Marketers and advertisers agree, 2010 will be the year of the mobile web. In a few short months mobile will have more audience reach than television, radio, or the internet. Two thirds of the world’s population, roughly 4 billion people currently have a mobile device of which 20% are currently web enabled smart phones. In 2010, mobile advertising is forecast to grow 45 percent to $3.8 billion, which will be spent on SMS, mobile display, and mobile search.
Carriers opening up data plans to flat rates rather than per kb consumption (between December 2008 and December 2009, the percentage of US mobile phone subscribers with unlimited data plans increased from 16% to 21%), new more powerful devices, and a publisher surge in generating mobile wap and app content have created the perfect storm for marketers and consumers to meet on the mobile web. Consumer media consumption patterns are changing. There is a significant rise in both production and consumption of “snackable content” which is consumed during the commute, at a stoplight, or in the waiting room. This opens up the new mobile venue over which advertisers can broadcast and target. Facebook and Twitter for example saw a 112% and 347% uptick in users consuming and creating content via the mobile web from January 2009 to January 2010. Not only are there more users on the mobile web, they are more engaged. According to facebook, mobile users currently average two times the pageviews, production, interaction, and consumption events that they do on the traditional display web.
Mobile advertising added to your marketing mix will connect you to consumers who are closer to the point of purchase. Think targeting a consumer who is in the mall parking lot walking in to buy a pair of jeans rather than one on the traditional web browsing jeans styles on their couch. Mobile ad placements offer a commanding presence of the consumer experience, think one banner per page rather than the traditional 4 plus average that we are seeing today in traditional display. As an advertiser is makes sense to employ the tactics below to target your consumers via mobile:
• SMS / MMS – Communications protocol that allow exchange of short text messages between mobile devices. Reach over 2.4 billion active users, 74% of all global mobile phone subscribers.
• Mobile Display – Banner inventory within smartphone application and mobile Wireless Access Protocol (WAP) versions of html publisher pages. Reach over 405 million global users according to emarketer .
• Mobile Applications – Banner inventory on applications for specific mobile devices like iphone, blackberry, and android. According to GetJar mobile application inventory will jump from 7 billion apps downloaded in 2009 to almost 50 billion in 2012.
• Mobile Search – Search traffic through mobile search engines, directories, navigation, or discovery services., about 15% of the total mobile advertising market.
Mobile is a force multiplier to any of your current campaigns. Get on the small screen, take advantage of the big opportunity in 2010. Want to learn more? Contact Nalu Media to learn more about how to harness the power of the mobile web.









The Super Bowl is a yearly reminder of why it is good to be in the advertising industry. Pigskin brings together a massive union of audience and advertisers on television screens across the globe. Audience at scale engaged in the same content, at the same time makes for a prime target for Americas largest brands. This year television attendance was up with
views of their TV spot in the two weeks following the SuperBowl. That is a 3% value add, $8 million in total advertising spend from a medium which has
The 140 character post has taken the world by storm. Twitter growth is currently trending at 965% year over year and predicted to be at 100 million users by end of 2009. This is a uniquely valuable channel to marketers, for both broadcasting your message and mining data to gauge your position in the market. It is more important than ever to understand the Twitter audience, both the Tweeters and the consumers of tweets.





Twitter, facebook, and the hundreds of other social media platforms offer an open portal for you to broadcast your message to millions. The point to many communication architecture takes away the need to “look” at who you are speaking to. With this comes an alarming lack of security for your personal information.
The goal of any advertising campaign is to target specific users with the right message, in the right place, at the right time to alter their behavior and convince them to act in accordance with your campaign goals. Millions of dollars have been invested in finding the right secret sauce to correlate the content of a page to a particular user. Contextual targeting has spawned the largest ad networks in the business.
When the decisioning made by the contextual network is right things are great. Advertisers have the ability to target specific keyworks and appear on placements across a content network. Measuring ROI on ad buys across multiple keywords is simple and scalable. Contextual works. On the other hand when the decisioning does not take into account content being mentioned in a negative light and your brand ends up running alongside bad press like the example to the left. Contextaul fails.