Europe
: As advertisers and operators seek out the best business model, 2006
will be a year of experimentation for the emerging mobile advertising
market. The next five years will see a shift by major brands from
simple SMS mobile marketing to more sophisticated multimedia advertising.
By 2007, brands will know what works, and mobile advertising will
become mainstream by 2008. These are some of the key findings from
visiongain's new report, entitled "Mobile advertising and marketing:
Market analysis and forecasts 2006-2011".
From 2005, when
the nascent market garnered $255 million in Europe and the United
States, mobile marketing and advertising in these two geographical
areas will grow to exceed $1 billion in 2009, according to visiongain.
The increasing availability
of multimedia content is opening a large opportunity for sophisticated
forms of mobile advertising. As content that already incorporates
advertising - like live TV programming - makes its way to mobile handsets,
brands and entertainment content providers are beginning to see the
value of presenting full multimedia ads with programs.
Players across the value
chain are developing their strategies and positioning themselves in
this space. Operators in the U.S. and Western Europe are currently
either testing various forms of advertising with 3G services or are
allowing ads to be served on their portals. A number of multimedia
companies will launch advertising in 2006 within their multimedia
offering. Furthermore, the entry of large online search engines into
the mobile world opens up new advertising opportunities in the shape
of context-based mobile search.
"The mobile phone
is a very personal device that most people carry with them 24 hours
a day. It affords advertisers an opportunity to present very targeted
and time-sensitive information that is of interest to the user. That
is a key advantage. With customer permission, advertisers can collect
valuable demographic and behavioural information to hone the marketing
message," says visiongain analyst and the report's lead author
Marcia Kaplan.
"3G technology enables
the delivery of richer content to mobile phone users, but there is
a limit to how many additional charges and subscriptions mobile phone
users will accept. At some point, content will have to be sponsored
or partially subsidised by advertising. We are also seeing the emergence
of ad-subsidised MVNOs, which plan to offer free airtime in exchange
for targeted advertising to subscribers," adds Kaplan.
The report notes that certain
elements need to fall into place before mobile advertising can establish
itself as a viable medium. Issues to be resolved include business
models and revenue share, the type, length and frequency of ads, consumer
attitudes and many others. Operators will have to walk a fine line
between maximising the revenue potential of advertising, while at
the same time not risk alienating subscribers and increasing churn
by doing so.
Based on interviews
with key market participants, including operators, vendors, media
agencies, software application providers, access providers, marketing
specialists, and trade association representatives, this 170+ page
report analyses the market drivers and barriers affecting mobile advertising
and marketing. It discusses the main market trends and charts the
market evolution in the US and Europe. The report examines mobile
advertising opportunities presented by MMS, video, TV, LBS, as well
as contextual advertising. Regional forecasts are provided up to the
year 2011.