Today I came across an interesting post on GoMoNews.com about the emerging challenges associated with measuring the effectiveness of mobile advertising; specifically tying results from different ad networks together in a consistent manner such that they can be compared. The post recommends that ad networks begin offering APIs (application program interfaces) such that the raw data can be accessed by clients and then massaged into a consistent display for assessment by marketers.
While that sounds like a terrific step or opportunity for consulting firms, as I point out in a comment on the post I don’t see many marketers taking advantage of APIs to this end. Instead, I see:
- Marketers partaking in mobile advertising across multiple networks without any expectation at resolving the metrics across them, at least not at first. All forecasts predict that mobile advertising will explode in the next few years, suggesting marketers are either unconcerned or unaware of the issues described in the blog post.
- Because marketers generally are drawn to mobile because it is among the most trackable and accountable channels, they soon may bump into the metrics integration issue. Those marketers who do will fall into two camps: those who lack the resources or business case for integration regardless of API availability and those who will integrate because mobile advertising directly supports sales.
Let me explain: Many businesses utilize mobile advertising for awareness, branding and demand generation. If resolving metrics across networks becomes an issue, I expect many marketers to narrow their network partners to one or two that offer access to the most targeted group of potential customers – to undertake an integration exercise is simply not worth the effort. Other businesses that can drive sales via mobile transactions, however, will find it imperative to integrate metrics and tie these back to sales since the advertising directly supports the business.
With awareness/branding and demand generation representing arguably the largest mobile ad market opportunity, it suggests that mobile networks as a segment will narrow to 1-3 leaders with others either acquired or rendered irrelevant. Thus, pretty quickly a consistent view of mobile ad metrics should happen almost automatically.
When it comes to engaging customers in the mobile channel, there is a strong analogy. A single system which allows marketing objectives to be tailored to the mobile channel, executed and tracked, should be high on marketers’ priority lists in 2010.
Technology-wise, I am talking about SMS text messaging, mobile optimized websites, mobile applications, mobile email and social media. In practice, marketers enabled with a solution that stitches each of these together will have a significant advantage over those who don’t.
For example, imagine engaging your customers via SMS text messaging, let them forward the invitation response to their Twitter followers, send text responders a thank you email, point them to a mobile website to redeem a coupon or to download a mobile application designed for their handset to enhance the shopping experience. And, track this activity across all these mobile channels in a single system that easily integrates with the only system that matters — the one registering sales.