According to the Executive Summary of the recent Mobile Marketing report from Borrell Associates, mobile media has emerged as the next big wave in advertising, mainly threatening the Web, but
also peeling significant expenditures away from direct mail and yellow pages.
Mobile marketing is set to reach dominant penetration levels faster than any medium before it, thanks to an
existing installed base of cell phones (80% of the population) rapidly being exchanged for smart phones (currently about 31% of the population and growing). By contrast, when the Internet
was born as a commercial medium in the mid-1990s, only 8% of households had a modem-enabled computer.
After radio, the first electronic new medium, aired the first commercial in 1922, it took
30 years, then 28, then 15 for the next new medium to arrive, from TV advertising in the early 1950s to cable advertising in the late 1970s to the Internet in the mid-1990s.
The
study sees fundamentals in place for mobile that will boost its trajectory over the next five years beyond what broadcast TV reached in the 1950s and the Internet reached
in the late 1990s.
For these reasons, Borrell is developing a series of reports focused on mobile marketing advertising. The first sets the stage by quantifying the context within which
mobile marketing will unfold, and tackles mobile couponing. a major key to the emergence of mobile marketing, according to the report.
Mobile Coupon Spending Local vs Total 2006-2014 (Million $ rounded) |
Year | Total Spending | Local Spending |
2006 | $3.3mm | 0 |
2007 | 7.2 | 0.1 |
2008 | 7.15 | 0.6 |
2009 | 86.4 | 3.3 |
2010 | 373.7 | 11.6 |
2011 | 1055.3 | 52.9 |
2012 | 22424 | 205.8 |
2013 | 4101.6 | 520.7 |
2014 | 6598.5 | 1090.0 |
Source: Borrell Associates, April 2010 |
Text-based coupons are the fastest-growing and most obvious mobile marketing application, and the easiest
to implement, says the report. Redemption rates for mobile coupons are 10x that of mail or newspaper distributed coupons. The report summarizes the future by noting that a restaurant in
Texas pays $37 to send out 500 text messages for a "buy-one/get-one-free burger" offer and gets 60 people to walk in the door, for incremental revenue of $1,000 per day.
Last year online marketing captured $44 billion in spending while mobile marketing reached $2.7 billion. The report expects total online marketing to grow at about 13% compounded annually, to
$80 billion by 2014. Mobile will grow at 84% per year and hit $57 billion by 2014.
In addition the report expects foresee "local" online advertising growing at an unusually
brisk pace, doubling every year for the next three. Local mobile advertising totaled $285 million in 2009; the report forecasts it to double this year to $586 million, then spike upward to
$11.3 billion by 2014.
$13.3 Billion Local Online Ad Spending Shares in
2009 |
Medium | Share of Total Spend, 2009 |
Pureplay | 51% |
Newspapers | 23 |
Directories | 11 |
Broadcast TV | 10 |
Radio | 2 |
Magazines | 2 |
Other print | 1 |
Source: Borrell Associates, April 2010 |
For additional
information from Borrell Associates, please visit here.