touch screen.

Source: Olivier Mermet (Blog de nuit)

décembre 02

Un article intéressant de MobileMarketer.com! Vous en pensez-quoi?

Mobile ads are 30 times more effective than Internet ads. This headline was run recently by a wide range of industry publications. It refers to a study about advertising on mobile phones that was recently carried out in association with a leading wireless carrier in the Czech Republic.

The research, which included 22 top brand advertisers and more than 3,000 users, showed that “the average successfulness of individual SMS/MMS campaigns was approximately 27 times higher than in the case of Internet banner campaigns. Even the results of the least successful campaign surpassed the response rate” for Czech Internet campaigns.

Taking digital advertising to next level
The Internet deserves a full measure of credit and admiration for developing new advertising concepts and business cases that made possible the spectrum of wonderful developments on the Web.

It is with due respect and humility, rather than arrogance, that the mobile industry reacts to the likelihood that mobile advertising is more effective than Internet advertising.

Assuming the validity and the accuracy of the referenced research, the question to be addressed is: What makes mobile advertising more effective than Internet advertising?

Our attempt at defining those reasons is below.

1) Where the users are: Advertisers can reach many more users via the mobile phone than via the PC. Globally, mobile ownership and usage far outstrips the ownership of PCs with Internet access.

It is estimated that half of the world’s humans now carry a mobile phone, approaching the 4-billion mark, yet Gartner’s latest figures put the number of installed PCs worldwide at only 1 billion units — and not all of these have Internet access. The gap between mobile and PC ownership is even greater in developing markets.

2) Multiple touchpoints are better than one: PC-based Internet ads have one way to reach users: through the Internet on a PC.

Carriers have a much richer menu of options to offer advertisers: voice (visual voicemail, ringback tones, missed call notifications), text (SMS), multimedia messaging (MMS), mobile Internet, billing touchpoints and handset clients and more.

3) One-on-one: Due to the one-on-one personal nature of mobile devices, mobile ads are more effective in terms of product awareness and sales.

Because messages are intended just for the user, users generally pay more careful attention to mobile ads (e.g., text added after a notification) than they do to ads that come to a PC.

4) Bull’s eye – right on target: The unrivalled amount of relevant information about a subscriber makes a mobile device the ultimate targeting tool.

Unlike the PC, the mobile phone is usually used by a single individual, as opposed to a household on the PC. Advertisers can know exactly who the users are in order to target ads effectively:

 Demographic information: From subscriber profile
 Time and context: User, Web site, time and location
 Ongoing profile builder: Subscriber information is accumulated from a variety of sources to one unified subscriber profile
 Predictive behavior: Based on user habits, preferences and history

Because targeted ads are inherently more relevant, they are more interesting. Users pay more attention to them, and advertisers get a higher response rate.

5) On location: Only via a mobile phone can knowledge of the user’s movement and changing location be used for timely offers, such as a discount at a store or at a cafe in the food court as a user enters a mall.

Advertising for small local businesses can have a much stronger business case on the mobile than on PCs.

6) Trusted billing relationship: The confidence and high level of trust that the user has in the carrier facilitates decisions to purchase.

Whereas purchases from a PC generally require money transfer methods such as PayPal or credit cards, purchases from a mobile phone can be handled simply, quickly and automatically by means of familiar and trusted billing procedures. This makes users more likely to act on their impulse to buy through their handset.

7) Direct user response: The interactive nature of the mobile phone removes barriers to responding and purchasing through direct user response capabilities: Click to call, click to SMS and click to purchase.

8) Opt in: Unlike the PC experience, users must opt in to participate in mobile advertising.

Whereas ads on the PC are largely regarded as a form of spam and ignored, mobile ads are delivered only to those who request them. The way they are regarded increases their effectiveness.

9) Triggers: Mobile ads triggered by real-time situations such as billing and location triggers, and can be highly effective in meeting immediate real-life needs and maximizing response rates.

10) Banner blindness and ad blocking – only on the Internet: Eye-tracking studies show that Internet users have developed banner blindness and in a large number of cases have stopped even noticing Internet banners – to say nothing of the large number of users who use ad-blockers to prevent even the appearance of ads.

The nature of mobile advertising prevents both of these phenomena, giving mobile ads a chance to be more effective.

THE RESEARCH in the Czech Republic seems to confirm that mobile advertising is much more effective than Internet advertising.

The average mobile response rate was 2.72 percent. In the case of the most successful campaign, the response rate reached 11.78 percent.

The least successful mobile campaign had a response rate of 0.29 percent, which was still three times higher than the average response rate for Internet campaigns.

The research is not conclusive and further studies are warranted. Further clear strong results for mobile advertising will continue to attract the attention and dollars of advertisers to this growing advertising domain.

Source: Mobilemarketer.com