
MOBILE SOCIAL NETWORKING USERS WILL NUMBER MORE THAN 641.6 MILLION by 2013, according to the latest predictions from Informa. A new report from the company says that at the end of 2008, there were just 92.5 million users of mobile social networking services, but that will skyrocket to between 641.6 million and 873.1 million by the end of 2013. It adds that the most popular mobile social services
October 5, 2009
Tags: AdMob, Android, BlackBerry, demographics, Informa, Palm Pre, RIM, smartphones, Telematics, working moms
Posted in Mobile Marketing, Mobile Research, Mobile Social Media | No Comments »
In brief: App stores are hot, but what are the challenges and where is the opportunity? This analysis draws from a variety of sources - including a recent Airwide Solutions survey, an exclusive interview with Vodafone UK's Jonathan Kelly, and a thought-provoking post from Alfred DeRose, Co-founder & Managing Director of Tego Interactive, a Web and mobile product and services company providing development and integrated solutions for the needs of major brands, content publishers and mobile network operators - to provide some practical answers.
App store frenzy? That's what comes across when you connect the dots in the raft of recent announcements. Mobile operators ranging from U.S. mobile operator
Verizon Wireless (which has borrowed a page from parent company Vodafone to launch a carrier-wide app store based on Java ME that can target more than one device) to China Mobile (which tells
TelecomAsia.net that it's moving full-steam ahead on its Mobile Market app store where it plans to take 50 percent cut of app sales revenues) are jockeying for position and a piece of the action.
Interestingly, much of the operator excitement centers on the new mobile advertising opportunity app stores represent. As Jonathan Kelly, who heads up Vodafone UK Marketing, recently told me in a briefing: "I see some quite interesting opportunities in apps and widgets. A likely scenario could involve a sponsored widget, where the brand actually works with us to create a widget or application that we then prominently place in our app store."
Beyond that, Jonathan sees other opportunities around actually embedding advertising within a widget. "You could have some sort of utility widget that's providing weather, and there's no reason why certain relevant companies may not wish to have some advertising embedded within that."

At the other end of the spectrum, Apple's App Store, RIM's BlackBerry App World and Android's Marketplace may have been the first to the party, but they have company. The recent JavaOne conference kicked off its annual convention by opening the doors of
the Java App Store, a global marketplace for Java apps headed by Sun Microsystems. It comes on the heels of other app store news elsewhere in the industry including
Nokia's launch of the Ovi app store, a storefront offering available in Australia, Singapore, Spain, Italy, Germany, Russia, Ireland and the U.K, offering 20,000 titles (a fraction of which are apps) to an estimated 50 million Nokia devices globally.
July 30, 2009
Tags: Airwide Solutions, Android, Android Marketplace, app store, Apple, AT&T, Blackberry App World, China Mobile, fring, GetJar, HOVR, JavaOne, joiku, Nikia Ovi, Nimbuzz, Nokia, Palm, Palm Pre, RIM, Shape Services, Sony Ericsson, Sprint, Sun Microsystems, Tego Interactive, Verizon Wireless, Vodafoen UK, VuFone, WeFi, WiFi
Posted in Content Discovery, Personalization, Usability | 1 Comment »
Editor's note: Apple has the first-mover advantage, and its App Store sets the bar. The result is a buoyant market for apps and ample opportunity for fast-followers to (perhaps) do one better. Benjamin E. Jacobsen - Co-Founder of Mobspot, Inc., a company championing "Mobile App developers and App users on any platform," and a new author to MSG - gives his take on the size of the market and the prospects for other players.
IS THE APP INDUSTRY WORTH NEARLY $7 BILLION? Will Apple do nearly a billion dollars in revenue in its first year of the App Store? While the exact numbers are debatable, you can't ignore the monster success Apple has had with its store (which also drives device sales, by the way). How much money has Apple made? This post, titled
Apple has made no more than $20 - 45m in revenue from the app store, gives us a figure. One I might add is not too shabby for a product yet to see its first birthday. What makes this more remarkable is that Apple has captured between 1-2 percent total market share worldwide (including feature phones), and
only 10.8 percent share worldwide in the smartphone segment. Few (save
Juniper) have taken a stab at valuing the total app industry.
StatCounter's
recent announcement that Opera Mini surpasses the iPhone's Safari as the most popular web browser for mobile phones is testament to the potential of the greater industry. Opera Mini is the
most downloaded Java application of all time. So, while I am excited about the enthusiasm for the iPhone, I find the conversation is missing a big-picture perspective. The question we should be asking is: What is the total app market worldwide really worth? After all, Opera Mini's success story underlines the potential of the app market beyond just the iPhone.
So, allow me to take a shot at valuing the total app industry, worldwide, for pay-apps (apps you pay to own on your phone). This is the total value excluding Of course, we have to exclude free apps like Opera Mini.
In a nutshell: If Apple can do nearly $1 billion in sales its first year and has 10.8 percent smartphone market share worldwide, how much is the total smartphone app market worth?
This post from AppleInsider tells us that
Apple could do $777 million in App Store downloads in 2009.
A 10.8 percent worldwide smartphone market share implies that the total mobile app market is $7.2 billion, if all smartphone users spend as much on apps as iPhone users do. We know that this won't be the case. A much more likely scenario is one in which smartphone users will spend far less.
So, let's assume users with these handsets (other than the iPhone) spend half (50 percent) of what iPhone users on App downloads. Now let's do the math.
$7.2 billion is the extrapolated industry valuation of direct revenue from apps if consumers spent as much on apps for other platforms as they do the iPhone. Let's take $7.2 billion minus $777 million (iPhone app share), and multiply that by 50 percent.
That gives us a valuation of $3.2 billion for the non-iPhone app market, or $4 billion total, including the iPhone.
($7.2 billion - $777 million) * 0.5 = $3.2 billion non-iPhone app market.)
June 10, 2009
Tags: Android, app store, Apple, Content Discovery, Google, iPhone, Microsoft, Mobspot, Opera, Opera Mini, Palm Pre, RIM Windows, Skymarket, StaCounter
Posted in Content Discovery, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Research, Usability | 12 Comments »