Over the last decade, text messaging services and mobile internet has quickly taken hold in the US. As of June 2008, the CTIA reports that in the US, over 75 Billion text messages are sent and received every month. To put that into perspective, in June 2000, the number of text messages was just 12 million (not billion). How and why did mobile messaging kick into full gear? Wireless carriers opened their networks to inter-carrier messaging that transmits messages between mobile communications networks regardless of technologies involved (CDMA, GSM, iDen, or TDMA). This has lead to mass adoption to text messaging and opened the door for mobile marketing.
Advertisers, retailers and other service businesses have jumped on board to take advantage of mobile marketing. Mobile marketing can enhance customer loyalty and reduce churn and as it becomes a popular and sustainable revenue-generating medium, will also force the carriers to take notice.
The complete mobile ecosystem includes network operators, advertisers, technology and solutions providers, service providers and consumers who all stand to benefit from wireless commerce. To apply wireless commerce to everyday life, companies are quickly developing new mobile commerce applications. These applications and services are prepared to give a significant boost to the adoption of wireless commerce across the mobile ecosystem. Some of these applications include:
Wireless Commerce Applications
Mobile banking & Financial Service
» Mobile brokerage
» Mobile financial information
Mobile entertainment
» Mobile gaming
» Download of music and ring tones
» Download of videos and digital images
» Location-based entertainment services
Mobile information services
» Current affairs (financial, sport and other news)
» Travel information
» Tracking services (persons and objects)
» Mobile search engines and directories Mobile office
Mobile marketing - Mobile couponing
» Direct (context-sensitive) marketing
» Organization of mobile events
» Mobile newsletters
Mobile shopping
» Mobile purchasing of goods and services
Mobile ticketing
» Public transport
» Sports and cultural events
» Air and rail traffic
» Mobile parking
These mobile commerce applications are currently in use by retailers, banks and other companies. Other wireless commerce applications are being tested throughout several markets in the US. Having a mobile commerce application is only half the challenge. Many wireless carriers require approval for some types of m-commerce while others have to approve each campaign running across their network or promoted in their storefront. These new campaigns and applications often require certification and testing prior to acceptance.
Quality of service and ease of use are often considered part of a carrier review. According to Telephia, 22 percent of consumers who encounter a "quality of service" problem when making a purchase give up on the purchase. They also tend to register their complaint with the retailer or their wireless carrier. However, all is not lost. Those who can't finish the order process often complete their purchase in store or online and 17 percent stated they would try again later.
"We have found that user testing and quality of service improvements are critical if we expect to foster development of wireless commerce as a sustainable and formable business model," noted David Geipel, President of US-based QWASI, Inc. "Companies have to create a user experience for wireless commerce and m-commerce that supports industry growth."
The future of wireless commerce and m-commerce depends on a number of players in the mobile ecosystem to be creative and innovative. A solid, replicatible customer experience is vital to growing m-commerce throughout the next decade. As more retailers and companies dip their toe into the water, one thing is sure: the outlook for wireless commerce is bright.
Published by Chad DeBolt
- A Methodology for the Construction of Expert SystemsWe explore an unstable tool for studying context-free grammar (Drug), which we use to disconfirm that scatter/gather I/O and the lookaside buffer can cooperate to answer this question.
- Regulating the Internet: Our Last Chance to Save Democracy?Whether the Internet becomes a tool of democracy that will liberate and equalize consumers, or just another means for media conglomerates to control pop culture and public opinion rests largely upon whether access and...
- E-commerce Application Solutions Utilizing Microsoft's .NETAccording to Forrester Research, as cited in Kessler, 2003, electronic commerce generated sales worth US $12.2 billion in 2003(Forester). Ele
- How Information Technology is ModernizingAbstractOver the last past centuries banks have developed and matured to adapt today's society. As technology changes and evolves from a seed to a flower, the road to information technology gets longer by day and elo...
- CISCO B2B E-Commerce - Business to BusinessThe recommendations that I make are not the same as what Cisco had done from 1997 to the present. My focus is the service expansion in business-to-business while Cisco focuses on upward integration and expansion in r...
- Wireless Technology - A Wave of New Business
- AT&T: The Largest Communications Holding Company in the United States
- The Road Map Towards Secure Banking
- Wi-Fi - How Does It Work, What Can Interfere With It, and Is It Secure?
- Wireless Security Issues
- Latin American Mobile Marketing
- Wi-Fi, Wide Open: Wireless Technologies in the Age of Communication
