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ToonsWare
Jun 09

JUNE 9, 2009

Look!

Applications for mobile devices date back to the 1990s, when Palm—by far the largest PDA player at the time—built an open platform that developers soon filled with thousands of applications. Users downloaded applications to PCs and synchronized them with their PDAs.

Enter the Apple App Store in July 2008.

“Apple did not invent either the model of aftermarket applications or the notion of building a store to house them,” says Noah Elkin, eMarketer senior analyst and author of the new report, Mobile Applications: Moving Beyond Apple, “but it did succeed in radically improving an existing idea.”

Excitement over the iPhone and App Store transformed these functional utilities into full-blown consumer experiences. Apple and others in its wake have jolted the mobile advertising market and are paving the way for paid branded applications.

As a result of rising smartphone popularity, eMarketer projects that mobile Internet access will see significant gains over the next five years, with the number of mobile Internet users reaching 134 million in 2013.

Global economic forces are taking their toll on the mobile device market, but smartphones have been spared the ravages of the economic downturn.

Even in the face of a worldwide recession, the International Data Corporation (IDC) expects smartphone shipments to grow by 3.4% this year, and expand at triple the rate of feature phones in 2010.

This sales growth will dramatically reshape the device market. By 2013, Informa predicts smartphones will make up 38% of all handset sales worldwide, more than double their share in 2009.

“As integrated devices grow more sophisticated in functionality and more accessible in price, consumers are responding by upgrading their handsets,” says Mr. Elkin. “And once they have experienced the mobile Internet through improved browsers or installed applications, they appear unwilling to let it go.”

The size of the mobile applications market is something of a moving target, given how quickly app stores are proliferating and their catalogs growing. Piper Jaffray, one of few organizations to project the extent of the growth, estimates that combined spending on consumer and business mobile applications will top $13 billion worldwide by 2012, a nearly fivefold increase over 2009.

“It is increasingly evident that for many marketers, mobile applications constitute a necessary avenue for reaching and engaging with their customers, either by building and marketing a proprietary application or sponsoring a third-party app,” says Mr. Elkin. “In both cases, the essential challenge remains: to understand consumer behavior and craft experiences that not only resonate with a target audience but also integrate with other channels.”

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May 26

MAY 26, 2009

Young, hip and ad-friendly.

It appears that the Apple iPhone, one of the hottest gadgets from one of the most cutting-edge companies in the world, may kick mobile advertising up a notch.

According to Brightkite, Inc. and Gfk NOP, iPhone users are more likely to recall mobile ads than non-iPhone users.

US Mobile Phone Users and iPhone Users Who Recall Viewing Mobile Advertising, by Type, Q1 2009 (% of respondents in each group)

iPhone users had higher rates of recall from all measured types of mobile ads than nonusers, including mobile display, standard text message (SMS), audio, picture or video messages (MMS) and mobile TV and video ads.

That’s great news for marketers, particularly at a time when other mobile manufacturers are building more touch-screen smartphones, such as the BlackBerry Storm, Palm Pre and Google Android.

But are iPhone users a viable demographic target? After all, Nielsen estimated that only 5.9% of US households owned or rented an iPhone in Q3 2008.

That number is sure to grow.

The NPD Group data ranked the iPhone as the second-highest-selling smartphone in 2009, and a Skype survey conducted by Zogby International ranked it the second-most-popular smartphone in the country, after the BlackBerry.

US Smartphone Users, by Brand, December 2008-February 2009 (% of respondents)

Enthusiasm for the device is also high among current users. Based on a customer satisfaction index, J.D. Power and Associates ranked Apple as the No. 1 smartphone brand in the second half of 2008.

According to a survey by Rubicon Consulting, most iPhone users are young (under 30), technologically sophisticated and apt to buy gadgets.

All in all, targeting smartphone users looks like a pretty smart tactic.

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