Sometimes using your own family for industry research can muddy the emotional waters a bit too much. As longtime readers of this column know, my daughter, partner, and even my friends and parents get
pulled into my little obsessive vortex of deliberately unscientific inquiry about mobile habits. In most families, dinnertime can be touchy, but at Chez Smith, Dad's version of chit-chat can test
everyone's nerves. I am told that my grilling over SMS usage, favorite new app downloads, shifting to mobile IM, etc. is not always welcome.
"OK, you know I am your
daughter, not a focus group, right?" my daughter snaps from behind her forkful of veggie burgers. "Maybe I just don't feel like being in your column this week." Teenagers!
They never want to go anywhere with their parents... even into a column.
"You could ask her about how the college applications are going," my partner chimes in, subtly letting me
know that if I persist it will be two women against one Dad. I have done this math before, and it never works out for me.
But lo and behold, it turns out that I am becoming my own best
focus group. According to Compete's latest survey of smart phone use in the retail setting, I am pretty much the ideal consumer. Compete polled almost 2,000 smart phone owners about a dozen types
of retail-related interactions with their phones. Not only have I participated in ten of the 12, but I have done so in the past month as part of my holiday shopping.
The two most popular
retail-oriented uses of smart phones are looking up shipping information for items a user may order online (68% of users) and looking up the address or store hours of a store (68%). Among m-commerce
apps, Amazon offered the best experience bar none for me. Not only could I track my incoming gift orders but I got SMS alerts when the package was on the truck to be delivered. I was using mobile Web
sites and retailer apps throughout December to check store hours, although few of the mobile sites were updated with special holiday times.
One of the things I did notice in both using
store finders and checking in-store pick-up (used by 40% of smart phone owners) is how quickly I identified which retail mobile apps and sites were easy to use. The Blockbuster app was able to tell me
what titles were available at which nearby stores, or it could just kick the title onto my mail-order rental queue... all in a couple of clicks.
What this tells me is that retailers need to
make a good first impression right out of the gate. I knew that Fandango could get me a nearby movie time and even order some tickets, but its click-path was often awkward and its ticket ordering
coverage is limited. This sent me back to the Web often -- or to rival Moviefone more often than not. The seamlessness of a mobile experience gets emblazoned in one's mind pretty fast, and you
quickly look for the straightest line to get what you want.
According to Compete, 52% of smart phone users are looking up product descriptions and 45% are consulting product reviews
in-store. This should be a call to action for retailers. We were shopping for a carpet cleaner in Best Buy. But the Best Buy iPhone app is more interested in marketing its deals out-of-store than
getting me a quick path to more detail about the product in front of me on the shelf. There is a search box for an sku in the app, but why bother with that when an Amazon image scan or a bar code scan
with the RedLaser app can deliver a ton of information without typing?
In the case of the otherwise superb Amazon app, however, its image recognition technology does not deliver immediate
results. So, again, my mobile adaptive brain is starting to tell me where to go first on my phone for in-store information. But the real point is that the retailer should own the mobile experience
when in-store. On my visits to several retailers throughout the season, I saw many people standing at store shelves with a tell-tale tick: head bouncing between mobile input and store shelf, obviously
using their phone to look up something related to the product at hand.
I think the smart phone stats Compete and others are serving up during this week of the Consumer Electronics Show
should send merchants sprinting to their developers. Most of the mobile retail apps I used this holiday were treating me as if I were simply at a Web site. They were porting an old desktop mentality
to mobile. What most of these apps needed was a single button at startup that asked, "Are You in Our Store?" At that point the interface could change entirely to surface all of the product
scanning tools, inventory checks, coupons, blue-light specials, store maps, etc. that can capture all of that wireless activity that is already going on in their stores. The problem is that most of
the mobile look-ups I was doing in all of these stores, even ones with their own mobile apps, was with another retailer.
"That's a lot to spend on a book," my daughter says as
we look at a coffee table tome we are considering for her grandfather. I hand her my phone and tell her to look it up on Amazon to see if we can get it cheaper. She hesitates.
"This is
a test, right? You're just going to write about it, especially if I screw it up."
"No, really, try it out."
"Sometimes I wish you were just a banker like
Mom. She never pulls stuff like this on me."