Written by Augme CMO David Apple
“Incorporating Mobile Advertising effectively to create the perfect Mobile Marketing Plan”
Mobile marketing and mobile advertising are often used interchangeably but they are not the same. Clarifying the definitions and using them appropriately is the difference between delivering impressions or building brand loyalty and increasing per-customer ROI. Mobile marketing is the practice of promoting or selling goods or services via a mobile device. Mobile advertising should be a tactic of a well-planned mobile marketing strategy. Mobile marketing enables marketers to engage with their consumers and measure that engagement at a granular level that isn’t possible with traditional media.
A demographic is no longer women, ages 18-49. With mobile, it is a woman, age 27 with 2 kids, and household income of 100K+ who buys brand “X” 3 times per week and lives in suburb “Y”. Marketers know this because the consumer is actively engaging with the brand on a regular basis via her mobile device. Marketers are maximizing the conversation with each individual consumer by creating strategies to maximize per-customer ROI. With marketers able to track engagement at such a detailed level via mobile web-enabled devices, why is mobile ad spending grouped with a traditional ad budget just to be spent? The most effective marketing strategy includes an effective mobile strategy that incorporates mobile advertising. This will become even more important as mobile usage increases in general.
Strategy Beyond the “Click”
The headline in a mobile banner display attempts to provoke a “click”. It is often the end of the line for customer acquisition and engagement strategy. Instead, if the banner ad delivers the user to a mobile web experience, providing brand-specific content and instant gratification, a lot will happen.
For example, a dental hygiene brand launched a new product last year. Originally the plan pointed mobile banners to a traditional website. Users who click a mobile banner that lands on a non-mobile website are not likely engage, therefore wasting the ad spend. This showed that there was no strategy beyond the click.
Fortunately, the mobile production plan included a budget to create a mobile website (features included Geo Location Tools, Coupon, Product Info, Social Connect, and Drive-to-Retail incentives) for all web-enabled mobile devices (7,500+ smartphones and feature phones). 8 unique QR codes and 8 unique SMS keywords were created. The codes and keywords were incorporated into all traditional media insertions. The mobile banners pointed to the mobile site instead of a traditional website.
The mobile marketing budget accounted for only.008% of the total campaign budget for the new product launch. Overall, mobile response directly added over 61,000 new consumer data records to the brand’s database in 35 days, a new record for the brand and the company as a whole. More importantly, the 61,000 data records indicated through which placement they entered, device type used, gender, age, income level, marital status, parental status, geographic location, web behavior, purchase intent, and “opt-in for more info” responses.
Is this the perfect mobile marketing plan? Maybe. Mobile advertising played a significant part in the mobile marketing campaign because advertising was a significant component within the overall plan. The .008% of budgetary commitment to mobile made up over 90% of the detailed learnings of the program. Traditional media like Out-of-Home (OOH) and Print only quantify circulation and traffic numbers. Traditional digital display returns good granular data, but perhaps users sitting in front of their PCs were not in the mindset of oral hygiene because the click-through rates were very low.
The conclusion is not that mobile replaces traditional media, but rather makes traditional media better. Mobile marketing, including mobile advertising, deserve their own billing and place on the budget sheet.










