Over a year ago, prior to the 2011 holiday shopping
season, a major advertising agency issued a white paper saying the mobile
device was the new point of purchase at retail.
Outstanding insight. Still,
brands and agencies were caught flat-footed during the 2011 holiday shopping
season. A year later, there has been
little or no progress. The disease of
ATNA (All Talk No Action) is in full force.
What leads me to this observation? The hernia educing size of the Thanksgiving
newspaper (it is an anachronism, I receive a daily newspaper) most of it was
filled with advertising inserts. They
were neatly packaged in two plastic wrappers.
None of the ads had a special url, sms, qr calls to
action. Forget the fact that you might
be able to gain the name and phone number of someone who might buy your product,
you marketers just lost an opportunity to track the effectiveness of your
spending. On top of that, with bonded
mobile couponing solutions available, such as Koupon Media, there was no way
for the consumer to download the coupon on their mobile devices.
According to many sources, over a quarter of the billion
dollars spent during the “Gray Thursday, Black Friday” shopping period was
spent online. Several large chains
reported that consumers were comparing prices on mobile devices the wares on
the shelves. This happened last
year. Yet, I did not see anyone with a
display saying got to “ourstore.com” or “Text ourstore to 1245” or “scan this
code” to get a unique in store special.
By the way, you have to do all three. The consumer makes the choice on where and
how they use their mobile devices and you as a marketer need to have this
redundancy. It is something many in the
mobile field have preached for years.
Start doing it.
As for all of the money and time you spent going over and
vetting the editorial and artwork of these inserts, publishing them and paying
for them to be included in the newspaper, wouldn’t it be wise to invest some of
that money into a mechanism that gives you data and a direct relationship with
the consumer – mobile?
Brands and agencies have to stop talking about how mobile
is the future. They have to stop talking
about embracing mobile. They have to
start investing in the infrastructure and bake it into their overall
strategies.
This morning a study came out that was done by Forrester
and paid for by Velti (full disclosure, a former employer) that showed that
most marketers are being tactical in their use of mobile and that they are
looking for customer acquisition. The
conclusion of the article states “The report takes this as further evidence
that too many mobile advertisers are using desktop marketing tactics and
haven’t yet adapted to the opportunities presented by mobile. It recommends that marketers use mobile to
deliver highly contextual, relevant information that directly engage individual
consumers.”
Marketers it is time to kill ATNA. Now, before you lose the 2013
holiday season.
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