If everyone has a mobile device, why is mobile marketing so difficult for marketers? Why are the companies tasked to deliver mobile marketing opportunities so challenged in the
marketplace? The answer is surprisingly simple, as was recently stated very clearly by a colleague of mine, Jeff Frantz. Mobile is a “meta-channel,” as he puts it -- exactly
the right phrase and one I sincerely wish I had thought of first.
Most digital marketers were caught flat-footed by the rapid rise in consumer use of mobile browsers via smartphones.
Adoption had been projected for years, but actual planning against the mobile audience was limited -- and for good reason. At the launch of the iPhone, any marketer who was running standard
banner ads on the Web could say a portion of their marketing was “mobile,” because they knew a portion of the audience was exposed to their ads through a mobile browser. Every
network and DSP could say they delivered mobile ads because of the same rationale. Of course, this was only half true, and it overlooked the challenges of cookie tracking and creative
development for websites. While these marketers could say they were “mobile,” they were over-representing themselves dramatically.
Fast-forward to today. Mobile
is a channel, but one that’s woven into almost every other channel. Mobile connects the digital world to the real world with location-based GPS, iBeacons, QR codes, etc. Responsive
design enables a Web developer to create multiplatform websites and email templates that resize based on the device and viewer being used. The technology exists to allow creators to create once
and content to be delivered everywhere, which is exactly as it should be from an experiential point of view. But marketers are still looking at mobile as an after-thought.
Technology has put
make-up over the blemishes that result from marketer’s shortsighted view of mobile. To succeed in mobile, you have to scrub the strategy to make sure it’s sound and not repurposed
from somewhere else. You have to do the research and figure out how your customers are truly accessing mobile, and once they are there, what are they doing? Once you know what
they’re doing, what can you be doing to deliver them the information they need?
The answer to this is not as easy as it sounds, and I acknowledge that completely. The answer
usually sounds something like this: “My customers are spending time on social, so I should test some native ads on Facebook. Those cannot be secured through the Facebook Exchange, so I
need to work directly with Facebook. Additionally I should work with a mobile ad platform to get my ads into apps, where my audience is. Last, I will make sure my emails are designed to be
delivered on a mobile device. Done – my mobile strategy is complete.”
This is not going to cut it.
Mobile’s biggest benefit is understanding the path back and
forth from different devices and into the offline world. Data is at the core of this challenge, and data can provide the solution. 2015 is going to be the year when cross-device mapping
becomes commonplace, and marketers will know by matching mobile devices (including location), desktops and other screens what the actual path was for a consumer on her journey. Data and the
analytics of cross-device mapping will provide a truer view into attribution, so my point here is that mobile as a meta-channel becomes the key to unlocking true attribution for marketers.
As
a meta-channel, mobile can become one of marketers’ most valuable tools for understanding how their messaging truly works. It’s meta -- but meta implies a complete view, in my
eyes.
Do you see the same challenges when it comes to mobile -- or is there a simpler way to explain the “state of mobile” in 2014?