GUEST COLUMN:Tapping New Messaging Approaches For New Revenues
EDITOR’S NOTE: This special series of thought leadership columns, which examines the pivotal role of messaging in advertising, promotion and all the ways companies connect and engage with their customers, continues with a look at exciting opportunities brands – and mobile operators – could be missing.
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Mobile phones – and specifically text messaging – are central to the lives of everyone everywhere on this planet. This is the message that came across loud and clear in this well-written analysis in the New York Times. To drive home this key point the article recounts how people in emerging and developing markets are using their simple mobile phones and SMS text to improve their lives, conduct commerce, transfer money, record and share sermons and even oversee elections.
Mobile has become the truly universal technology and text messaging – a flavor of people-powered communication discovered quite by accident by ordinary individuals eager to connect using their mobile phones – has become mobile’s first and truly universal language.
Granted, we increasingly use our mobile phones to explore the wealth of content on the mobile Web or browse the assortment of applications in our chosen device or mobile operator app store. But mobile is and remains central to our lives because we rely on it to connect with the people who matter most.
Put simply, texting is embedded into our mobile behavior.
Rafts of recent surveys show teens would rather text than speak, and even more have turned off their voicemail as a rule to show they mean it! Some five years ago Mizuko Ito, a cultural anthropologist at Keio University in Japan, observed in her book, Personal, Portable, Pedestrian, the emergence of “tele-nesting,” the practice–especially among youth in Japan, and now everyone everywhere –of staying in touch through a steady stream of text messages. In the West Alan Moore, author and founder of the Engagement Communication Consultancy SMLXL, reminds us that we are a “WE SPECIES,” individuals who are part of, and belong to, a bigger whole. Our messaging behavior reflects this enables us to achieve our ultimate goal: to (co-)create and share the narrative of our lives that adds meaning and value to us and everyone around us.
The simplicity of ordinary phones and the fact that people everywhere can use them to send and receive text messages opens up a world of opportunities. It also paves the way for global innovation that allows companies and startups everywhere to harness simple text messaging to achieve extraordinary results.
We’re already seeing evidence of a new breed of messaging services. And this is surely just the beginning. From life-simplifying reminders to life-saving medical advice, people around the world – particularly in emerging markets – are using text to connect, communicate and interact with companies, brands, medical doctors, government authorities and clergy – and the list goes on.
SPEAK TO US
The emerging markets may have a greater reliance on text messaging, but our appetite for messaging – and the value we receive on top of the text messages we send and receive — is growing.
This is the key finding of a recent survey of the U.K. market by Dialogue Communications, a mobile messaging and mobile payments company. It reveals more than 67 percent of respondents want more messaging in their lives.
According to the findings, respondents would welcome reminders and alerts via text for everything from medical alerts to bill payments. People said they wanted to move away from postal reminders because it’s convenient, reliable, easy to store and on a phone for future reference and simple to synch up with the calendars they already have on their mobile phones. (Again, messaging – all messaging – should be permission-based.)
And let us not forget the important fit between text and marketing, for all the reasons I have outlined above.
Destinations such as Mobile Marketer and Mobile Marketing Magazine document the success of messaging campaigns daily. Brands and agencies harness text to connect with consumers (an even more effective approach if the advertising is opt-in, of course). From soft drinks that use text messaging to deliver brand messages and links to downloadable content and perks, to large U.S. chains that cleverly use text messaging to deliver product vouchers and drive customer loyalty, the press is chock-full of case studies that underline the central position of text in marketing and advertising.
But we should not limit ourselves to just these. Paul Berney, Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) Managing Director Europe, has also said on several occasions that mobile CRM and mobile commerce loom large on the horizon as the next big opportunities for brands, agencies and all their partners.
I would take it one giant step further: messaging lays the groundwork for a much deeper – and potentially lucrative — exchange between a wide array of companies, advertisers and institutions, and the people who want to hear what they have to say. Brands want a dialogue with their consumers. What better and more effective way to achieve this than messaging?
Messaging in the proper context adds real value to our lives.
