Keeping you on The Edge of interactive technology
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Mobile Ad Spending to Gain Momentum

eMarketer
September 23, 2009

Higher growth rates in 2010–2011

Despite the rising number of mobile users and their increasingly sophisticated habits and mobile devices, advertising and marketing dollars flowing to mobile lag behind consumer usage of the channel. But long-term growth trends are positive. Spending on mobile advertising is set to increase rapidly over the next five years.

eMarketer estimates that mobile ad spending, including messaging-based formats, will reach $416 million in 2009, increasing to $1.56 billion by 2013.

“As an emerging advertising channel, mobile will continue to see lofty growth rates through 2013,” said Noah Elkin, eMarketer senior analyst and author of the new report, “Mobile Advertising and Marketing: Change Is in the Air.” “Mobile will grow considerably more quickly than online ad spending as a whole, more in line with emerging online formats such as digital video.”

Like many research firms have done in the past year, eMarketer has revised downward its projections for mobile advertising in the U.S. to account for the realities of the global economic downturn. But based on extensive interviews with marketers and agency executives, the overall long-term outlook for mobile remains optimistic.

Estimates for mobile ad spending span a broad range. At the low end, Yankee Group predicts $184 million in 2009 spending, while the Mobile Marketing Association forecasts spending will reach $1.7 billion this year. This disparity reflects the relative immaturity of the channel, particularly for non-messaging-based advertising and marketing formats.

In terms of spending share for various mobile formats, eMarketer foresees a rise for search, from 18% ($57.6 million) of the total in 2008 to 37% ($577.2 million) in 2013. Over the same time period, eMarketer also projects a decline in share for SMS, from 60% of the total ($192 million) to 28% ($436.8 million), while display will grow from 22% ($70.4 million) to 35% ($54.6 million).Of all mobile ad formats, eMarketer believes search will see the steepest growth through 2013, yielding a CAGR of 58.6% between 2008 and 2013.

“Disparate hardware and software platforms, competing app stores, rival search engines and a large, fragmented universe of agencies and service providers make the mobile ecosystem more daunting than the desktop environment,” said Mr. Elkin. “But overcoming this complexity pays dividends.”

Mobile has an additive effect on other advertising and marketing efforts, and can bridge the gap between digital and traditional campaigns. It is also flexible, lending itself to both direct response and brand reinforcement and awareness campaigns.

Nielsen Hooks Up With Facebook for Ad Effectiveness

Nielsen has struck a global, multiyear partnership with Facebook that begins with hundreds of studies this year to explore the effectiveness of advertising on the online social network.

Nielsen will design and execute the studies while data collection and consumer privacy will be handled by Facebook, which claims 300 million users.

The partnership “contributes a new and important dynamic element to our overall three-screen strategy,” Nielsen Online CEO John Burbank wrote in an internal memo to Nielsen employees.

The deal calls for Nielsen to be Facebook’s preferred market research provider.

The first product stemming from the relationship is called BrandLift; which will leverage data from user polls already at Facebook.

“BrandLift will be commercially available in the coming months, and we expect to conduct hundreds of studies with clients who advertise on Facebook by the end of the year,” Burbank wrote.

It will be interesting to see how the efforts pan out, as polling wouldn’t seem to be the best way to measure online effectiveness.

While Facebook is the undisputed king of social media at the moment, there are plenty of analysts, marketers and media who are starting to see cracks in Facebook’s armor, and wonder if the network is destined to experience a rapid falloff in usage as www.myspace.com did, or becomes a ghetto of undesirable demographics.

Marketing Tips for Twitter Search

Bizzia
September 19, 2009
By Stephen Kersey

While Google remains the king of search, Twitter Search is moving up the ranks. I’ve started to use Twitter Search more and more because its great for finding out what is happening at the moment.

For marketers, getting found via Twitter Search isn’t very complicated, however you need to follow these Twitter Search marketing tips:

Use keywords
Keywords are extremely important when marketing on Twitter Search. Use keywords that people would likely search.

Repetition
With Twitter Search, you want to be at the top of the stack. To do that, youll need to consistently tweet to get to the top. But mix it up so that you dont appear to be spamming.

Trending topics
Trending topics on Twitter Search shows you want people are talking about. Mixing trending topics with keywords is a good idea.

Track results

Like any other type of online marketing, be sure to track your results. You can easily do so by using a link that counts the visitors who click on it. Find the formula that works best for your Twitter Search marketing campaign.

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