Crisp Voices Blog
Online Campaign Measurement Doesn’t Work for Mobile
24 Aug 2009 - Xavier FaconLet's get rid of the traditional online measurement methodology for mobile campaigns and get real about what we can measure and what those measurements mean in mobile. Let’s face it, many mobile campaigns today are very poorly targeted, capped, and measured because doing this right is difficult. At the same time, brand managers are faced with justifying their spend in this new channel. The lack of standard, reliable, and insightful measurement is hindering the growth of mobile advertising. To add to this confusion, many mobile ad networks and technology companies are making promises that exceed the ability of the technology and further confuse the marketplace.
Mobile Campaign Measurement is Broken
So let’s start with what isn’t working. First, using the click through rate as the de facto standard for measuring the success of a mobile campaign is too simplistic of a measurement. Mobile display advertising should encourage click-interactivity but not necessarily click-through events. In fact, a successful rich media ad campaign may result in negligible click through rates. This is especially true in mobile. Mobile technology provides the capability to launch brand videos on embedded players, to directly initiate a call to the advertiser, or to auto-locate and route users to nearby stores. In addition, rich media expandable panels provide brand interactivity and information without requiring the user to leave the mobile site. Be warned: click-throughs launch separate landing pages which can take much longer to load on mobile networks. This can quickly turn a positive advertiser (and publisher) experience into a negative one.
Mobile ad networks and rich media vendors dipping their toes into mobile are focused on the scale of their business and leveraging their existing know-how’s. It is not surprising that many of their ads do not take advantage of the unique capabilities of mobile devices; nor do they adequately handle the challenges of mobile ad serving. They tend to drive users to micro-sites, and thus they try to focus your attention on CTR as their go-to measurement benchmark. While CTR it is important to their business, it is not necessarily important to yours.
The next challenge is audience measurement. Every mobile technology provider is using their own way of determining unique visitors in mobile, which aren’t necessarily as accurate as the way it is done on the web using cookies. Online, due to frequent deletion of cookies on browsers and access from multiple computers, the unique visitors are overstated about 2.5 times in the server logs. This creates a vast overstatement of audience reach. Early on in mobile, there certainly have been some issues causing the understating the audience. Like when IP addresses were considered unique user identifiers by some or when page and image caching on the network were poorly understood. Still today, impression beacons (small invisible gif) are used to track ad impressions on the server but a good portion of mobile devices misbehave and won’t download the darn pixel.
This and various other issues caused each mobile technology company to figure out their own way to measure based on more granular parameters. Now that cookies are better supported on mobile, we could move toward a more standard methodology, but again face the challenge of audience overstatement due to a variety of complex factors like gateway cookies vs. device-side cookies, carrier HTTP headers and more.
Finally, while mobile advertising is starting to look and feel more like online advertising with rich media - beyond-the-banner - campaigns, online ad tracking and measurement simply doesn’t work for mobile. For example, many online rich media companies utilize JavaScript in their ad forms. Yet in mobile, not every phone supports JavaScript. In fact, the BlackBerry, which represents 56 percent of the smartphone market in the U.S. (IDC) does not come enabled for JavaScript. Mobile phones also handle video ads differently from online browsers. While online browsers stream video, iPhone and other smart phones utilize video downloads, requiring a whole different method of measuring views.
Mobile is unique and its measurement needs to be also. Metrics around mouse-hover times or other online standards are meaningless in mobile. It takes a mobile expert to figure out what can be measured in mobile and how to do it.
What Needs to Be Fixed
The time is ripe for re-inventing the ad format, placement and measurement of campaigns. A mobile ad format needs to be interactive, captivating, rich, and leverage the medium – not just simple banners. Ad placement should take advantage of the mobile display size without annoying or confusing the customer. Measurements need to detail the interactivity with the ad and explain the corrections applied due to device form factor and technology. Measurements need to accurately show that a campaign reached the promised target segments.
At Crisp Wireless, we are focusing on solving these issues because the mobile channel is the perfect medium for premium ad campaigns. Contact our team to see demonstrations and to hear more about the innovative ways to create and measure mobile campaigns.
DigiDay: Apps was APPtastic
20 Aug 2009 - Tom ForanI recently attended DigiDay: APPS in New York, focused on social and mobile applications. With all the debate over native apps and web apps for mobile, the attention at this show was clearly on social. Jason Calacanis, founder and CEO of Mahalo, stole the show with a blistering criticism of Steve Jobs and equating Apple with Microsoft. His message was so relevant to mobile in his lament about how applications are not as open as the web and focus the mania on Apple, rather than innovation.
Many mobile ad networks, including Quattro and AdMob, were on hand to present recent case studies from recent in-app campaigns. It was very interesting to note the large percent of their business that comes from in-app advertising, primarily focused on the Apple iPhone. It seems that much of in-app advertising is driven by application developers seeking to increase discovery of their apps, and thereby improve their ranking in the AppStore.
