For years we have looked to the UK Europe and Asia as a mobile marketing crystal ball. As trends emerge from markets with more mature mobile consumer habits (and carrier ecosystem) we can get a very good gauge of how consumers will be utilizing mobile in this country. Traditionally the US has been a year or two behind other markets in mobile usage and adoption figures. However the app / smart phone explosion in the US after has sped up the process. So we see similar numbers as presented in this study only about a year away in the US. Is your company ready for the mobile web explosion that’s headed to our shores? Reach out to ApolloBravo for a complementary corporate mobile readiness evaluation. Pay special attention to the nearly 70% of consumers accessing the mobile web via their phones.
From wark.com and IAB
LONDON: Consumers in the UK are adopting an increasingly diverse range of mobile habits, from browsing the web while on the move to using their phone when watching TV.
Industry body the IAB and research firm Connect Insight asked 500 people who regularly utilise applications and the internet, or download content, via handsets to keep a “media diary” for a week. These data were supplemented by six digital focus groups to gain a rounded picture regarding the daily role of wireless devices.
On average, individuals engaged with their mobile 18 times each day, going online most frequently among the pastimes assessed.
Indeed, 66% of contributors “couldn’t live without” such gadgets and 58% believed they helped ensure life was more organised.
Elsewhere, 40% of the panel had participated in one of the featured activities having witnessed advertising communications.
Some 69% of respondents accessed web-based content through a mobile browser, as opposed to links, shortcodes, apps and equivalent tools.
A further 27% agreed their phone assumed the status as “first choice” when it came to consuming content at least once a week.
Simultaneous media use is another widespread habit, given that 70% of the sample deployed a mobile at the same time as being exposed to a different medium. This is most commonly the case for TV, as 53% of those polled leveraged mobile media while viewing television broadcasts between 9pm and midnight.
From 6am to 9am, the mobile information of greatest interest concerned finance, weather and travel, a position held by entertainment, shopping and maps in the 3pm to 6pm slot. Entertainment, music, sport and games then took over, as people sought to relax after work.
“The implications of this consumer behaviour for advertisers are huge,” Alex Kozloff, the IAB’s mobile manager, said.
“Mobile is a hygiene factor that every brand should be thinking about to make sure the customer experience is a positive one.”
Data sourced from IAB; additional content by Warc staff, 3 February 2011 www.warc.com