Marketing-mobile.ca
Marketing-mobile.ca

Archive pour le mot-clef « Site mobile »

décembre 09

Une très belle campagne. Félicitation à l’agence Marvellous!

août 26

Commanditaire principal depuis la première édition de l’événement en 1993, Bell propose cette année aux visiteurs du Challenge Bell d’utiliser pleinement la technologie de leur téléphone mobile afin de maximiser leur expérience.

En effet, la présence d’une borne interactive Bluetooth, à l’entrée du Challenge Bell permettra aux visiteurs de télécharger gratuitement du contenu exclusif aux couleurs de l’événement, sur leur téléphone cellulaire. De plus, les visiteurs auront accès à un site mobile leur permettant de consulter la programmation mise à jour de l’événement, ainsi que d’autres informations, peu importe le moment et l’endroit où ils se trouvent.

 » Nous sommes heureux de pouvoir offrir aux visiteurs du Challenge Bell un accès facile et rapide à l’information dont ils ont besoin grâce à une technologie moderne et efficace », a indiqué Sylvie Giguère, Marraine du Challenge Bell 2009 et vice-présidente Ventes/Affaires commerciales, Québec chez Bell Canada.

Partenaire financier et technologique, Bell est très fière de pouvoir ainsi contribuer au rayonnement de la capitale nationale et permettre par la même occasion l’ouverture sur le monde qu’entraîne la tenue d’un événement de cette envergure.

juin 30

Voici une entrevue du site mobiThinking (en anglais) que je trouvais très pertinent de diffuser sur ce blogue. Depuis maintenant quelques mois, il est possible de remarquer que la majorité des grands noms de l’industrie des communications commencent à considérer le mobile comme un véritable média d’avenir.

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Five-minute interview: Rory Sutherland, vice-chairman, Ogilvy Group

Branded utility – that’s the key advantage mobile brings for service-conscious companies, and Sutherland has a fistful of great examples of how mobile utility has made a dramatic difference.
Every marketing agency needs people like Rory Sutherland – people at the very top who get mobile. The best thing is that until recently Sutherland was an outspoken cynic, but having witnessed the power of mobile both as a consumer and as a marketer, he is a true convert. This gives a certain religious fervor to his presentations, as he reels off endless stories of how everyday brands have transformed their customer relationship with the simplest of mobile innovations.Rory Sutherland is speaking at Mobile Advertising UK on June 15.

Q1. What is your favorite mobile site, campaign or application? My favorite examples of mobile marketing are also often the most simple. For instance, a service that texts you when your train or airplane is delayed, mobile ticketing for cinemas or the service that allows you to pay for parking by text message. I love it when delivery services – such as the UK Internet grocer Ocado (mobile site: Ocado.mobi) – text you to remind you when your goods will arrive or when a taxi firm sends you the driver’s number. These services are wonderfully simple and yet completely transform the customer experience.

Q2. What can the rest of us learn from these examples? I have nothing against mobile entertainment. But any brand where service is important should be using mobile to add utility to customer service. After all, the first job of marketing is to make your product easy to find, easy to use and easy to buy – and easier still to buy next time.

Q3. Who is the new kid on the block – the mobile site/application to watch for the future? Fizzback is a wonderful idea. It helps service businesses solicit feedback from customers at the two vital extremes – the highly satisfied and the highly dissatisfied.

Q4. What sector would you say is furthest ahead in mobile Web/marketing? Travel and transportation are probably furthest ahead for obvious reasons, but every business from packaged goods to charities can benefit from mobile marketing.

Q5. What can the rest of us learn from the games sector? The key lesson is that you let customers use their preferred channel. We learnt this valuable lesson recently with one of our clients – a charity: young people have previously been considered very low donors to charities, but if you allow them to donate by mobile phone, they become quite generous.

Q6. What are the most exciting/inspirational places in the world for mobile Internet/mobile marketing? I suggest keeping an eye on what’s happening at the two extremes: Japan and sub-Saharan Africa.

Q7. What can the rest of us learn from there? In much of the world, mobile is a very attractive enhancement to other forms of communication. In large parts of the world, however, mobile is the only form of communication infrastructure – short of walking 10 miles and conversing face to face. We should never forget that there are also many millions in the developed world who do not have access to the internet except via their phone.

Q8. What’s the most exciting area of mobile Web/marketing? Actually there are many great areas to explore. In general, though, two things interest me most: the immediacy of mobile and, of course, the social aspect.

Q9. What site use this to maximum effect? You can’t help but admire the Obama iPhone App. This would prioritize your contacts according to whether they lived in a battleground state, so you knew which friends to persuade to vote for Obama.

Q10.What’s the biggest mistake in mobile Web/marketing? Fear of failure. This leads to spending more time and money arguing over what to do than expenditure on actually doing something. The occasional failure is part of the price of success in mobile.

Q11. What is the most useful resource site and/or must-read book for mobile marketers? I recommend Nudge [http://www.nudges.org], by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein. There isn’t much about mobile in the book, but it gives mobile marketers an invaluable insight into how to encourage behavioral change among consumers.

juin 30

Il y a de cela une semaine, un ami m’a fait une remarque très intéressante : tu as un blogue sur le marketing mobile, mais je ne suis pas capable de bien le lire sur mon iPhone. En effet, cela semble un peu contradictoire de créer un blogue qui fait la promotion active de l’adaptation des sites Internet traditionnelle au mobile et qui ne le fait pas pour son propre blogue.

Ainsi, nous avons installé l’application WP-Touch à Marketing-mobile.ca. Le résultat est super!

Visitez le blogue sur votre iPhone et iPod touch et dites-nous ce que vous en pensez. Pour notre part, nous sommes bien content.