Monday, December 31, 2012

Happy New Year




We want to take a moment today to simply wish you the absolute best for 2013. Happy New Year!

Thank you for being part of our community. We are here to support you and promise to continue to deliver valuable content that will not only enhance your business, but your quality of life as well.

Cheers! Here's to your best year ever!

Your Partners!

www.beachbumsmarketing.com

Friday, December 28, 2012

How mobile shopping will improve in the future

While the growth in mobile shopping was one of the big stories of 2012, continued success is likely to be driven as much by how retailers leverage emerging technologies to enhance the omnichannel shopping experience as by higher smartphone penetration levels.

Mobile’s ubiquity is one of the reasons for its success with consumers as a shopping tool, but the experience as it stands today lacks richness. However, retailers have an opportunity to leverage emerging mobile technologies to enhance the experience through touch, sight and smell, according to IBM.

“Part of what we are trying to address is taking the best of the mobile experience, which is the ability to go remote and to be pervasive and add in some of the richness and the qualities that are important in human experiences,” said Robyn Schwartz, associate director of retail analytics at IBM Research.
“Our appetites and interests have matured to a point where the qualities that have become more important tend to be more emotional rather than functional,” she said.

“The ability to address those in a real and intuitive way enhances the whole experience.”

Immersive experiences
While mobile traffic and sales increased significantly during the recent holiday shopping season, mobile still only accounts for approximately 25 percent of traffic to ecommerce sites and 15 percent of purchases.

Going forward, the trend toward enhancing the in-store experience will focus on creating more immersive experiences that are less about technology and more about what a user’s goals are. Some of this is already in place with the use of augmented reality, location-based services and extreme personalization.

“The mobile shopping experience is an isolating experience,” Ms. Schwartz said. “It is definitely lacking in the richness visually that a bigger screen can bring or the in-store tactile experience.
“What it is rich is that it is already becoming more and more ubiquitous,” she said. “Today, I can be sitting on a bus and get my errands done or scan something and it gives you that immediate access that you need.”

The omnichannel shopper
Retailers will begin to look at their business in terms of an omnichannel shopping experience and the commingling of all the channels.

As a result of this omnichannel approach, mobile’s role in shopping will become more important as it acts as a conduit to shape retail experiences based on whatever information is stored on a user’s phone, such as favorite colors and textures as well as buying habits.

“What we think is going to happen with retail is this kind of unifying experience that happens across touch points in support of the customer’s end goal, whatever that may be,” Ms. Schwartz said.
“Mobile can be the conduit of our personal experiences, which are imbedded within a device that ends up shaping a personal experience in a physical store or an augmented store,” she said.

“The phone recedes as a pure physical piece of it but becomes much more important as a surrogate for the shopper to help define, shape and mold the experience.”

Emerging technologies
Based on social and market trends as well as emerging technologies, IBM predicts mobile will be able to better harness the sensations of touch, sight and smell to improve the mobile shopping experience within the next five years.

IBM is developing applications for retail that use tactile and infrared technologies to enable users to “feel” the texture and weave of a fabric or product by brushing their finger over the item’s image on a mobile phone screen.

“We believe that using pressure sensitive technologies through the phone that the phone becomes an intermediary for touch,” Ms. Schwartz said.

“This will enable an artisan in a far off country to use the phone to give a customer somewhere else the feel of the product she made,” she said.

Retailers will also be able to better harness of the visual data stored on mobile devices, such as the images shared on social networks, to make better recommendations for products consumers may want to buy.

Smartphones will also be able to detect smells and analyze them to determine if a user is coming down with a cold, for example, or determine whether someone is in an area with high pollution.
Other advances that could affect retailers include the ability for phones to interpret the sounds nearby a user and understand where they are or what is happening as well as the ability to experience flavor.
“Today, the phone is thought of as a diversion,” Ms. Schwartz said.

