Upcoming Events
Event Date Location

Mobile Commerce World

06/24/2013 - 06/26/2013 San Francisco CA

mobile

Subscribe To Latest Posts
Subscribe
Sort Posts By:

Facebook plans to unveil smartphone; The company aims to dominate on mobile devices the way it has on desktop computers

Los Angeles Times

 

Get ready for the Facebook phone.

The company is close to unveiling a smartphone whose software keeps the social network front and center. It is part of an overall strategy to advance Facebook’s ambitions to dominate on mobile devices the way it has on desktop computers. Facebook Inc. has scheduled a news conference Thursday at its Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters to show off an HTC smartphone that operates on software called Facebook Home. The social network’s News Feed, messaging, photo uploading and other features will be integrated into the phone, according to reports.

It will be the biggest step yet to re-engineer Facebook into a mobile company. Like Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp. before it, Facebook is putting a device into people’s hands designed to tether them to the service.

Facebook is under heavy pressure to capture — and keep — the attention of users who are spending more time than ever on mobile devices so that it can cash in on mobile advertising. And that has forced the giant social network to attempt the most dramatic transformation in its history. It has deployed hundreds of engineers on coding mobile projects. It rolled out new mobile advertising formats and new mobile apps such as Poke, and overhauled its iPhone and Android apps. Facebook also stepped up its focus on Android, which in recent years has surpassed the iPhone to become the No. 1 operating system for smartphones around the world.

At the end of last year, the number of active daily users accessing Facebook on a mobile device exceeded the number logging on from desktop computers for the first time. More than 650 million of its more than 1 billion users check Facebook from mobile devices — and that number is growing fastest in big markets such as the U.S.

“Facebook’s goal is to get its stuff in front of as many people as possible,” IDC analyst Karsten Weide said. The HTC phone is powered by a modified version of Google’s Android mobile software. If successful, the HTC phone could be the first of many, analysts said. “This is a way to get the distribution that they would have gotten through their own smartphone by partnering with somebody else,” Weide said.

Continue reading… 

Mobile Advertising Projected to Grow 47% Annually

IDC PMS4colorversion no shadow 300x98 Mobile Advertising Projected to Grow 47% Annually

The often predicted year of mobile advertising may be 2012.  Karsten Weide, program vice president, IDC Digital Media and Entertainment, expects mobile spend to double from 2011 to 2012, reaching almost $4.5 billion.  Today, more than 60% goes to cellphones and most of the remainder to tablets and eReaders.  But by 2016, Weide predicts when ad spend reaches almost $15 billion, it will be almost equally split between phones and tablets/eReaders.

Karsten Mobile Ad Research1 Mobile Advertising Projected to Grow 47% Annually

 Click here to download the trends and dollars spread across search and display over the next four years….

Digital Ad Spend Slows

Online advertising remains a bright spot among media categories but its growth rate is slowing.  IDC’s Karsten Weide tracks the industry and says watch ad spend to see where the economy is going.  Learn more in this interview with IDG Global Solutions Director Howard Sholkin…

The Facebook Social Media Train Slows Down

IDG Global Solutions 

Facebook, the talk of the social world for a few years, has hit a bump.  Its growth rate has slowed considerably and its stock price has slumped.  To find out what’s behind the Facebook struggles, IDG Global Solutions Director Howard Sholkin spoke with IDC’s Karsten Weide….

Digital Ad Spend Records Solid Growth

IDG Strategic Marketing Services

Online advertising continues to grow but the share across media is shifting.  Mobile advertising is drawing funds from search and display.  To learn more about the online trends worldwide in the first quarter of this year, IDG Strategic Marketing Services Director Howard Sholkin spoke with IDC VP Karsten Weide….

Facebook’s Growth Slow-Down Causes Market Share Loss

By: Karsten Weide, Program Vice President, Media & Entertainment, IDC

Facebook’s domestic advertising growth has slowed dramatically, from growth rates in the 60s% in the first three quarters of 2011 to 30% in 4Q11 and now to just 21.2% in 1Q12. This has led to an actual market share loss after what seemed to be an inexorable rise, from 13.9% of U.S. display advertising in 4Q11 to just 12.0% in 1Q12.

