Title: Wireless Works 13th September 2005
1Wireless Works13th September 2005
2My Brief
- The voice of the consumer
3Todays presentation
Shifting communications landscape in a digital age
Customer research into attitudes to mobile
Implications for mobile content and communications
4Research conducted by Proximity Worldwide BBDO
- Major quantitative survey
- 15 markets 3000 respondents
- Qualitative support from 15 markets
5How many of you think that a mobile says as much
about a person as a car?
6Mobiles are seen as status symbols
In China 70 agree that a persons mobile says as
much about them as their car
In Mexico the figure is 60
and in Spain 58
In the UK 37
7How many of you have your mobile turned on and
within reach for between 21-24 hours per day?
8Mobiles are an essential part of life.
Lowest scoring country China at 42
In Russia 78 have it switched on all waking hours
If they had to choose, more than twice as many
people would keep their mobile over their TV
In the UK 66
9Mobiles are an essential part of life
- Banks report that, when people lose their
wallet, it takes an average of 26 hours for them
to report the loss to the police.. While with
mobile it takes 68 minutes.
10Have you ever flirted using your mobile phone?
11Mobiles are central to making and reinforcing
emotional connections
Overall 52 of respondents have flirted using
their mobile phones
12Have you ever answered your mobile phone during
sex?
13Your relationship with your mobile is very
personal!
Overall 14 of the base said yes
14The mobile brings spontaneity into peoples lives
In the UK 61 call friends when they are close
rather than arrange a specific meeting place
78 call just to find out where their friends are
44 prefer to make plans at the last minute via
their phone
15Your mobile is deeply personal privacy is
defended
The majority would refuse to lend their phone to
a friend for a day
63 screen calls
Most would answer a colleagues direct line a
minority their mobile
16Mobile provides a fantastic marketing opportunity
- On all of the time
- Deeply personal
- Intrinsic to peoples lives
- Highly targeted
Is it responsive? Is it welcomed?
17Have you ever used your mobile phone to respond
to a brand promotion or competition?
18The mobile as response medium
In Australia and Spain this increases to 75
53 have responded to a brand promotion on their
mobile
In the UK its 50
In USA its 34
19How should marketers and content owners exploit
the mobile opportunity?
20How should marketers exploit the mobile
opportunity?
Understand the shifting communications landscape
Understand customers attitude to mobile
Implications for mobile content and communications
21A huge topic in its own right some top line
observations
22The media market place has transformed
Customer marketing Thousands of channels Press
online Posters Direct mail Digital
radio Internet PDAs Mobiles Gaming etc
Mass Marketing 3-4 TV channels Press Posters Radio
Time
23A dramatic increase in media fragmentation
24The ability to edit commercial communications is
increasing
Turn the page Cup of tea Binning Mail
Sky Plus - 650k homes, 76 less
commercials Personalised online
newspapers Ability to block pop ups Telephone
preference service, 7.5M registration since
1999 Mailing preference service levels opt out
from 2005 electoral rolls 30
Time
25A profound shift has occurred
- From an intrusion based model to an invitation
based model
26Time is still finite.The choice is infinite.
27This shift will force the emergence of new models
- Five OPB (Opportunities Per Break).
- Advertisers will pay people to receive ads
- Tiered subscription service.
- Engaging, timely, relevant communication which is
opted into will drive response rates and ROI
particularly online and mobile.
28New technology will allow radical new media and
creative approaches
- BMW films turned the media/production model on
its head. - Burger King Subservient Chicken showed the
power of viral. - Context relevant communications in on line
gaming. - Pepsi embedded branding
- Pizza Hut allowing you to order while playing
Everquest
29- The power of bloggers will be harnessed to some
brands benefit - The spontaneity of flash mobbing will be used by
brands e.g. Guinness Sampling - Mass promotional events such as Oprahs 500 car
give away will create fame. - Time and event critical media will become more
and more valuable
30Understand the shifting communications landscape
Understand customers attitude to mobile
Implications for mobile become fairly obvious
31The lessons learnt
In the Attention Economy mobiles are always
switched on and your target always available
Mobiles are an intensely personal part of
everyday life
Huge potential but significant implications for
brands and content providers
321. Mobiles are an intensely personal part of
everyday life
- Permission is essential (not just legally)
- Highly intrusive messaging is very risky for
brands. - Creativity will become more and more important.
- Campaigns that allow self expression will be
successful. - Integration of messages across other media
channels will be essential
332. In the Attention Economy relevance is critical
- Successful content and brands will
understand the different ways the medium is
being used. - Entertainment filler while on the move.
- Content that helps me get where I am going.
- Or that helps me make the most of where Im
going. - Ways to help me interact with people Im seeing.
- Helps me/reminds me to do things I didnt have
time to do
Filter for creative ideas
343. Finally think about usability
- Dialogue and interactivity will be expected
- Fulfilment will be critical
- Data capture and data analysis will be required
to maximise effectiveness - Tracking to demonstrate ROI
35Here is a real life example of what can go wrong!!
36We are on a journey
Understand the shifting communication landscape
Understand customers attitude to mobile
Implications for mobile
37www.proximitylab.com
38(No Transcript)
39Thank you