“What we are talking about is using the phone to enhance or create a more immersive experience, “she said. “To make people more aware of their present conditions or augmenting that using technologies that enhance the sensations of visual, touch and smell.”

Get mobile today....contact us to get mobile tomorrow!

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Why You Need a Mobile Website

How Zales could have driven sales through its mobile campaign

Zales is currently running a mobile ad campaign that entices consumers to shop its collection. Although the company has great intentions with the initiative, it falls short in many ways.

Firstly, it is never a good thing to encourage consumers to shop via mobile and then take them to an unoptimized page. Retailers should know by now that consumers do not like to pinch-and-zoom.

When a brand is determining strategy for their mobile push/pull campaigns there should always be a thoughtful process to story board out each element in order to produce the proper results to gauge future mobile strategies.


Falling short
Zales is running the mobile ad campaign within People’s mobile site.
The banner ad reads “Shop Now. The Celebration Diamond Collection. Zales.”

When consumers tap on the mobile ad they are redirected to the company’s Web site where they have to pinch-and-zoom to browse the content on their screen.

This not only helps diminish the user experience, but does not leave consumers wanting to buy anything.

Zales has a mobile site that consumers can visit by entering m.zales.com on their mobile browser.
The company would have been better off sending consumers to its mobile site where they can have an optimized experience, and thus, helping Zales drive sales for its Celebration collection.
It is important that marketers optimize their content on mobile.

The space is no longer an add-on, but a necessity for customers.

Furthermore, consumers are constantly on-the-go and are beginning to turn to their mobile devices to make purchases.    Their website is not mobile friendly, is yours?

Therefore, making sure all aspects of a campaign are optimized is critical for marketers, such as Zales.

Going forward, marketers need to test out their campaigns to make sure that the intiative provides a seamless experience for consumers.

Customers are becoming more tech-savvy by the minute and demand a lot more of their favorite brands.

Mobile evolution
Over the past few years, Zales has been dipping its toes in the mobile space.
Last year, the jewelry retailer rolled out a mobile commerce-enabled site that lets consumers browse and buy products from the company’s entire inventory.

This year, Zales enlisted mobile to link an ad in an issue of Cosmopolitan magazine to its Pinterest page as a way to drive engagement for its products and, ultimately, sales.

A critical factor to take into account is where your consumers will be when they are receiving a message – if the ad is created for mobile the consumer will, indeed be on their mobile when they click through, if the click through outcome takes the consumer to a non mobile friendly site, the consumer will 99 percent of the time, simply ‘move on’ and the entire campaign will have been a waste of effort.   Why? Their website is not mobile friendly, is yours?

Contact us today and get mobile tomorrow!

www.beachbumsmarketing.com

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Big spenders: Mcommerce not just for small purchases any longer

With consumers spending as much as $48,000 on purchases made via mobile, it is clear that the medium is not just for small-ticket purchases any longer.

In the early days, many thought no one would use mobile for purchases other than small ticket items such as digital downloads. While several recent examples disprove this idea, the majority of consumers are still not comfortable making very large purchases via mobile.

“As consumers increase their use of mobile and become more comfortable on devices, we are seeing that this is leading to higher purchase amounts,” said Claudia Lombana, shopping specialist at PayPal, San Jose, CA. “We are not seeing these every day, however.”

“It comes down to the flexibility and convenience on mobile, which is unparalleled so people are becoming more comfortable making higher-end purchases,” she said.

$48k bulldozer
PayPal this week revealed that the largest mobile transaction it has processed so far this year was for a $48,000 bulldozer.

In comparison, the largest mobile purchase made last year via PayPal topped out at $40,000.
The payments provider also reported that the other top mobile transactions for 2012 include $46,500 for a diamond necklace, $46,000 for a coin collection, $40,000 for another diamond necklace and $40,00 for a painting.

While PayPal is not releasing data on the average order size for mobile, it is reporting significant growth in the volume of transactions made via mobile, with PayPal nearly tripling its mobile payment volume on Cyber Monday compared to last year.

