Craft Topics - Going Mobile

 

Going Mobile

Overview

This is an attempt to provide some stimulus and some resources on the implications of mobile communications. There are some books to get you going that you can link to - a copy of Wired magazine (if you're quick) with a guide to wireless computing. An article on dos and don'ts for SMS (text) marketing on mobile phones with a chance to preorder a whole book on the subject of SMS and its successor MMS by its author. I've also just invested in the form of a PDA at long last and to put in a wireless access point at home which means that it is possible to use a computer or surf the net anywhere in the house or garden. And for the next few months I will be keeping a diary on going mobile - much as I have been on broadband. But why? Is this yet another excuse of a techie rant by a planner with a predilection for working on IT accounts?

Well I hope not. While there are might be some mileage in a debate on whether surrounding oneself with pagers, PDAs and mobiles is makes for super productivity my interest is how all this is going to affect communications - since the lion's share of communications budgets is still tethered to mass consumption in home. Another challenge is that there is every indication of a digital divide which means that budgets are likely to be stretched even more using conventional media to reach the laggards and these newer forms of communications to reach the early adopters. Remember that despite the apparent ubiquity of the internet half of UK households still DON'T have access.

Breaking it down

  • mobiles which have an adult penetration over 80%: that takes in SMS,MSM, WAP/GPRS (no comment) plus up and coming 3G

  • PDAs: Palms and Pocket PCs

  • Laptops and the new tablet PCs

  • GPS devices for finding where you are or finding what's near you

  • Bluetooth and wifi wireless protocols

  • Sentient devices

GPS - Now you may think that GPS is for company chairmen to use in their Mercs as they thunder down the motorway but in Japan there are over half a million GPS requests a day for services based on location - where's the nearest cinema and so on. In Japan on certain networks if your friend is late you can use GPS to find our where they are and how long its going to take before they reach you.

WIFI - If you haven't heard about wifi then its time you did - set to totally upset the 100 billion 3G auction which hobbled the mobile companies with massive debts when they bid for a piece of the action. Wifi enables wireless communication with phones and computing devices at a range of 100 metres indoors and 500 metres outdoors from an access point. At the end of April 2003 Westminster council announced that Soho is going wireless and they will pay for it. That means that anyone in Soho will be able to surf the net, check email - make IP phonecalls and communicate with one another absolutely free - a very good reason for choosing to work or relax in Soho rather than elsewhere in the West End - but a nightmare for telephone companies who thought they could make a fortune charging us to do exactly the same thing with 3G phones. And all of the gear to do this is on the market now. And it costs £10s rather than hundreds of pounds. Like the world wide web it decentralises power away from the consortia - once you have access to all this then no one can really control what you do with it. Expect all city centres to be wireless within the next 2-3 years.

Bluetooth - is another wireless standard for linking devices within a range of up to 10 metres. Which means if your bluetooth phone rings in your backpack you can answer it with your headset.

Sentient Devices - Coca cola vending machines were among the first so they could reorder when they were empty. There's a lot more now: cars that book services and order emergency services in the event of a collision, fridges that know what's in them. Past 2005 there will be more machines than people communicating via the internet. And wireless chips are being built into these now. Expect home entertainment to go wifi within months.

So here's a box of goodies to to get your teeth into. And if you still have the patience then scroll down underneath where I summarise why the next phase of going mobile after the mass adoption of the mobile phone is set to change the communications landscape out of all recognition.

THE GOODY BOX
FREE DOWNLOAD - Mobile Marketing article by Russell Buckley who has a book Using Mobile Messaging coming out
FREE DOWNLOAD - Using SMS as a research technique by Steve Watkins of 2CVPub. Admap Mar 2003
Wired Magazine May 2003 - Introduction to Wireless. Buy it or read it here!
Smart Mobs by Howard Rheingold - reviewed on the Recent Reads page where you can buy it
Beyond Mobile by Mats Lindgren, Jorgen Jedbratt and Erika Svenson - reviewed on the Recent Reads page where you can buy it
Preorder Russell Buckley's book Using Mobile Messaging SMS, EMS and MMS - there will be a review here soon!

Why Mobile Comms is significant if you work in marketing communications