Knovolo Mobile Marketing Reviews

Smithsonian Channel Mobile Marketing for Aerial America

August 22, 2011
Comments Off on Smithsonian Channel Mobile Marketing for Aerial America

I came across a fantastic mobile engagement on the back of this year’s Smithsonian Folklife Festival brochure. These guys really put a lot of thought into this mobile promotion, and for the most part, it created an excellent mobile user experience in a time when many marketers are throwing together poor mobile campaigns.

More Ways Than One

Mobile Marketing Campaign for Aerial America

Mobile Marketing Campaign for Aerial America

Many mobile campaigns these days only offer one door for mobile users to walk through: a QR code, a SMS call-to-action, or maybe a link. A solid mobile campaign will offer several different doors to accommodate the myriad of devices and user preferences out there, and this Smithsonian Channel ad does just that. They offer a QR code, a SMS call-to-action (text AERIAL to 74699), and they spell out the link that the QR code and SMS point to: http:smithchan.com/aerial.

This approach is critical for including the highest possible number of mobile users. Although QR codes have been out for a while, the majority of people in America don’t know exactly what QR codes are for, so relying on that as the only way for consumers to interact with you on their mobile devices is like trying to sell a book written in Greek to New Yorkers on their lunch break.

SMS (text messaging) is a widely supported technology among mobile phones (essentially supported by all mobile devices), but some users are cautious of getting extra charges, using up their allotted texts, or getting spammed in the future and may not want to text in. Also, SMS great for having users sign up to receive periodic text updates or coupons from you, but again, if you rely on it as the sole means of interaction with mobile users, you will be leaving some people out.

This is why it’s important to offer the URL itself, in print, in addition to other mobile entry methods discussed above. People who aren’t comfortable with other methods can always access your mobile content the “hard way” by typing in the web address themselves, and Smithsonian Channel even makes this easier with a shortened URL (although this could be a lot shorter). However, for mobile users who are accustomed to scanning QR codes and texting to short codes, entering a URL is almost as bad as having to write down the website on a napkin so that they can visit later when they’re in front of a computer.

In addition to all of these mobile calls-to-action, there’s a traditional website link (www.smithsonianchannel.com) printed near the bottom of the ad. The mobile engagements are important for catching people right when they see the ad, before they forget and move on with their lives. If, however, for those that take the ad all the way back to their computer (like I did), it’s quite insightful to have a small line telling us how to get there without using a cell phone. This makes it easy to watch the videos comfortably on our larger computer screens.

Mobile Web
The mobile website that the QR code, text messaging, and URL take you to (http:smithchan.com/aerial) is quite well done and looks great on all the smartphones we tested it on. The page is very nicely formatted, and the 45-minute episodes streamed quite well, with few breaks or interruptions. We saw some HTML5 in the source code, and like how the page fills all of the mobile screen, no matter its size. (It doesn’t look very good on computers, but it’s not supposed to!)

Mobile Webpage not looking very good on older phone

The Mobile Website doesn't look very good on this older smartphone, the HTC Excalibur.

The only disappointment we encountered was viewing the website on non-smartphones. There was no simpler code served to basic feature phones and the like, which means that those types of devices try valiantly to load the whole page, but ultimately fail in rendering anything usable. This page uses some JavaScript and advanced CSS that feature phones, older smartphones, and most Blackberries should not be expected to render at all, so there should a much lighter version of the mobile web page for these older/more basic devices. They ought to be able to read about Aerial America and learn about where they can watch the free episodes. There could, for example, be a form where the users enters their email address to receive links to the episodes so that they can watch later from their computers.

Here at Knovolo, we have been developing our own “advanced device detection” technology to address this problem. In fact, as of last month only 35% of American adults own smartphones. Mobile marketing campaigns that don’t address non-smartphone mobile users are leaving out a lot of people.

Summary
Aside from isolating non-smartphone users, this mobile marketing campaign for Smithsonian Channel’s new Aerial America was excellent. We hope that others marketers that are venturing into mobile will have mobile websites and call-to-actions of similar quality.


Seattle Art Museum Incorporates Mobile for Picasso Exhibit

March 28, 2011
1 Comment

I was quite pleased to see a mobile presence at the recent Picasso exhibit at the Seattle Art Museum. I was leafing through a flyer while waiting to enter the first gallery and when I got to one of the pages near the back, my jaw dropped in excitement. On the page was a Microsoft Tag (Microsoft’s proprietary version of a QR Code) next to a nice little paragraph describing how to scan it.

Microsoft Tag at Picasso Art Museum

When scanned with the proper app on your smartphone, this Microsoft Tag would point you to a mobile web version of the entire Picasso exhibit, complete with images of paintings and descriptions. (I found that sometimes the descriptions on mobile had more than what was written on the wall!)

The mobile site was extremely well-formatted for my T-Mobile MyTouch. There was no extraneous left-and-right scrolling, and I didn’t have to zoom way in to read the content – it was already at the right zoom level and exact width of my device’s screen. This was clutch because many mobile marketing campaigns these days FAIL at this point. Believe it or not, many QR Codes and Microsoft Tags point to websites that are NOT optimized for mobile devices! This is one of my greatest peeves about mobile marketing: obviously, anyone who scans one of these code will be on a phone, so why serve them some desktop-sized website that’s not going render correctly on their mobiles??? GUUUH.

High points to SAM for, as simple as it sounds, having their MSTag point to a mobile website. On top of that, the site was very well done and essentially flawless in my opinion (although I didn’t get a chance to test it on any other devices).

The Basics

Organization Seattle Art Museum (SAM)
Call to Action Read the wall labels for Picasso masterpieces on your mobile phone
Date Winter 2010
Description SAM extended the Picasso museum experience onto mobile phones
Mobile Technologies Used Microsoft Tag, mobile web

Mobile Technology Rating

Microsoft Tag 

5-star Knovolo Mobile Rating

This Microsoft Tag was well-placed, pointed to a mobile-optimized website, and had a helpful explanation next to it.
Mobile Website 

5-star Knovolo Mobile Rating

A+ to SAM for this mobile website. Sadly, the exhibit ended and they took it down before I had a chance to write it up in detail, but know that it was quite excellent and a worthy example for future mobile campaigns.
User Experience 

5-star Knovolo Mobile Rating

The user experience here was seamless. A quick MS Tag scan or manual entry of the mobile webpage (more cumbersome, but doable) takes the user to a mobile webpage that appears to perform extremely well on the average smartphone. (We didn’t get a chance to test it on many devices though.)
No Bonus Star:
mCommerce &
Social Networking 

0-star Knovolo Mobile Rating

No bonus star here because I didn’t see any mCommerce action on the mobile website. Once you get people looking at this stuff on their phones, it would be an easy leap for them to browse products and accessories from the museum gift shop, especially relating to masterpieces that they’ve just viewed. 

Also, no bonus star because I didn’t see any social media presence. SAM has a Facebook page, so why don’t they make it easy for people to Like it from their phones? Mobile and Social Media are a hot combination.


Final Rating: 5 stars

5-star Knovolo Mobile Rating

The Seattle Art Museum gets very high points for its innovative use of mobile in the recent Picasso exhibit. Even though social media and mCommerce weren’t incorporated into the campaign SAM still gets high points for a seamless user experience and excellent use of bar code scanning and mobile web design.

Learn more about mobile marketing at knovolo.com


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