
The mobile commerce prerogative for retailers in 2010
As retailers settle into their routine this year, one thing must change from 2009: mobile must no longer suffer benign neglect. At risk are dashed consumer expectations for consistent experience across store, catalog, online and mobile. While retailers and marketers have suffered through a 2009 holiday of endless checklists, sage advice and told-you-so’s, now is the time to examine how the American consumer is changing in her shopping and buying habits, as well as in her receptivity and response to targeted marketing messages.
How the Mobile Decade will change marketing, media and commerce
The nation stands today at a pivotal point where mobile will soon infuse every marketing, media and retail decision just as the Internet did in the last ten years. The Mobile Decade is upon us. Marketers have only to look around this country and see the one thing that consumers today cannot be parted from: their mobile phone. And that device, as the decade wears on, will become the interface between consumer and society.
10. Hypochondriac? We’ve got an app for that!
Ongoing global pandemics and concerns about socialized healthcare warrant a prescription for mobile content geared toward the sick and the paranoid. Symptoms to watch for include apps that diagnose, doctors that text and medical reminders at hand. Mobile health is just what the doctor ordered! 9. Back to Reality…Oh, those boring old coupons – they get lost, forgotten, left behind or expired. Look for augmented reality to start playing a larger role in location-based advertising. Now, when you’re walking into your favorite coffee shop, the real-time mobile coupon you receive gives you instant gratification with your discounted daily grind.
Mobile Internet Report Everywhere (Get Used To It)
Morgan Stanley’s Mobile Internet Report, released only a few weeks ago, is already taking on the air of a self-fulfilling prophecy as it finds its way into mobile industry announcements and business plans. Predicting more people will connect to the Internet via mobile devices than PCs in five years, the report is helping to spark a new wave of mobile hype at the start of 2010 that will likely carry over throughout the year.
Nokia projects 500 million handset sales in 2010
Nokia expects to ship over 500 million units in 2010, predicted Rick Simonson, the head of Nokia’s mobile phones unit, who also defended the company’s platform strategy. Simonson, in a wide-ranging interview about Nokia’s corporate strategy and vision, said in an interview with the Economic Times of India that the company’s reliance on three platforms–Mameo, Symbian and its proprietary platform–would pay off.
2010 Signals End of Recession for American Mobile Market
A new study by TNS shows strong promise for the mobile phone market in 2010 with 53% of Americans (55% Canada) planning to buy a mobile phone in the next six months, up from just 24% (19% Canada) this time last year. Touchscreen phones are set to be the big winners, with 29% of consumers (28% Canada) looking to buy one as their next phone. Mobiles with Qwerty keyboards are also rising in popularity, with 23% (19% Canada) planning to purchase one as their next device.
China’s Wireless Data Service Market to Nearly Double by 2013
The release of 3G licenses in China is spurring a wireless data boom, with national revenue from such services rising by 18.9 percent in 2009 and nearly doubling from 2008 to 2013, according to iSuppli Corp. As the one-year anniversary of the issuance of 3G licenses in China approaches, wireless data revenue, including both messaging and non-messaging service, is set to rise to $19.3 billion in 2009, up from $16.3 billion in 2008. By 2013, data revenue will surge to $31.5 billion, increasing at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 14.1 percent from $16.3 billion in 2008.
Google vs Apple: the gadget showdown
Google’s Nexus One smartphone is its first foray into hardware. Can the internet search giant challenge Apple’s iPhone or the BlackBerry? Nick Clark reports. or the world’s gadget lovers, it looks like being a very happy new year, with the two most innovative technology companies of the past decade set to launch eagerly awaited devices within weeks of each other. oday marks the unveiling of the first of the pair, with Google due to reveal its first high-end mobile phone, dubbed the Nexus One, …
The smartphone handset market in Thailand has bucked the downward trend that has beset the rest of the handset market over the past year, with solid growth. he momentum is expected to continue in 2010 at the expense of traditional mobile phones, say global handset manufacturers. oth European and Korean handset makers have stimulated a renewed focus on smartphones, with the collapse of the market for mid-tier handsets. he popularity of the BlackBerry and iPhone have spurred demand, thanks to the surge in social networking.
2010 Top 5 Korea Telecom Market News Spotlights
In conjunction with the global economic environment, the telecommunications market in Korea is also expected to become more brisk in comparison to the previous year. Along with a deregulatory governmental mood, the competition between telecom players will be even fiercer. The first commercial LTE (Long Term Evolution) commercial service began in Sweden last year and is expected to increase LTE service all around the world. Korean telecom operators have also shown more detailed blueprints for 4G technologies with LTE and WiBro(Wireless Broadband).

