Web development , php , ajax , symfony, framework, zend
In: web resources
20 Mar 2010
Kevin Nakao is VP of Mobile & Business Search for WhitePages, a Top 40 Web and Mobile Publisher. You can find him on Twitter, and on the Whitepages Blog where he writes about mobile, local, and social media.
While last year’s SXSW seemed to serve as the “coming out” party for location-based services (LBS), maybe this year’s conference signifies the migration of these platforms into mainstream culture. And perhaps the only real “new” concept to emerge this year is the idea that there is finally a real opportunity to make money via “location.”
Here are five things that companies should consider as they look to utilize location-based services (LBS) as part their mobile strategy.
From finding the nearest ski slope on REI’s Ski and Snow Report to a nearby movie on Flixter, there are plenty of Top iPhone applications that have incorporated a “lead with the offer, not the capability” philosophy into their mobile product offering to provide a better service. Build the best service first, then add the bells and whistles.
With all the hoopla surrounding location, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that location’s real appeal to advertisers is the fact that with this functionality, you can reach the on-the-go user, who is ready to buy and consume. Just because Twitter and Facebook offer location doesn’t make that valuable or new to advertisers. Location-targeting via IP address has been around a while. For the same reason radio is a great advertising channel for retailers, LBS advertising is also valuable: because it can reach the consumer near the point of sale.

Foursquare has clearly emerged as the location darling. Consider the fact that after only one year, they’ve reached 500,000 active users (Foursquare recently tweeted they added 100,000 users in 10 days).
However, if you apply any city’s share of the total U.S. population, the results show some pretty low estimates of Foursquare users in individual localities. What emerges is a very “long tail” — a steep, narrow graph — of local user adoption. This shows why it is important to achieve scale if you hope to see return on investment in the location marketing space.
For example, using these rough estimates of a city’s proportional share of the U.S. population, if a local pet supply store wanted to target people in San Francisco, the estimated reach would be 1,310 Foursquare users. Even if you double this audience estimate, the number is fairly small for even a local marketer. We had to hit around 4 million downloads of the Whitepages iPhone app to achieve the minimum scale needed for advertiser geo-targeting. Today, 80% of our campaigns from major brands are geo-targeted.
Editor’s Note: It’s important to remember that these are just rough estimates. Because Foursquare was initially only available in a handful of major metro areas, the geographic distribution of users may not precisely follow the geographic distribution of the population.
Battery life is the single biggest threat to location. With GPS on, the phone is asking the network where it is, and this chatter can drain battery life — anyone with an iPhone knows what I am referring to. Thus, phone manufacturers will play a critical role in the future of LBS. RIM, the manufacturer of BlackBerry devices, faced this problem early on with the energy-tax of e-mail polling, and as a result, their devices now have some of the best battery life.
Foursquare has helped us move forward here as well. “Check-ins” help to address the issue as they offer efficient geo-triggers without having to keep battery-draining GPS features on at all times.
Looking forward, I predict the mobile platform wars will be fought with location and maps. This is an important feature that a platform can use as a point of differentiation for consumers and developers.
In anticipation of that battle, Apple purchased mapping company Placebase, and Google is starting to provide unique mapping features like turn-by-turn navigation on its Android devices. The only hope I see for Windows Mobile is if they do something completely revolutionary on the mobile location front. A development like this was alluded to at the recent TED conference with its augmented reality layering of geo-tagged Flickr photos and real-time video integration.
At WhitePages, we monetize our mobile services through a mix of premium, national display, and sponsored links for local business. Our effective CPM (revenue per thousand ad impressions) for sponsored local links is $30-$50 — double the effective CPM (eCPM) rate we see for premium display ad campaigns from national brands. The eCPM multiple of local targeted ads over ad network rates is a staggering 10x.
Location-based inventory will also become scarce as Apple recently announced that iPhone apps will not be permitted to access GPS capabilities for advertising alone. There now needs to be some consumer benefit and functionality in order to access a user’s location. Geo-targeted inventory on mobile will continue to be at a high premium with no excess supply or ad networks to drive it down.
It is my hope that by this time next year, SXSW –- the festival of “emerging” music and technology –- will have finally moved on from location. It’s clearly happening now, and if integrated wisely, location will be making companies too much money to be called the “cool kid on the block” any longer
- 9 Killer Tips for Location-Based Marketing
– 10 Foursquare Apps You Can Use Right Now
– 6 Foursquare Apps We’d Love to See
– 6 Tips for Getting the Most out of Foursquare
– Foursquare vs. Gowalla: Location-Based Throwdown
– Location, Location, Location: 5 Big Predictions for 2010
Tags: android, business, foursquare, geo-tagging, gowalla, iphone, List, Lists, location based advertising, location-based, Longtail, MARKETING, Mobile 2.0, small business
This blog delivers stylish and dynamic news for designers and web-developers on all subjects of design, ranging from: CSS, Ajax, Javascript, web design, graphics, typography, advertising & much more. Our goal is to help you communicate effectively on the web with an engaging website or functional interface.
3 Responses to 5 Things You Need to Know About Location-Based Social Media
michelle
March 24th, 2010 at 1:28 pm
It's huge. Teenagers watch a lot of TV and are easily influenced by what they see on it. You can tell by the way they act, dress, etc..
sliu18
April 3rd, 2010 at 2:44 pm
I have Verizon too. I know, their roaming is absolutely terrible, but they are fixing it. I can roam in Taipei, Taiwan now so you should be okay in London. You will have to pay roaming charges, but I highly doubt that would be more expensive than actually buying an entirely different plan with a different carrier.
You should update your phone's roaming capabilities – from your Verizon cell phone, dial *228 and when prompted to, press 2. It's a free call so don't worry about minutes (although it usually takes just over 1 minute anyway).
Another option is to purchase a calling card and use that to call people but then use your cell phone to receive calls, which would lower your phone bill.
Unsilenced Lamb The Real One
May 21st, 2010 at 5:33 am
In response to an earlier post.
"That's a stupid way to look at it." Is it?
Or is it just a different way to look at it?
"1. The writer of the book/movie is totally against God, and promotes atheism."
Peter denied Jesus 3 times during one of the most important times in Christian lore, yet Christians still consider him one of the great apostles. What's worse? Not believing at all or pretending to believe until uncomfortably questioned?
2. His movie is about how God is evil…When that is not true for one second.
Not true? Who decided to flood the earth? Who cast plagues down on his own "children"? To believe that "god" doesn't have an evil streak in him is to be as blind to his actions as you are in your faith.
3. In the movie, "Lord Asriel" wants to kill God? How stupid is that? Not only is it impossible, it is ridiculous to even think of something like that.
It's not ridiculous because as you Christians so often say… ALL things are possible through god. All happens to include his own death. Hell, it already happened once on the cross so there goes that theory.
Have you ever stopped to think that man made god and not the other way around? There is NO proof that god exist in any way. There is a 2000 year old book that you lean on, but would you send your kids to a school where the curriculum was based on 2000 year old books?
Religion as a whole poisons society. It's responsible for many, if not all wars and because of your blind faith you leave no room for anything that challenges it. I'm not saying you're wrong for believing in god, but you have the audacity to judge those who don't share your same views. Judge not… Unless it's convenient I guess.
In the end, it's entertainment and unlike the Christians, you didn't a bunch of Atheist lining up to protest The Passion of The Christ… It was other religions that didn't agree with his interpretation.