A few curious tidbits picked up at the Mobile Marketing Association’s Mobile Marketing Forum this week in New York:
- 1 in 10 Brits thinks it is OK to text during sex.
- A widely successful condom awareness campaign, running in India, is based on a ringtone download that sings “Condom, condom!” (get yours at www.condomcondom.org).
- Victoria’s Secret is attracting eyeballs with an outdoor campaign that uses a sultry model in lace panties to promote a program allowing cellphone users to use Bluetooth outside their stores to get downloads and special offers.
If nothing else, this nascent industry has learned what every good advertiser knows: sex sells. Outside of these titillating facts I also learned that –
- Disney predicts that half of all brand engagement with its customers will be through mobile media by 2012.
- 1 in 3 mobile searches on Google involve a “local” intent.
- Conversion rates for mobile advertisers are in the double digits.
The message was loud and clear: Mobile has arrived as a major media that cannot be ignored. In fact, the biggest hold up is not advertiser interest but bandwidth. And watch out, because once the pipe gets fat, the market will explode much in the same manner that broadband gave the Web its turbocharge over the last decade.
There are about 400 attendees at the Waldorf Astoria. Nothing I’ve heard here conflicts with Borrell Associates’ aggressive forecast that local mobile marketing spend will surpass the Web in four years as it climbs $14 billion. (Then again, I wouldn’t expect to attend a mobile conference and hear less than rosy predictions about the topic.)
Perhaps the best morsel of advice was imparted by mobile marketing guru and author Tomi Ahonen, who kicked off a keynote with his “8 Unique Mobile Benefits.” Approving nods rippled through the audience as Ahonen proclaimed, “Mobile is as different from the Internet as TV is different from radio.” Keep that in mind, for this is a whole new way of marketing to agile consumers in new and challenging way that will require local media Web sites to mobilize faster than they did when the Web launched only 16 years ago.
Ahonen has an excellent point – one that we’re planning to explore deeply at our Local Mobile Advertising Conference in Dallas Sept. 27-29. We’re taking a lot of pointers from the MMA forum and crafting a dynamic agenda that separates the hype from the real money-making mobile programs spawned from innovative thinking – not incremental steps built on media companies’ existing Web sites. Check out our agenda at (www.borrellassociates.com/mobile), and watch next week for additional speakers.
More from the Mobile Marketing Forum — Twitter: @MobileMktgForum and #MMAF2010

