A hot-off-the-press comScore report presents the 2012 Mobile Future in Focus – and things are looking good for mobile!
ComScore examines last year’s mobile landscape through “an exploration of key trends driving smartphone adoption growth, mobile media use in categories such as social networking and retail, mobile ecosystem dynamics, and shifts in multi-device digital media consumption.”
From a proliferation of public WiFi access, an insurgence of app usage in health and commerce to the ongoing battle for top mobile platform – now led by Apple and Android – the report shows that mobile has been the hot topic in tech since early last year.
The report is lengthy and covers those myriad avenues of mobile influence, but one thing is consistent across mobile usage and industries: as mobile continues to grow as a part of core comprehensive marketing strategies, it becomes increasingly important for brands to understand how current trends are shaping the mobile environment – and how the mobile space is shaping future trends.
The report does highlight a few interesting emerging trends, one of which is mobile’s advancement of social media users to interact with brands in the commerce arena.
The study found that, by the end of last year, nearly one in every five mobile (smartphone) users scanned product barcodes and one in eight compared prices on their phone while shopping in an actual brick-and-mortar location.
As mobile retail usage grows retailers are faced with the challenge of understanding how audiences interact with their mobile devices while shopping to take advantage of any opportunities to increase customer conversation and conversion.
Of course, gender behaviours varied – as they are want to do – when it came to mobile commerce. Males preferred to do product research on-the-go, while females were more likely to use their devices to share their shopping experience socially (ahem, Pinterest?). The latter finding is interesting considering we think 2012 will showcase and interesting menage a trois for the mobile + commerce + social media equation.
What do you think? Will mobile and social media continue to change the way we browse and buy from retailers? Tweet us @plasticmobile with your thoughts, comments and general mobile musings.
BlackBerry PlayBook tablet will hit the stores on April 19th; RIM has finally unveiled the launch date! The 0.9 pounds, 7.48 inches by 5.10 PlayBook, may be the most significant development for RIM since the release of its first BlackBerry in 1999.
To heat up the competition between the iPad2 and the PlayBook, RIM set the starting price for its PlayBook at $449 (for the 16 gigabyte version), which is the same as the iPad2. Also like the iPad, RIM will offer a 32GB version of the PlayBook for $599, and a 64GB version for $699. As Motorola’s Xoom Android based tablet’s retail price starts from $699 (for 32 gigabyte of storage), RIM’s pricing makes the PlayBook the first real competitor to the iPad in terms of both pricing and features.
All of RIM’s current PlayBook offerings will be WiFi-only, with mobile broadband versions; PlayBook can smoothly play 1080p high-definition video, and it can handle Flash-enabled websites- this is what RIM brags about. Also RIM claims its smaller size (compared to the iPad) will makes it easier to carry around. Another feature that somewhat makes the Playbook a necessary gadget for businesses is the dual-camera feature which will allow for conference calling. Best Buy, Staples, Office Depot, and RadioShack are retailers who are going to preorder the PlayBook.
Is it a “you snooze, you lose” situation for PlayBook?
PlayBook created a huge buzz when it was first announced last September. Tech savvies were mostly impressed by the list of features RIM promised, but this week when RIM finally announced the launch date and pricing for the PlayBook, it was done with a no muss, no fuss news release.
Now, are consumers going to pay attention to RIM’s beloved PlayBooK? Are they willing to glance up from their lovely, fashionista iPads for even a second to give this poor PlayBook a chance? How is RIM going to differentiate its tablet? We don’t know yet, but one thing we know is that we can’t really blame RIM for failing to inspire the tech world like Apple has, because only very few companies (if any) have a CEO like Steve Jobs that can cast a spell on consumers like him and make them cry about a tablet device -iPad- or make them stand in line for gadgets -for long hours or days- same way some people stand in line for food in poor countries.
It’s taken RIM so long to bring its tablet to market and it hasn’t started ramping up its marketing machine yet. Are RIM’s loyal corporate users going to save the PlayBook? Are PlayBook’s multi-tasking abilities good enough to differentiate it from the iPad? Or is it going to be history in the buzz created by Apple’s tablets?
Well, we’ll find out these answers very soon; but untill then, take a look at the BlackBerry PlayBook vs. iPad 2 (dimensions) video – well, minus the “giving the finger” part, which we have nothing to do with and we apologize for it in advance.