Tony Nethercutt, General Manager of Mojiva, notes that "... mobile marketing performs well when it lines up the services and products that affect people on an everyday basis ... mobile advertising is part of the conversation for major national brand advertising..."
Some additional findings from Mojiva and InsightExpress in the Mojiva Mobile Audience Guide include:
With user statistics from InsightExpress, the MAG offers a look into what resonates with users through mobile devices like smartphones and tablets. This month's research shows that marketers need to focus on engaging creative executions that encourage user interaction.
Joy Liuzzo, Senior Director from InsightExpress says "... InsightExpress research continues to demonstrate that mobile consumers are evolving, with new behaviors, attitudes, and demographic segments emerging almost monthly..."
There are opportunities to advertise with mobile ads, says the report, as respondents are frequently clicking on mobile ads. Graphic ads as a whole appear to be successful in grabbing attention. Content and type of ad will impact overall reach:
Which Of The Following Would You Do As A Result Of Seeing A Mobile Ad On Your Phone? | |
Action After Mobile Ad | % of Respondents |
Play a game | 63% |
Download a mobile application | 52 |
Browse a website | 51 |
Watch a video | 49 |
Listen to music | 49 |
Redeem or download a coupon | 40 |
Request more information | 38 |
Tap-to-call | 17 |
Purchase a product | 22 |
None of these | 13 |
Source: Mojiva Mobile Audience Guide, May 2011 |
For the most part, graphic ads as a whole were successful in capturing the attention of respondents:
Which ONE Of The Following Types Of Mobile Ads Are You Most Likely To Pay Attention To? | |
Type of Ad | % Likely to Pay Attention |
Normal banner ads | 22% |
Video ads | 22 |
Ads that let me interact with them | 21 |
Animated banner ads | 19 |
Text ads | 13 |
Expanding screen take-over ads | 2 |
Source: Mojiva Mobile Audience Guide, May 2011 |
Ads pertaining to retail stores, weather, restaurants or bars and sports are most likely to be clicked on by someone using their mobile phone:
From Which Of The Following Types Of Companies, Would You Be Most Likely To Click On A Mobile Ad? | |
Ad From | % of Respondents |
Retail stores | 18% |
Weather | 15 |
Restaurants or bars | 13 |
Sports | 12 |
Music groups | 11 |
Food or drink products | 11 |
Radio stations | 6 |
Social / dating | 6 |
Magazines | 3 |
Airlines | 2 |
Traffic | 2 |
Banks or other financial institutions | 2 |
Source: Mojiva Mobile Audience Guide, May 2011 |
60% of respondents click on a mobile ad for more information at least once a week. Of those, 19% click on a mobile ad for more information several times a day.
How Often Do You Click On A Mobile Ad To Get More Information About A Product / Service You Saw On Your Phone? | |
Click Frequency | % of Respondents |
Several times a day | 19% |
Around once a day | 15 |
Several times a week | 14 |
Around once a week | 12 |
Several times a month | 8 |
Around oncea month | 6 |
Less than once a month | 10 |
Never | 16 |
Source: Mojiva Mobile Audience Guide, May 2011 |
Study Demographics | |
Category | % of Respondents |
Age Group | |
Under | 18 5% |
18-25 | 16 |
26-35 | 35 |
36-45 | 24 |
46-55 | 13 |
Over 55 | 7 |
Education | |
Some high school | 10% |
Graduate high school | 33 |
Vocational / Technical school | 11 |
Some college | 29 |
Graduated college | 12 |
Some post-graduate work | 2 |
Completed graduate degree or higher | 3 |
Annual HH Income | |
Under $20,000 | 30% |
$20,000-$29,999 | 15 |
$30,000-$39,999 | 15 |
$40,000-$49,999 | 5 |
$50,000-$74,999 | 8 |
$75,000-$99,999 | 7 |
$100,000-$149,999 | 1 |
$150,000 or higher | 0 |
Prefer not to answer | 19 |
Source: Mojiva Mobile Audience Guide, May 2011 |
For more information from Mojiva, see the release here, or access the full Mobile Audience Guide here.
As much as I respect Tony, you're publishing an entire study on the effectiveness of mobile advertising from a mobile advertising network. Perhaps a second source or some critical review would boost confidence in the results, or reassure your readers you haven't turned your space over to whatever press release is next.
I agree with Tom here. I have clicked on 3 ads ever since august on my Android. But then I never click on digital ads online either so maybe I am unique. It is really hard to separate bias though when a study could benefit who commissioned the study.
Best example ever was the Bush administration suppressing EPA studies about refinery emissions then commissioning the American petroleum Institute to do a study who of course found no dangers and because they basically bought bush the presidency bush rubber stamped the study.
My rule of thumb is skeptical until proven true.