The numbers reported by PayPal point to how quickly activities that were once popular on desktop are migrating to mobile.

Parent company eBay reports selling over 2,000 automobiles weekly via its eBay Motors app. Several airplanes have also been sold via the app.

“I look at these figures as a sign that people’s comfort level with mobile as a purchasing channel is pretty high,” said Nikki Baird, managing partner at RSR Research, Miami, FL.

“How long did it take from when the first eCommerce site went up until a purchase of that size was transacted over the Internet vs. being able to say the same thing for mobile,” she said. “I suspect it happened a lot quicker on mobile, in part because people tend to see mobile commerce as merely an extension of the Web site.”

Frequency gains
While the average purchase price on mobile may be trending upward, the more impressive gain is in the frequency with which mobile users are purchasing via their devices.

“Without a doubt, basket size and actual purchase amounts have increased over last year but the more exciting trend is the increase in purchase frequency,” said Joy Liuzzo, president of Wave Collapse, Washington.

“People are finding that mobile can satisfy a wider range of purchase motivations and purchase needs, which translates into them turning to mobile more often,” she said.

Driving future growth
Several issues need to be addressed by merchants for the average order price via mobile to continue to grow and for mobile commerce, in general, to continue to grow.

One of the key inhibitors to mobile commerce is the continued lack of an omnichannel experience, per Ms. Liuzzo.

“Very few companies are able to link our mobile and online shopping baskets, even when there is registration information,” Ms. Liuzzo said. “Shoppers are not always ready or able to make a purchase immediately and by locking them into coming back to the original shopping cart, companies are limiting their ability to complete the sale.”

Another area that merchants need to address is leveraging mobile data to deliver offers to users based on what they have previously purchased.

“Affinity purchases – upsell/cross-sell – are going to be much more difficult on mobile than on traditional Web, just because of the real estate limitations,” RSR Research’s Ms. Baird said. “So retailers need to get very targeted and personalized to make sure that the few offers they can put in front of mobile shoppers are the absolute most relevant, best offers for that particular customer.”

www.beachbumsmarketing.com

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Monday, December 3, 2012

QR codes draw promotional offers

Promotional offers a draw

Overall, we saw over a quarter of a million scans completed between 7 p.m. eastern time on Thanksgiving Day and 7 p.m. eastern time on Black Friday using the mobile app, making it the busiest day to date for mobile bar code traffic.

The numbers also suggest QR codes are shaping up to be a good way for marketers to deliver rebate offers, with the single best QR code marketing campaign on Black Friday delivering a promotional rebate offer for a popular DVD title.

By category, the consumer electronics and retail industries saw the most mobile bar code scans on Black Friday.

Other key findings include that during the third quarter, almost 4 million new people scanned mobile bar codes, representing a 45 percent increase over the same period last year.

Are you offering promotions to draw in clients?  Let us help you TODAY!

www.beachbumsmarketing.com

Saturday, December 1, 2012

QR code scans jumped 50pc on Black Friday

Scanlife

QR codes help marketers close sales
 
In a sign of the growing role that mobile plays in helping consumers make purchasing decisions, mobile bar code scans on Black Friday increased 50 percent, according to a recent study.

Black Friday is one of the busiest shopping days of the year and consumers are increasingly using their mobile devices to scan QR codes and UPC codes that appear on products, in-store displays and ads to help them make informed buying decisions. The numbers also point to continued adoption of QR codes by marketers and media publishers.

We believe that this holiday season, QR codes are helping retailers close sales and amplify their message via social networks.

Showrooming is here to stay, but QR codes can give shoppers the confidence they need to shorten the path to purchase.  Seventy five percent of the scans from Black Friday that were processed came from QR codes and they will undoubtedly play a large role in holiday shopping.


What are you waiting for?  Get your QR Code TODAY and close more sales tomorrow!

www.beachbumsmarketing.com