What is clear is that creating a quality brand experience that maintains the integrity of the application is critical to the brand perception and overall effectiveness of a campaign. This is where it is essential to work with a mobile expert that can create this engagement within the envelope of the application. But more on what we are doing in that area later. Stay tuned and leave us a comment if you will be at DigiDay: Mobile in September.
Location Aware Ads are now Possible on the Mobile Web
5 Aug 2009 - Tom LimongelloAre you like me, do you hate having to type in your zip code to get your location on the mobile web? If you are an iPhone user who has run the latest software update (3.0), that is no longer a problem. Much of the lure of applications was the ability to ‘locate me,’ which didn’t work in the Safari browser, well now it works on iPhone, Android and Palm Pre.
Why should advertisers care about that feature?
Location in the browser is good news for two reasons:
1) No more typing!
2) Speeds up discovery of content
3) If you don’t want your ad tied to app store discovery or approval processes, you have an alternative for running location based advertisements on the mobile web
Luckily, Google did the bulk of the work explaining the value of HTML 5. Specifically they’ve done three big things to hype ‘location in the browser’ in the past month. They launched the ability to locate yourself on http://google.com, enabled Latitude for iPhones via the browser, and followed up at Mobile Beat 2009 with the statement that they could not afford to customize experiences for all mobile devices.
But in a down economy the only innovation that gets a long look is that which relates to advertising: “how can I make money right now from this locate-me feature?”

Try it on your iPhone,Android, Palm Pre or email it to your phone. (Note: If you are on a BB or other non-HTML 5 phone you will get a regular mobile banner that links to a dealer locator page with a prompt to enter your zipcode)
Now is the time for national brand advertisers who have enough geographic coverage to be able to target by time of day and use location as a lubricant to make the interaction easy and fun. Here are some easy campaigns that can work today:
1) Automotive companies can direct buyers to the closest dealer
2) National retailers and food chains can drive foot traffic to their closest retail locations
3) Movie studios can help their audience find the closest theater
Adding some creativity, you can drill into more local businesses. For example, big companies that drive national loyalty programs such as airlines or American Express can tell users where their closest loyalty program partners are, which could be restaurants that offer deals to card members.
But make no mistake, location aware ads are right here, right now.
If you’d like a demo please email Tom Limongello or you can send us a tweet @crispwireless.
How to Deliver an Engaging (and not Annoying) Full Screen Mobile Ad
4 Aug 2009 - Tamara GruberWhile standard MMA banners may deliver higher click-thru-rates (CTRs) than online, they fail to deliver on the full promise of mobile advertising. This is why more brands are experimenting with ‘beyond the banner’ mobile advertising options and more and more vendors and agencies are innovating on engaging ad units.
When designing a rich media mobile advertising experience, you need to walk a very fine line between engaging the user and annoying them. After delivering some very compelling mobile advertising campaigns for major film studios, automotive manufacturers, and financial services companies, we have settled on some best practices that deliver results that please advertisers and publishers while creating a novel, enjoyable, and informative experience for the consumer.
Best Practices for Mobile Advertising – Full Screen Ads
Full screen ad units are a great solution for brands looking to extend existing campaigns into mobile in a way that makes a big impact. Agencies can take existing, pre-approved IAB standard 300x250 ad units and serve them as full screen home page takeovers or interstitials on smart phones. However, they can also be confusing to a user that hasn’t experienced this type of interaction on their mobile phone before. Some simple steps to take include: 
- Frequency Capping – the first time the ad appears it is interesting, the second, it is an annoyance. You need to frequency cap to limit impressions to no more than one to two a day per visitor.
- ‘Layer’ the Ad – use a gradient or other creative technique to make sure the site is still visible beneath the ad, so the user doesn’t think they’ve arrived at the wrong destination.
- Ability to Skip – offer the ability for a user to skip the ad. This is common practice online and intuitive to users if made visible.
- Time Out – the ad unit could time out after approximately 7 to 10 seconds, so without taking any action the user is still directed to the content.
Using these best practices, we have been serving full screen home page takeovers and site interstitials that deliver upwards of 20 percent click through rates. Mobile advertising is real and it is working. Just ask us.
Recent Entries
- Crisp to Present at Upcoming Mobile Advertising Events
- The SXSW Interactive Mobile Thriving Guide (iPhone)
- What Does Apple Blocking In-App Location Ads Mean for Mobile Advertising?
- Google's New Click-to-Call Ads Not so New to Crisp
- What the iPad Means for Advertisers
- Crisp's Rich Media Ad Support for the Apple iPad
- Introducing Adhesion, The First Fixed Placement Ad Technology for the Mobile Web
- Apps Call, But Will Your Phone Answer? Maybe Not.
- 5 Predictions for Mobile Advertising in 2010
- Making Sense of the Mobile Advertising Ecosystem
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