inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

Archive for Research Roundup

Mobile Research Roundup

by Debi Jones

Research Roundup is a weekly feature from the writers and editors of MM2. Every week MM2 editors and writers will recommend interesting findings from a variety of research sources covering the mobile industry.

From Russ Shaw

Mobile Social Computing Adds Trust To Marketing
A new report from Forrester Research notes that members of “Generation Y” spend as much time on their cell phones as on the Web.
Because of these usage patterns, Forrester analysts Vidya Lakshmipathy and Jaap Favier see promising opportunities for text messaging within existing as well as new, social computing sites. “Most of this time is spent sending and receiving text and picture messages, but with more than half also using social networking sites, the likes of Facebook and MySpace have now launched mobile social computing sites, and new mobile networks like Zingku are popping up,” the analysts write.

From Debi Jones

Birth of a Cell Phone Nation
According to Mediamark Research, US consumers have reached a landmark. There are more cell phone-only households in the US than landline-only households.

From Paul Ruppert

”New” Does Not Mean ”Better” in All Countries
A new global survey of innovation acceptance undertaken by The Institute for Innovation & Information Productivity Innovation–The Innovation Confidence Index–reveals that consumers’ confidence in the ability of more advanced products and services to improve their lives varies greatly around the world and that up to half of consumers in some European continental countries are skeptical of the value of innovation.

From Darla Mack

US Mobile Searchers
Mobile search is gaining strength in the US market, where the Nielsen Company estimates 46.1 million wireless subscribers are using 411 and SMS-based mobile search on their phones in the third quarter of 2007.

From Imran Ali

Metaphors for the Mobile Internet
This paper examines a set of metaphors for describing, understanding and characterising the Mobile Internet. The metaphors are a result of extensive user studies in the US, Hong Kong and Europe in the late 2006 and early 2007. In these studies, we explored the user experience related to the Mobile Internet through in-depth contextual interviews with over 40 users, including a group in the US, which was deprived of their standard Internet PC access for several days. Our analysis of the collected data resulted in six metaphors that can be used as powerful creative tools in designing Mobile Internet applications.

From Ewan Spence

Quarter of Marketeers Use Mobile
The results of Wave Eight survey of marketers, showing that 26 percent said they were currently using mobile, 20 percent said they planned to use it in the next six months and 54 percent said they are not currently using mobile.


Mobile Research Roundup

by Debi Jones

The Mobile Research Roundup is a new feature for Mobile Messaging 2.0 (MM2) that will be published every Friday starting today. Mobile has finally crossed the chasm between the mobile industry and everyone else. Ubiquity of mobile devices above and beyond PCs with 3 billion mobile subscriptions versus approximately 1.1 billion PCs offers a market so large that even a small share of the market is attractive enough to activate budgets in the most prominent Internet companies, media organizations and enterprises worldwide.

The shear amount of activity around everything mobile in 2008 makes the task of keeping up near impossible. The Mobile Research Roundup at MM2 will deliver links from each of the MM2 writers to help you locate the interesting, important and insightful research on consumer behavior, market share or up coming technology developments from analyst firms, independent research organizations and academia.

Do let us know if you find The Mobile Research Roundup valuable and as always we are thrilled to hear feedback from our readers on how we can make MM2 better.

From Darla Mack:
Mobilizing the Mobiles: How Text Messaging Can Boost Youth Voter Turnout

From Russell Shaw:
In-Stat notes that the percent of companies using mobile data applications increased from 75% in 2006 to 94% in 2007, while enterprise use of smartphones increased 34% over the same two year period. The report also said that four horizontal applications, including wireless email, wireless Internet access, wireless instant messaging, and personal information management (PIM), have the highest penetration because they are easier to implement than the vertical market applications.

From Paul Ruppert:
Duh! Teens are Super Communicators
From the Pew Internet & American Life Project,the use of social media gains a greater foothold in teen life as they embrace the conversational nature of interactive online media.

From Debi Jones:
How America Searches: Mobile
Example findings:
1. Mobile is a search medium. 75% of those who access the mobile Internet conduct searches on their mobile devices.
2. Dedicated mobile Web sites a must. An overwhelming 84% of mobile searchers expect the sites they visit frequently to have a dedicated mobile version.