Tag Archive for 'australia'

Mobile Advertising - this year is THE YEAR! (Really?!)

Ever since 3G mobiles came on the scene in 2001, the m-marketing buzz (that’s mobile marketing buzz) hasn’t exactly kept pace with reality. Here’s a quick step back in time from a Sydney Morning Herald article from 2002:

a greater change for the individual than when the telephone first became a part of our everyday life
Ericsson Phones (Late 90’s)

m-commerce will change our shopping experience… It’s also likely to be one of the most effective branding tools we have ever had at our disposal.
Martin Lindstrom, Former BT LookSmart COO (April 2000)

It won’t be long before every train or bus is filled with people reading the newspaper on their phone or hand-held computer.
Kim Yeadon, NSW Information Technology Minister (August 2000)

That’s not to say those prophecies won’t be coming true some day; the question is: when?

Introducing Mobile Codes Technology

Here we are in 2008 and we find Sensis bringing Mobile Codes Technology to new Telstra handsets. Mobile codes or QR (Quick Response) codes may be new in Australia, but they are already in use in retail promotions in Asia and with airlines abroad, including JAL, ANA and Air Canada to name a few.

QR Code billboard in Asia

Cue the m-buzz: QR codes may just be the marketing widget to help mobile advertising make its mark in the Australian market…. So what are they?

Quick Response Codes - a better barcode

QR mobile codes, a form of 2D barcode, were originally created by Japanese corporation Denso-Wave in 1994 to track parts in vehicle manufacturing and they look something like this:

QR Code of Amplify.com.au

QR Codes - a picture worth a thousand words!

With the advent of camera phones, a host of QR coding applications came into being allowing consumers the ability to transfer proofs of purchase or promotional coupons to camera phones.

How does it work? By simply taking a picture of the QR Code off a computer screen or street advertising billboard, a user is able to store the data onto his mobile.

Click on the picture below to see how QR codes might work on your mobile camera phone:

[video]crPg_eyXPTs[/video]

Cue the m-buzz: QR codes could revolutionise online marketing!

Mobile Codes - a better SMS

QR codes can carry a lot of information. How much? Here’s the breakdown of what you can store:

  • Numeric only Max. 7,089 characters
  • Alphanumeric Max. 4,296 characters
  • Binary (8 bits) Max. 2,953 bytes
  • Kanji/Kana Max. 1,817 characters

Just think of it this way, a mobile SMS allows you to send 160 alphanumeric characters. Sensis’ Mobile Codes Technology allows you to store over 25 times that capacity!

Cue the m-buzz: QR codes could help me sell just about anything!

Bridging the gap between traditional and online advertising

QR codes could further bridge the gap between traditional advertising. By allowing consumers to respond directly to advertisements on street billboards, advertisers could more accurately measure a return on ad spend (ROAS) and finally put a sales figure to ‘branding’ initiatives.

Cue the m-buzz: This might actually work… today!

QR Code of 28 Weeks Later DVD in UK

Seen QR codes lately? Used them? Tell us about it by posting on this blog!

What Australians Searched For in 2007

Google Australia just released its ‘Australian Year-End Zeitgeist Highlights Hot Searches in 2007‘ (try saying that quickly 3 times); a summary of what Australians searched online in the past year.

The Fastest Rising Keyword Searches

No surprise, social networking sites make a up a large part of Google’s fastest rising search queries in 07, most notably: Facebook, YouTube, MySpace and Bebo. And if Aussies weren’t chatting with friends, looking at videos or sharing their lives through pokes and ranking their ‘top friends’, they were trying to escape dreaming of owning an iPhone, jetting off on a cheap Tiger Air flight to Asia, trying to catch up on the Rugby World Cup, or getting the latest update on their favourite fantasy show like Heroes or the ABC’s brilliant Summer Heights High (Yes! That made the list too!)

Channel Seven Winning the TV Wars!

If Google searches are anything to go on, then you would have to conclude Channel Seven is tops while Nine is all but irrelevant! Out of the top ten searched shows on Google, Seven had 6, including: Heroes, Today Tonight, Home and Away, Prison Break, Lost and Grey’s Anatomy. Channel Ten followed with its two hot media properties, Big Brother and the ever-popular Australian Idol, while the ABC’s Summer Heights High and SBS’ Top Gear rounded out the top ten. Where did it all go wrong Eddie?

Paris, Britney… The Whole Gang’s Here!

As you’d expect, Paris Hilton and Britney Spears were top of mind in celebrity searches for 2007 the Internet’s equivalent of the 18 car pile up (you can’t help but look, but you should really just move on!) Rihanna and Justin brought sexy back, John Howard didn’t, Steve Irwin will be fondly missed and Anna Nicole Smith closed out her 15 minutes on a sad note. What a year it’s been!

 For more insights on what Australians searched in 2007, check out the rest of Google Australia’s Search Highlights for 2007 right here.