Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Mobile ads need to be more targeted- study

Added:
Jun 25, 2007

MoMac's research, conducted by independent research agency Tickbox, emphasises the need for mobile advertising to match specific audience requirements.

Results from different demographics indicate that responsiveness to different kinds of advertising changes according to age and gender, giving brands and marketers valuable guidelines around which to design their mobile advertising campaigns.

MoMac's GoSell platform has been developed to help publishers easily integrate and manage the inclusion of mobile banners and sponsored content within editorial and branded environments and will be available as part of MoMac's integrated mobile publishing platform, GoMedia.

The Mobile Advertising Attitudes Report surveyed a cross section of 1,400 UK mobile phone users during May 2007.

Advertising Formats

Despite the fact that mobile advertising is in its infancy, the report reveals that as many as 13% of 16-24s have already responded to or clicked-on a mobile advert.

Given the limited inventory currently available for mobile advertising, and the relative rarity of mobile users being served mobile ads, the figures show the potential for a significant future take-up - if the communication is delivered in the right way.

When it comes to mobile advertising formats, MoMac's research shows clear differences in the preferences of men and women and the different demographic groups.

When on mobile sites, text based advertising links are the most popular (56%) with a clear female bias of 60% compared to just 47% of men.

Picture or banner-based advertising was the second most popular option, favoured by 29% overall and just under one in three 25-34 year olds.

Interestingly, video based advertising has a strong male bias with 22% of men compared to just 12% of women stating they would be most likely to respond to a video advert.

Video formats were also more popular with younger mobile users selected by 23% of 16-24s but only 12% of the over 55s.

Payment Models

The research results also indicate that content providers will need to consider a number of payment models to appeal to the diverse groups of mobile users in the UK looking for content.

The ad-funded model could become dominant with younger mobile users, with 47% of 16 to 24s preferring to access content for free in exchange for viewing advertising.

Only 32% of this group opted for a pay-as-you-download (PAYD) model and only 3.9% stated they would want to pay for content via a subscription.

In contrast the PAYD method is more popular with older mobile users, with 55% of those aged 45 and older opting to pay for content on demand, and also appeals more to women, with 54% choosing PAYD compared to 41% of men who are more open to advertising.

Sham Careem, MD of MoMac UK, comments: "The research shows that brands and media companies must think carefully about who their primary targets are before they decide how to deliver both their content and advertising campaigns. Different demographics will respond better to different methods of advertising and the key to a successful campaign will be ensuring that the format matches the target audience."

MoMac's research was conducted as part of the preparation for the launch of its new GoSell mobile advertising platform.

A number of recent acquisitions (including AOL's purchase of Third Screen Media and Microsoft's purchase of Screen Tonic) have added impetus to mobile advertising's move to the mainstream, with research house Strategy Analytics predicting mobile ad revenues to be as high as $14.4billion by 2011.

The GoSell campaign management platform is aimed at both media companies and advertisers, giving them a one-stop platform to plan ad campaigns and assign them to one or more mobile sites.

The platform also lets clients create promotional areas within a mobile site and optimize ads to the specific handset of the end-user.

Clients can choose to show ads depending on a range of criteria, such as campaign priority, date and time, network operator and user handset, and the platform offers a range of live reporting features.

www.momac.net

 

Document Actions
Subscribe to Netimperative Newsletters

Email address:


Daily
Weekly
Search Marketing
Events
Publishing & Media

Send as:
Text
HTML

Alternatively, click here to unsubscribe

Digital Training Academy
Digital Training Academy
Essential skills for today's marketers: boost your team's results with customised advanced digital marketing coaching from world class trainers at the Academy.
Mail our academy managers Ask our tutors for more
Full details here...
Digital marketing audits
Digital Training Academy

Getting the best ROI from your websites, emails and online ads? Sure?

Our digital marketing audits review your current and planned campaigns to find ways of cutting budgets without cutting impacts.

Mail our academy managers Ask for more
Full details here...
 
Digital events
Latest polls
Mobile ad networks
Apple's iAds Vs Google's AdMob- which do you think will be most succesful in the long term?



Votes : 114
Comment
Right to reply: The New Twitter – a sticky, revenue-rich service that blitzes the third-party apps
Twitter is now a 'destination website' and that means it is gunning for Facebook, but cleverly avoiding a direct dogfight. It’s more an information network than a social network and so is offering much, much more. Tanya Goodin, CEO of search and social conversion agency Tamar comments…
Sep 16, 2010
Right to reply: ‘Instant Search’– Google giveth then taketh away
Google has just announced its “streaming search” service, Google Instant, is coming out of limited Beta testing and going live for all users. According to Adam Bunn, Head of Search at leading independent search and social marketing agency Greenlight, when it comes to search engine optimisation campaigns (SEO), some websites may now suffer a drop in traffic.
Sep 10, 2010
Guest comment: No rival to the SMS text exists in the market today
SMS is the obvious “lowest common denominator” mobile marketing solution... yet critics still talk about apps and website and vouchers. Darren Daws, Managing Director at Txtlocal argues why SMS is still the best mobile marketing medium, even on smartphones.
Aug 04, 2010
All subject items…