QUARTER OF GLOBAL USERS ACCESS MOBILE INTERNET VIA NOVARRA PLATFORM. Novarra announced its Mobile Internet Experience Update with the news that two thirds of U.S. mobile phone users and one quarter of all global users have access to some form of mobile Internet service via the Novarra platform today. A benchmark report gives a broad overview of how consumers access and use the internet via mobile phones with Novarra's Vision browser and mobile Internet platform.
Among the overall findings:
- Devices don't' matter (much): Users with standard feature phones will use the Web as much or even more than a smartphone user if the mobile Internet experience is good
- There is a 'long tail' in the mobile Internet: The top website typically accounts for 5 percent of total mobile page views. The number two site accounts for less than 1 percent of traffic. And the top 500 sites account for only 25-30 percent of all page views
- Sessions vary: 40 percent of mobile internet sessions are under five minutes and 40 percent are over 15 minutes
The report further groups mobile users into 'tribes' based on their distinctive user profiles. These are:
- The Business Pro - Dependent on their mobile to be more productive and to handle all their communications
- The Mobile Millennial - Early adopters and young adults with disposable income
- The Connected Kid - Children and teenagers who have grown up with technology from a young age
- Frugal Fanatics utilise handset customisation services more than twice as much as any other group
- Connected Kids have far more page views relative to sessions than any other group, indicating they tend to surf more for entertainment purposes
- Source
June 22, 2009
Tags: AdMob, Amethon, comScore, handset, iPhone, iPod touch, LG, Location-Based Services, mobile analytics, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Social Networks, Novarra, Segmentation
Posted in Content Discovery, Location-Based Services, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Research, Mobile Social Media, Personalization | 2 Comments »
You know the specter of the downturn has hit mobile when a super power like Google claims it can't attend participate in industry events because of budget constraints.
However, smart companies know that a sluggish economy spell
opportunity for businesses that know how to move forward when the economy is standing still. Indeed, the doom-and-gloom mood hasn't stopped
50+ industry heavyweights from around the world from meeting in London in June for an executive brainstorm about the future profit opportunities in an open mobile world.
I am reminded of the
recent MSG podcast with
Tom Huseby, Managing Partner, SeaPoint Ventures, and his observation that there is plenty of money and opportunity in mobile, but it's up to entrepreneurs to structure their good ideas so VCs get it.
Mobile has enjoyed an exceptionally high growth trajectory and even the credit crunch can't discourage VCs from investing. "On the whole, venture capitalists have not run out of money. The bars are high and it's difficult, but my gosh, my advice to entrepreneurs is keep working on your idea until it does appeal to the money, or don't use the money to do it." What has VCs excited?
Open systems, open storefronts and open operators - and lots of apps.

Against this backdrop, the timing couldn't be better for an industry event sharply focused on what open is (and isn't). Yes, it's about new and increasingly open business ecosystems (where mobile operators can still play a central role provided they play according to the new rules). But
open means much more. It's about the convergence of platforms and devices
to blur the boundaries between the physical and virtual worlds, and transform communication, content, advertising, search and retail.
More importantly, open is about the shift from command-control to coordinate-cultivate, a seismic shift in how we do business and make money.
How do we get there from here? What models are sustainable and which are hype? There are no easy answers. However, the
Open Mobile Summit (June 10-11 in London), produced by
Robin Batt, an independent consultant with 13 years experience in the space, certainly covers all the bases to offer attendees insights that will allow them to take charge of the wave of change rather than be crashed by it.
(In fact, even Google is attending!)
May 6, 2009
Tags: Acer, Google, LG, mobile analytics, Mobile Internet, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Search, Mobile Social Networks, Motorola, Nokia, O2, Open, Open Mobile Summit, RIM, Symbian, T-Mobile, Teliasonera, Vodafone, Yahoo
Posted in Mobile Marketing, Mobile Research, Mobile Search, Mobile Social Media, Usability | No Comments »

Back as promised with an exclusive podcast to connect the dots in the recent raft of announcements and get the
inside track on Scanbuy strategy. Indeed, there are a lot of open questions since Scanbuy, a leader in mobile marketing solutions based on barcodes, surprised the industry in early April with
the decision to make the specs for the company's proprietary EZcode 2D barcode symbology "globally available." What does this
really mean and what structures will Scanbuy put in place to see this through?
These are just a few of the questions I explore with
Jonathan Bulkeley, Scanbuy CEO.
(Personal thanks to David Javitch, Scanbuy VP of Marketing, for streamlining my request and arranging the podcast, the first such in-depth interview since the announcement.)
To fully understand the significance of Scanbuy's decision, it's important to review the events and
announcements that have effectively dealt companies up and down the mobile barcode business ecosystem (Scanbuy included) a new hand of cards.
First came the decision in February by the United States Patent and Trademark Office to
re-examine the patent claims filed by
NeoMedia Technologies, a provider of barcode scanning solutions. The move prompted NeoMedia to push forward in March on a
patent licensing program and tie up with other vendors (3GVision, Mobile Discovery, Mobile Tag, and NeuStar) in a
pilot program based on open standards in a bid to show interoperability between the technologies out there and - more importantly - position NeuStar, a short code registry, as a central clearinghouse in the middle. More about this model and Jonathan's own take in the podcast.
April 27, 2009
Tags: 2D barcode, 3DVision, barcode, LG, Mobile Discovery, Mobile Tag, NeoMedia, NeuStar, Nokia, Samsung, Scanbuy, Sony Ericsson, Sprint, Telefonica
Posted in Barcodes, Mobile Marketing, Podcasts | 2 Comments »