Somo's Sleight: Mobile Is Bigger Than Just M-Commerce - It's Affecting The Whole Customer Journey
LONDON – The retail implications of mobile media go far beyond so-called “m-commerce” -- the instant conversion of a retail purchase via a mobile device -- but likely have even greater long-term effects for consumers and marketers alike, a top strategist at London-based mobile agency Somo Global said this morning during a presentation at OMMA Mobile Europe.
In fact, that executive, Somo Chief Strategy Officer Ross Sleight, went to far as to assert: “I think in e-commerce, we have taken the fun out of shopping.”
Sleight indicated that the problem with mobile media -- especially tablets -- is that many marketers, agencies and retailers are thinking of it as an extension of a Web site, and are utilizing it in prosaic, task-oriented and conversion-oriented ways that aren’t leveraging the high-impact experience value of mobile technology.
“Shopping on Amazon isn’t any fun,” he quipped, adding that tablets, by contrast, are about “bringing things to life.”
Sleight gave an example of a campaign Somo recently implemented for Domino’s Pizza that went well beyond conventional task-oriented conversions, and provided emotional and eye-catching displays and options that enabled consumers to customize and upgrade their pizza orders with “extras” ranging from “cole slaw” to “chicken wings.”
He said the power of the campaign was in its ability to harness the high resolution of retina displays to “make the pizzas look mouth-watering” in ways that conventional Web browsing experiences might not.
“This really showed that creating a tablet-only experience drove more sales in day one than it would have done on the Web,” he said, citing other examples of retailers who utilized the highly visualized nature of tablets to create custom content experiences that went beyond the kind of conventional brochure-ware that retailers usually utilize the Web for.
Offering examples of U.K. retailer Mark & Spencer’s new “Home” iPad app, Sleight said it was more of a “magazine-like” experience showing beautifully rendered home furnishing settings where the products are more in the background than listed as inventory on a retail Web page.
“This is not about ‘search for a sofa,’” he said, “This is about, ‘give me sets, give me shots, make it more magazine-like. Make the retail experience look, wow!’”
The point, he said, is to utilize the “engagement” value of tablet computers to bring some “joy with shopping,” and to leverage magazine-like or event TV format content to do that. Noting that tablets are equally capable of rendering high-quality video, he quipped: “A picture says a thousand words. And a video says a thousand pictures. I think we will see a lot more of that.”
Sleight noted that mobile devices are playing a direct response role too, especially as the “second screen” response mechanism for people watching television, but that when consumers bring their mobile device into retail shopping experiences, they begin to adopt other behaviors and habits that are beginning to augment their shopping experience, especially how they research the brands and products they buy at retail.
Sleight said he’s been spot-checking this phenomenon every three months by going into a major retail location and observing how people utilize their mobile devices while shopping.
“Every three months I see more and more people whip out their mobile and checkout products,” he said, noting that they might be “checking for prices” or researching additional information about the product instead of talking to a sales associate.
The important thing, he said, was to understand that while people are beginning to convert purchases directly on their mobile devices in retail locations, more of them are doing research that may be converted later online via a conventional computer Web browser or even at a retail location.
“If mobile affects anything on the purchase journey, it’s not all about the silo of e-commerce,” he said, adding: “We’ve got a medium here that is affecting the research and customer purchase journey.”
Recent Online Media Daily Articles
-
New Stanford Initiative Helps Browser Developers Refine Cookie-Blocking June 19, 7:35 p.m.
Privacy advocates at Stanford on Tuesday unveiled a new initiative that could pave the way for ... -
Facebook Aims To Simplify Page Analytics June 19, 5:52 p.m.
In its latest step to simplify advertising and marketing on Facebook, the company on Wednesday announced ... -
Powley Tapped As iCrossing CEO June 19, 5:32 p.m.
Catching agency watchers off guard, Don Scales is stepping down as CEO of iCrossing, effective immediately.Stepping ... -
Twitter Gets Social With Viacom June 19, 5:21 p.m.
Twitter took another step Wednesday toward supporting television. The social-media company signed a partnership with Viacom ... -
Digital, Alternative Media Revs Forecast To Hit $436B By 2017 June 19, 3:01 p.m.
Various types of mobile marketing and advertising accounted for nine of the top 10 fastest-growing digital ... -
Acquisitions Flourish, Google To Seek Equity Firm To Further Deals June 19, 1:24 p.m.
Google is considering alliances with private-equity firms to help structure acquisition deals, but the tech company ... -
Millennial Expands Video Ad Options June 19, 11:44 a.m.
Mobile ad network Millennial Media is stepping up its video ad offerings with the launch of ... -
CIMM Issues Request For Data, Cross-Platform Metrics June 19, 9:29 a.m.
The Coalition for Innovative Media Measurement (CIMM) said it has issued a request for proposals involving ... -
Heads Or Tails: Facebook Grows A Long One, Surpasses 1 Million Advertisers June 19, 7:48 a.m.
Facebook has reached an important ad industry milestone, becoming one of the few mega platforms to ... -
Consumer Action: Most Web Users Want Control Over Tracking June 18, 8:20 p.m.
Most Web users have expectations about privacy that appear to be at odds with current practices ...


1 comment on "Somo's Sleight: Mobile Is Bigger Than Just M-Commerce - It's Affecting The Whole Customer Journey".
Leave a Comment