In brief: Steve Ives, Taptu CEO, recounts the key takeaways of the new report showing the growth of Mobile Touch Web sites outpaces the growth of apps in the Apple and Android app stores why commerce rocks on the Mobile Touch Web PLUS a look a the Virtual Roundtable and what mobile industry entrepreneurs, authorities and pundits think about the Mobile Touch Web and the potential impact on how we live, work and shop.
Taptu, the search and discovery engine that indexes touchscreen content, reports that the Mobile Touch Web – websites and destinations created specifically for access via touchscreen devices such as the Apple iPhone – has grown 35 percent since last quarter. Unlike other mobile Web content, this content stands out through finger-friendly layouts and light-weight pages that are faster to load over cellular networks. The report, which covers January 2010 thru April 2010, also shows Mobile Touch Web sites rose to 440,100 from 326,600 in January.
May 13, 2010
Tags: Android, app store, Apple, Curation, Fjord, Gartner Piper Jaffray, Google, iPhone, mobile analytics, Mobile Commerce, Mobile Internet, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Search, Mobile Touch Web, podcast, Taptu, touchscreen, Virtual Roundtable, visual search, white paper
Posted in Content Discovery, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Research, Mobile Search, Podcasts, White Papers | 1 Comment »
In brief: The discussion of paid content comes to a head with Murdoch's decision to charge for content – no matter what. Is this prudent? What options are available to publishers? We take a look at some ideas and profile a path-breaking new concept from mobile visual search/recognition company Kooaba that may allow old media to leapfrog into new profits. Plus: an invitation to cool digital companies to contact me personally.
Regular readers will know that I work with a variety of organizations and publications, evaluating companies and candidates for awards ranging from the
Meffys (awarded by the
Mobile Entertainment Forum to recognize excellence and innovation in mobile entertainment and services) to the
Smaato Mobile Advertising Awards (recognizing the best in mobile Web and in-app advertising) to the EContent 100 (a list of the 100 companies that matter most in the digital content industry).

I am proud that EContent named me to its panel of judges to evaluate the 100+ candidates across the categories: classification & taxonomy; collaboration; content commerce; content creation, production, & digital publishing; content delivery; content management; content security; fee-based info services; intranets & portals; mobile content; search engines & technologies; and social media. I'd like to take this opportunity to thank the many mobile and Internet companies that have contacted me to be considered for inclusion in the list, and issue a final call for candidates.
Round 1 of the judging wraps up on
September 1, so please reach out to me this week. (Please note that your contacting me does not compel me to put any company name on the final list of contenders and, of course, in no way guarantees that any company will be named to the list.)
This year my participation in the judging team has not only introduced me to a number of new mobile industry innovators (companies you'll see profiled on MSearchGroove in the coming weeks). It has also exposed me to
new thinking about digital content creation and distribution.
The industry is at a critical crossroads. A milestone that speaks volumes: the storm brewing the media and digital industries after Rupert Murdoch’s very public announcement (after posting record losses of $203 million last quarter) that his News Corporation intends to charge for online newspaper content.
WILL WE PAY FOR CONTENT?
August 26, 2009
Tags: Android, app store, Apple, Artesian Solutions, barcode, behavioral targeting, EContent, Kooaba, Meffys, mobile analytics, Mobile Internet, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Search, Murdoch, News Corp, Smaato, Twitter, visual search
Posted in Content Discovery, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Search, Mobile Social Media, Personalization | 3 Comments »
The realization that mobile advertising is ripe for a re-think (and the stark possibility that
traditional advertising inventory may be dead on the mobile platform, as
Alan Moore,
author luminary and founder of the communication consultancy SMLXL, suggests) forces operators, brands, enablers and agencies to focus on what many are calling engagement marketing.
At the other end of the spectrum, this shift in mindset also
turns up the pressure on mobile search providers to develop services that are (likewise) more useful, engaging and personal. Indeed, improving the mobile search user experience is at the center of a sustainable and successful mobile search and advertising strategy. Users are encouraged to explore the wealth of content and applications at their fingertips, and their urge to discover leads to more queries and more opportunities to deliver paid search advertising. It's not quite the fixed Internet all over again, but there are similarities.
The outcome is a virtuous cycle where useful search results and targeted advertising convince users that mobile search is a useful way to find content and applications that matter to them. What's more, the advance of app stores (similar to the excitement the industry experienced when content portals were the rage) underlines the critical importance of a
better interplay between search and advertising moving forward.
I am therefore encouraged by improvements (from companies such as Yahoo), and excited by the increasing popularity of new mobile search paradigms, ranging from multimodal search (which has received a much-needed boost thanks to the iPhone); to approaches that integrate human input/judgment to deliver search results we're much more likely to appreciate.
April 8, 2009
Tags: AKQA, behavioral targeting, dotopen, EContent, Enagement Marketing, Idée, IQ Engines, Kooaba, Mobile Acuity, Mobile Internet, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Search, Mobile Social Networks, Multimodal Mobile Search, Nokia, Open Mobile Summit, Point & Find, Searchme, SMLXL, SnapNow, SnapTell, visual search, Voice Search, Yahoo
Posted in Location-Based Services, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Research, Mobile Search, Mobile Social Media, Personalization, Usability | 5 Comments »
There’s nothing more exciting than a first-hand look at path-breaking innovation from a company to be reckoned with in mobile search – and this is exactly what I came away with when I left an invitation-only briefing at Nokia’s research center in Palo Alto, California. The main attraction: An image-based mobile search application called Point & Find.
Granted, Nokia has been talking up its visual mobile search capabilities since 2007, when it snapped up Pixto, a San Franc…
December 1, 2008
Tags: Kooaba, Mobile Marketing, Nokia, visual search
Posted in Content Discovery, Location-Based Services, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Search, Mobile Social Media | 3 Comments »