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Few Answer Mobile Marketing Call

DECEMBER 7, 2007

American Idol votes are just a drop in the bucket.

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About one-quarter of mobile users are interested in mobile marketing, according to a November 2007 study by the Mobile Marketing Association.

Sweepstakes and voting campaigns (think American Idol) were the most common types of mobile marketing in which respondents had participated.

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The MMA also speculated that marketers will begin taking advantage of mobile phone features such as cameras. For example, camera phone usage is up more than one-third since 2006.

"Camera phone [usage] dovetails perfectly with the coming cross-carrier interoperability of picture messaging via a short code," said Gene Keenan, vice president at Isobar, in a statement released with the MMA data. "We expect to see some very innovative campaigns this coming year using picture phoning," he said.

US Mobile Phone Users Who Have Participated* in a Mobile Marketing Campaign, by Activity, 2007 (% of respondents)

Overall, self-reported participation in mobile marketing increased to 5% in 2007. For once, teens were not on the cutting edge. Participation by 25- to 44-year-olds saw the largest increase.

US Mobile Phone Users Who Have Participated* in a Mobile Marketing Campaign, by Age, 2005-2007 (% of respondents in each group)

With only 5% of these mobile phone users reporting participation in some form of mobile marketing campaign, it is still far from common. However, the move toward a mass audience for mobile marketers seems inevitable.

"The attraction of mobile messaging for marketers can be summarized in a single word: response," said John du Pre Gauntt, senior analyst at eMarketer. "The current response rates for mobile messaging campaigns blow competing mediums such as direct mail out of the water."

M:Metrics published research in September 2007 showing consumer response rates of 5.7% on the low end (in Germany) and 12% on the high end (in the US).

Text-Based (SMS) Mobile Advertisements Received and Responded to by Mobile Subscribers in the US and Select Countries in Western Europe, July 2007 (thousands and % of mobile subscribers receiving and responding)

Learn what it will take for mobile marketing to move beyond the experimental stage. Read eMarketer's Mobile Message Marketing report.  

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