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Posts Tagged ‘iphone’


Are apps replacing bookmarks?

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 If you use an iPhone, iPad, or Android device you probably rely heavily on apps to get to some of the  companies you used to visit via your web browser.  Think about it, Facebook on your iPhone, banking app on your Android phone, Twitter app on your iPad. Consumers are beginning to expect companies to provide  access via apps and mobile websites linked via web apps (ESPN On the iPhone combines both). That’s why the growth in Apps is looking more like growth of websites in general.  In addition QR codes,  and links to apps and web apps delivered via SMS in many cases make it easier than navigating to a companies traditional website and bookmarking it.  Need more info,see research below or reach out to ApolloBravo for a mobile readiness evaluation.

Read More Via Warc

GOTHENBURG: App downloads are set to increase rapidly around the world in the next five years, fueling growth in the subscription and advertising revenues generated through this channel.

Berg Insight, the research firm, estimated the number of apps installed by consumers on wireless devices will grow by 56.6% annually between 2010 and 2015, reaching 98bn a year by the end of this period.

More specifically, the company reported the revenues resulting from individuals paying for these tools, alongside in-app purchases and related subscriptions, hit €1.6bn in 2010.

It predicted the amount delivered by these combined activities should stand at €8.8bn in 2015, equivalent to a compound annual growth rate of 40.7%.

Apple is currently the leading source of income where mobile applications are concerned, with the firm’s App Store supplying some €1.3bn last year, a total anticipated to come in at €4.4bn in 2015.

During the same period, Google’s Android platform contributed a relatively modest €80m, but is projected to yield €1.5bn by the end of the forecast period.

The Windows Phone operating system manufactured by Microsoft is likely to assume third position in this area by 2015, although the company still has work to do if it is to catch up with Apple and Google.

Elsewhere, Berg Insight reported that in-app advertising was worth €300m last year, or 16% of all application revenues. Ad sales through this channel should be €750m in 2011 and €3.5bn in 2015.

As advertising is expected to be more of a “volume game”, Google Android is anticipated to assume a leading role, as the number of handsets utilising this operating system may be more prevalent, while Apple’s subscribers remain of higher value.

Overall, Berg Insight argued that Android would provide €1.2bn in ad revenues by 2015, versus only €39m in 2010. Apple’s comparative returns are pegged to rise from €230m to €1bn in this period.

Johan Svanberg, a senior analyst at Berg Insight, said: “Most apps are free to download and app monetisation will be a challenge for developers. Free to download monetisation strategies such as in-app advertising and in-app purchasing will be increasingly important.”

Geographically, Asia Pacific, which houses the key mobile markets of India and China, is pegged to account for 40% of all app downloads by 2015.

Data sourced from Berg Insight; additional content by Warc staff, 10 October 2011

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Traveling and Using Skype on iPhone in Mexico

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I recently installed the Skype app on my iPhone. It works well at home on any WIFI connection, but I wanted to put it to the test out of the US. On a recent trip to Mexico I was able to use the free WIFI at the Starbucks in Playa del Carmen Mexico. The service worked without any glitches, and because I was calling US numbers from a US phone the rate was .02 per minute to call landlines versus the .80 per minute ATT Mexico rate. Looking forward to making iPhone Skype calls in Europe. The connection was impressive considering I was an hour from any major metro area in Mexico.

apollobravo-skype

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Mobile Ads Catch Fire Among iPhone Users

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One-half of those who see ads respond

They are not quite as pesky as pop-ups, but are consumers responding to mobile ads or simply ignoring them?

One in three mobile users who recalled seeing a mobile ad said they responded to it in some way, according to Q4 2008 research conducted by Limbo and GfK NOP. Among iPhone users, that response rose to one in two.

The research indicates that iPhone users are more than twice as likely as non-iPhone users to browse the mobile Web on their phone and more than three times as likely to use location-based services, including maps, restaurant locators and friend finders.

Among iPhone users, SMS, mobile Web and in-game ads were all about equally likely to be recalled, at around 18%, while mobile TV and video ads experienced 6.6% recall and mobile radio 11.1%.

US Mobile Phone Users and iPhone Users Who Recall Viewing Mobile Advertising, by Type, Q4 2008 (% of respondents in each group)

Limbo, a mobile social network, found that 33% of non-iPhone mobile users recalled seeing mobile advertising in Q4. Some 41% of iPhone users recalled seeing commercial messaging. Most of the ads viewed were SMS messages.

“iPhone users do more things with their phones. They’re more likely to use SMS, location-based services and networks,” said Rob Lawson, Limbo’s CMO and co-founder, who attributes the difference to ease of use and the availability of diverse applications. “I think over time we’ll see that gap between iPhone and non-iPhone users start to narrow as people move away from pure SMS handsets.”

Contact ApolloBravo for the latest mobile advertising strategy.

Mobile Ads Catch Fire Among iPhone Users – eMarketer.

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