MORE MESSAGING MILEAGE
I have therefore identified three other scenarios where rich messaging – the mix of text and image we know from mobile advertising campaigns we have facilitated at Blyk on behalf of brands – could add significant value for everyone involved, including consumers.
- AMS (Application Messaging Services): The heightened interest in ‘apps’ presents advertisers and mobile operators worldwide a new opportunity to deliver consumers a message they would appreciate in this context. We are witnessing the advance of services linked to reminders or alerts that connect with the mobile phone features and functionality to remind users us of birthdays, appointments and other important dates/events. Consumers have indicated that they would opt-in to receive these messages. Surely, this provides a perfect platform on which to deliver a related message or branded utility. And this could be so simple for handset manufactures. All they need to do is build on top of the functions they have already embedded into many phone models.
- LMS (Location Messaging Services): The rise of travel advice and social media network services such as DOPPLR and WAZE point to a much larger trend: our willingness to receive messages about what’s nearby. From points of interest to traffic jams, consumers desire more information about their surroundings and have granted their permission to receive push messages that provide this detail. Again, this presents companies and mobile operators with an excellent opportunity to deliver a related and relevant commercial message. Done correctly this exchange might even lead to a transaction that consumers could perform using their mobile phones. The potential for mobile operators – the trusted keepers of our location data in the first place – are huge.
- VMS (Value-Added Messaging): Here we are talking about real value to the consumer because these messages enhance and improve their lives. Mobile education and mobile health are two obvious examples. A global market survey of 3,000 consumers in six countries (500 each in Brazil, USA, Germany, South Africa, India and China) conducted by management consultancy McKinsey & Company suggests that mobile health (m-health) opportunities in 2010 could be worth between $50 and $60 billion in 2010, a finding that has prompted mobile operators – and the GSMA – the professional organization that unites nearly 800 of the world’s mobile operators, as well as more than 200 companies in the broader mobile ecosystem — to step up initiatives. According to the research, the vast majority of respondents were interested in the following services: PhoneDoctor, a service that would allow people to call to speak with a qualified physician for remote diagnosis and advice, and HealthWatch, a SIM embedded biosensor watch that monitors vitals, and is connected to emergency services. It is easy to imagine how companies – through sponsorship and commercial messages — could align with these services to deliver related information, offers and real value to people everywhere.
Clearly, our messaging behavior powers of a wide variety of use cases and scenarios. What’s more, as a WE SPECIES we have come to expect – even demand – a two-way conversation with the companies delivering messages to our phones.
From bank statements to medical advice, from appointment reminders to public opinion polls, from location-linked services that tell us what’s nearby to mobile CRM services that ask us if we are satisfied with the service we just received at the checkout, messaging impacts people’s lives and lifestyles at all levels.
It also paves the way for new business models and combinations of models that harness push, permission and personal context to benefit companies across the ecosystem and – most importantly – consumers.
I have identified three areas of new messaging opportunities where companies, provided they apply the same rules of engagement, can reap tremendous benefits and build long-term customer relationships built on trust and respect. I expect to see much more innovation in this space –and I welcome it wholeheartedly. If you are thinking about new opportunities in messaging or have an application success story to share, please reach out to me directly to continue the dialogue. After all, two-way communication always produces the best results. (antti.ohrling@blyk.com)
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Antti is the Co-Founder of Blyk, the messaging media that works with mobile operators to link young people with brands and other stuff they like. He has over 25 years experience as a senior manager in branded goods, retail and wholesale, TV& film and advertising industries. Antti is also founder of Contra Advertising Group, today part of Touch Worldwide. He serves as Chairman of Contra China, an advertising agency specializing in mobile and social media marketing based in Beijing. In addition, Antti is a Fellow at the RSA (Royal Society for the encouragement of Art, Manufactures and Commerce) in the U.K. and a regular speaker at lectures on innovative business strategies and brand issues worldwide. For more information about Blyk, check out the company profile and explore the collection of customer case studies.
Disclaimer: Blyk is an MSG supporter. This is another in a series of columns by Blyk examining mobile advertising strategies and business models.





May 6th, 2010 at 4:02 pm
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