Skip to main content

Mobile Marketing and Geo-Targeted Campaigns

Location-based retailer advertising is evolving. However, according to the latest market study by ABI Research, businesses are now being primed to spend $1.8 billion on this emerging category by 2015 -- as part of overall mobile marketing budgets.

"It's still early days and there's no single right approach to location-based advertising," says ABI practice director, Neil Strother. "This remains a very fragmented market that is full of experimentation."

Nonetheless, the options are becoming more clearly defined. Location-based ads are enabled by three sets of technologies -- GPS, Wi-Fi, and mobile phone network Cell-ID.

According to ABI's assessment, the most successful campaigns use a mix of some or all of these technologies -- depending on the product or service, the region, the consumers, and the location accuracy required.

New location-based services are catering to mobile shoppers. Some are check-in services, such as Loopt, Gowalla, Foursquare, and Facebook Places. Others, such as Shopkick, use an iPhone app to reward shoppers just for visiting certain stores.

But, do consumers really want their physical location to be tracked?

"Some might be put off by the Big Brother aspects of this," says Strother. "But, it's really about the value-exchange: if you care about getting discounts or being rewarded for shopping, is the value-exchange high enough so that you'll accept having your whereabouts known to these companies in return for the benefits?"

Strother defines the basic steps for the prospective location-based advertiser, as follows.

Establish your marketing goals. Analyze your customer's mobile and location habits and develop your location approach. Choose location partner(s) and determine the best technologies for your brand. And finally, execute your geo-targeted campaign, measure the results and then refine the process.

Popular posts from this blog

The AI Application Integration Challenge

Artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly become the defining force in business technology development, but integrating AI into applications remains a formidable challenge. According to a recent Gartner survey, 77 percent of engineering leaders identify AI integration in apps as a major hurdle for their organizations. As demand for AI-powered solutions accelerates across every industry, understanding the tools, the barriers, and the opportunities is essential for business and technology leaders seeking to evolve. The Gartner survey highlights a key trend: while AI’s potential is widely recognized, the path to useful integration is anything but straightforward. IT leaders cite complexities in embedding AI models into existing software, managing data pipelines, ensuring security, and maintaining compliance as persistent obstacles. These challenges are compounded by a shortage of skilled AI engineers and the rapid evolution of AI technologies, which can outpace organizational readiness and...