Screen size may constrain mobile search

Screen size may constrain mobile search

Advertisers need to expand the types of activities being advertised on mobile

With the mobile marketing channel still in its infancy, there are several challenges in conducting mobile search programs, especially given the issue of screen size.

Search marketers who are dealing with small screens need to serve relevant ads and, at the same time, worry if the results will be clear and easy to read by the consumer.

“In the long run it decreases the value of mobile search because it degrades the end-user experience,” said Dan Flanegan, JHG-Townsend Mobile Strategy lead and CEO of Brand Anywhere.

In the process of creating a mobile search ad, marketers need to put themselves into the shoes of the consumer, he said. A key point to keep in mind is what consumers will think of the brand when they experience it on the phone and within search results.

Search research
Marketers should also understand their search partner and the products and services offered.

“Inventory levels – the number of searchers – on mobile are limited right now and are very specific to particular types of searches, essentially those that involve searches that are location-specific,” said Craig Macdonald, vice president of marketing, alliances and product management at SEMDirector, San Diego.

“Therefore, leveraging mobile search requires advertisers to match their resources to the opportunity which is determined by vertical,” Mr. Macdonald said.

Bandwidth is also a problem, requiring experimentation.

“Advertisers should have an 800 number to call and follow up to whether the interaction being advertised supports an inbound call model,” Mr. Flanegan said.

“Otherwise, advertisers need to test the landing page experience from mobile search that drives consumers to pages that can come up in 5 to 10 seconds,” he said. “This usually means page sizes of less than 20KB.”

To make the cost-per-acquisition from search more valuable, advertisers need to expand the types of activities being advertised on mobile.

For example, one of SEMDirector’s customers is a manufacturer of PDAs. Since most people do not buy their mobile phone via a handset, the landing page that is used online should not be the same as the one running on mobile.

SEMDirector found that advertising mobile phone accessories on mobile was more successful for its client.

“By building out appropriate potential sales categories and providing mobile users with helpful ways to find what they need – appropriate to the medium – SEMDirector has driven CPAs down through mobile by 83 percent over a six-month period,” Mr. Macdonald said.

“The key has been flexibility in getting different content on the mobile platform so different offers could be tested,” he said.

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Associate Editor Giselle Abramovich covers ad networks, advertising, content, email, media, messaging, legal/privacy, search, social networks, television and video. Reach her at giselle@mobilemarketer.com.