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Category: Mobile and Brands
Posted by: Chris
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Media executives from both sides of the atlantic were in agreement at a recent Mobile Advertising Symposium that fee-based media services of all kinds will increasingly give way to ad-supported models in the next few years. Surprisingly, this transition will be driven by consumer sentiment as individuals come to find countless small fees more and more burdensome in aggregate. People are going through subscription burnout and the consumers are saying enough is enough.The solution may be short, contextual, targeted advertising - the kind that mobile is ideally suited to.

Mobile advertising will likely be short-form, five or seven seconds, and consistent with programming but if the content of the commercial is not relevant to Generation M - they'll reject it.

Category: Mobile and Brands
Posted by: Chris
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Much has been written about the end of mass marketing and the move to a system of brand communication where every message is tailored to it's recipient - the utopian dream of 'massclusivity'.

In 'Behind the Scenes in Advertising' Jeremy Bullmore, the legendary JTW Creative Director, purported that mass marketing never really existed, "..mass transmission exists but mass reception does not" he insisted. What he meant by this is that for every mass broadcast to a community each individual will interpret and interact with the message in a unique way. Many of these individual interpretations will not be consistent with advertiser's marketing objectives. What Bullmore identified was that receptivity of message cannot be controlled, that wastage is of course inevitable, and that advertising in the future will need to fragment to mirror the fragmentation of media.

What role will Mobile have in Bullmore's near future? Increasingly mobile will play an integrated role in our lives, from content snacking to shopping to all singing all dancing pocket multimedia hub. This will provide media owners, working with mobile operators, with terabytes of data to mine and will in turn provide marketers with the information they need to fine tune their consumer marcomms. But before brands may leverage this social phenomena technology evolution, usability improvements and consumer acceptance of this 'mobile integrated lifestyle' are required and although this is accelerating, we're not quite there yet.