Desktop search advertising is rapidly losing market share to mobile advertising in the United States. That is one of the findings of IDC’s latest Worldwide and U.S. Internet Advertising Spending Report (IDC #235593, forthcoming) for the first quarter of 2012. While search advertising’s share was 54% in 1Q10, it has shrunk to 42.4% in 1Q12. Mobile advertising’s share on the other hand grew from 2.1% to 9.8% during the same period. Desktop display advertising is affected by mobile growth as well, but to a lesser extent. Search is affected more by mobile growth than display because the last three quarters of mobile advertising go toward mobile search ads. We expect a further decline as advertisers divert more of the budgets they transfer from traditional media onto the Internet to mobile advertising rather than PC-based advertising.

IDC’s report also found:

  • Worldwide online ad spending grew by 18.7% from $20.0 billion in 1Q11 to $23.7 billion in 1Q12.
  • U.S. spending increased by 18.7% from $8.2 billion in 1Q11 to $9.7 billion in 1Q12. IDC forecasts U.S. spending to grow 18.6% to $9.9 billion in 2Q12 and predicts 17% growth for the entirety of 2012, with total spending amounting to $41.7 billion versus $35.7 billion in 2011.
  • Yahoo! may be coming out of its U.S. sales slump. While Yahoo!’s net domestic ad sales declined in the past five quarters, it is now back to growth, if at a weak 1%. However, it is too early to tell if the current recovery is here to stay. Before this slump and recovery, Yahoo! had experienced a first cycle of downturn and improvement, only to end up in trouble again.
  • Search ads grew by 8.8% from $3.8 billion in 1Q11 to $4.1 billion in 1Q12. Search ads’ market share declined from 44.5% in 4Q11 to 42.4% in 1Q12. Google’s net U.S. search ad market share increased slightly to 59.8% in 1Q12 (58.2% in 4Q11), Microsoft stayed at second with 7.1% (8.7% in 4Q11), and Yahoo! ranked third again with 7% (6.2% in 4Q11).
  • Display advertising grew by 14% from $2.6 billion in 1Q11 to $2.9 billion in 1Q12. Display advertising’s market share fell from 30.7% in 4Q11 to 30.2% in 1Q12. In display ads, Google extended its lead, with a market share of 25% in 1Q12 (21.4% in 4Q11). Facebook stayed in the number 2 position, with a market share of 12% (14.0% in 4Q11). Yahoo! was number 3 with 11.1% (12.2% in 4Q11), and Microsoft was number 4 with 8% (6.8% in 4Q11).
  • Mobile advertising grew by 150.2% from $0.4 billion in 1Q11 to $0.9 billion in 1Q12. Mobile advertising’s market share grew from 7.1% in 4Q11 to 9.8% in 1Q12.

Worldwide Internet advertising sales have shown fast growth even in this time of economic uncertainty. In the U.S., we expect solid growth in the mid- to high-teen percentage range for 2Q12, but keep in mind a straw can break the economy’s back at any time (we are particularly worried about the European Euro currency and debt crisis and the stalemate and acrimony in domestic politics), which would result in low teen even negative growth rates or in 3Q12 and after. However, even if that were the case, we think that Internet advertising’s market share of all advertising across all media would continue to increase as it has in the recent “grand recession”.

 

Going Mobile

BtoB

Mobile devices and mobile marketing are surging; but, when it comes to b2b marketing, no one seems exactly sure where that’s heading.

According to figures presented by keynote speaker Karsten Weide, VP-research, digital media and entertainment at market data and analytics company IDC, at the BtoB Forum: Mobile Marketing conference, in just a few years, more people will access the Internet through mobile devices than desktop computers.

Read more… 

At ‘BtoB’s’ mobile forum: Mobile poised to dominate the Internet; marketers must adjust

BtoB Daily News 

New York—Marketers need to rethink mobile marketing, not as simply an adjunct to existing digital channels but as the soon-to-be-dominant medium through which virtually everyone will consume marketing content.

That message was delivered by Karsten Weide, VP-research, digital media and entertainment at market data and analytics company IDC, in his keynote address at The BtoB Forum: Mobile Marketing conference here today.

Read More…

A Milestone Change in Display Leadership

IDC NewLogo A Milestone Change in Display Leadership

Karsten Weide

IDC

Since the early years of the web Yahoo has led the display advertising world. Not anymore. IDC reports that Google passed Yahoo in the first quarter of 2011 and Facebook is close behind Yahoo. IDC’s Karsten Weide talks about the changing display market here….

Display Gaining on Search

IDC NewLogo Display Gaining on Search

Karsten Weide

IDC

There’s an important trend in online advertising: the rate of increase in display outpaces search. It reflects the years of big spending on search and the gaining popularity of display. IDC’s Karsten Weide, who tracks online advertising each quarter, explains. Click to hear his commentary…