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The Mobile Commerce Win: Location, Location, Location

Moosejaw-App-BLet the mobile location innovation begin!

While we regularly see and hear of innovations in how marketers can reach consumers at various stages during their path to purchase, new ideas around location are starting to get richer, as is the location data information.

For example, Moosejaw, the outdoor retail chain headquartered in Michigan, has 11 stores but the majority of sales come from online and mobile.

To better utilize its stores, the company linked its brick and mortar locations to its warehouse inventory, so customers shop the chain’s ‘endless aisle’ where they can see and touch about 5,000 different products but also have direct access to 120,000 products at the warehouse.

In stores in three states, payment terminals were cut in half and 70 percent of all transactions there are completed on a mobile device, according to IBM, whose technology is being used.

And yesterday, during a panel at the MediaPost OMMA Mobile conference in New York, a panelist raised an issue of a different way to factor in location.

The panel was focused on the future of new mobile technologies coming for cars and one of the obvious conversations was around using location-based technologies to offer deals as a driver passed a certain location, a common discussions in mobile circles for more than a decade.

But one of the panelists then suggested that location be leveraged in a different way. For example, rather than targeting the driver at a particular moment while driving, capture data about regular driving routes. The idea would be then to use that information to provide value related to the particular route driven.

Offers then could come in the form of coupons that could be used within a certain timeframe, for example, but not necessarily delivered when the person is driving.

The point is that we are at the very early stages in how to best utilize phone locations to provide the best value to consumers.  

The first instinct is typically to target a shopper based on their specific location at a particular moment.

While this can be effective, there may be other opportunities to engage the consumer based on where they have been and what they may have done, in addition to where they are.

Whether using a physical store to encourage in-house showrooming or analyzing past travel patterns to provide future offers, in the end, location rules.

What is the best mobile innovation you've seen or heard about?

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Save the Date: OMMA mCommerce, July 15, New York. Here’s the AGENDA.

5 comments about "The Mobile Commerce Win: Location, Location, Location".
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  1. Chuck Martin from Chuck Martin, May 23, 2013 at 6:54 p.m.

    At least you'll know what you could be getting into, Paula. In reality, you can simply turn off location tracking on a smartphone so none of this targeting then would affect you.

  2. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited, May 25, 2013 at 12:11 a.m.

    I knew you were going to say that Chuck. It's not even the cost of a smart phone, its the razor blades, I mean monthly plans of $1200 plus per month. I have email attached to my macbook, iPad, even an old mac plus a phone number with voice mail and a pretty good camera. Anybody who wants to contact me, I can be found. There has been nothing, absolutely nothing that important that I need a smart phone for. (I am even on linked-in and can be reached through MediaPost.)

  3. Chuck Martin from Chuck Martin, May 25, 2013 at 10:48 a.m.

    Not sure where you're located, but $1200 a month sounds a bit steep, unless that is a type, of course, and it is $120 a month, which also is steep. Sounds like you already are pretty digitally connected.

  4. Jeremy Geiger from Retailigence, May 27, 2013 at 5:05 p.m.

    Ideas about helping shoppers save time and money by guiding them to stores to buy products they want, with due consideration as to the shoppers home and office locations and the traffic involved are well underway. At $120 per month of service, you have an ROI if such solutions can save you a few hours of wasted time! ; )

  5. Chuck Martin from Chuck Martin, May 27, 2013 at 7:33 p.m.

    Right you are Jeremy, especially as more mobile shoppers figure this out.

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