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November 8th, 2011 by neilrobertson

Retailers must be mobile

Last night was Mobile Monday London’s sixth birthday event at London’s glamorous Centre Point. There were some familiar faces there last night and it was great to be back at a MoMo event, especially one that given the line up of speakers and topics, promised to deliver.

 

Martyn Warwick, from Telecom TV chaired the session with Russell Buckley (@russellbuckley) from Eagle Eye Solutions (client of Speed), Mark Curtis (@fjordmark) from Fjord, David Wood (@DW2) from Accenture and Mike Short from Telefonica all providing their answers to some of the big questions in mobile.

 

Some of those big questions seemed to centre around the death of things…perhaps a little morbid, but it was the conversations on privacy, trust, location and retail that took my particular interest. Much of the industry seems to be concerned about the decline and re-birth of different industries, which is i think only natural. After all, these cycles present a variety of different business opportunities.

 

I’ve heard all of these guys talk at MoMoLo and elsewhere before and although that everyone on the panel last night made some very interesting and valid points…i think that Mark and Russell always provide some fantastic food for thought.

 

I always come out of a MoMo session with a load of notes and thoughts, so I thought that instead of one massive blog post, I’d break it down in to maybe three shorter ones on different topics. So here goes, first up – retail.

 

Live or let die?


If a major high-street retailer doesn’t have a mobile offering today, something I can go to, download, view now, then it could already be too late. Mobile moves at such a rapid pace – evident to see from the recap of the last six years of events since MoMoLo started – that by the time it takes to act on something, it’s already out of date.

 

Five years ago there was no such thing as an iPhone and it was only a very slight minority that were using WAP on their phone to search the web, download JAVA and J2ME apps. Five years in retail never used to be *that* long of a time. In mobile, five years is a lifetime. As mobile commerce is increasing, retailers need to be quicker at adapting otherwise there’s a big risk that consumers leave them behind.

 

Interestingly, econsultancy recently published some stats around retailers and mobile offerings, concluding that:

  • 36 of the top 47 retailers on the list have either a mobile optimised website or a smartphone app.
  • 21 of the 47 have both sites and apps.
  • 9 have just apps, while 6 have a mobile site and no apps.

 

Russell made an interesting point that even when a retailer has a mobile offering and drives a consumer to the store, the battle isn’t won yet. Retailers are competing in their own stores for that consumer to make a purchase – 21% of consumers that own a smartphone have changed their mind about purchasing a product in store as a result of information gathered on their device. Retailers are failing to make the sale even with the consumer there with the product, hand in pocket. But the hand isn’t on their cash; it’s on their mobile.

 

Russell rounded up by concluding that it’s a fact that a lot of digital marketing techniques have passed many retailers by as they’ve never really invested in digital marketing. Many retailers out there are just not geared up for mobile thinking yet, but they have to be as they’re about to go through absolutely massive changes just as the music, publishing and many other industries have.

 

Mark went as far to say that a lot of retail looks dead already. I think that in some ways he’s right, but arguably it’s in retail that a lot of the action and opportunity is right now. Some retailers have made significant effort towards mobile and continue to reap the benefits, Amazon for example is always, always my default choice to check prices, availability etc. and I’ll continue to give them my custom as they provide exceptional service. There are however many others using mobile very well such as Tesco, Ocado and Argos to name a couple.

 

Mark went on to say that retailers who don’t now accept that mobile is very much part of their business are in big trouble and that high street retailers should be looking at making their stores in to experiences rather than just a place to hold and sell stock. Something that Steve Jobs evangelised when the first Apple Store opened in 2001.

In the last 10 years Apple Stores across the globe have provided that ‘Apple experience’ that make visiting a store actually quite an enjoyable experience even when you don’t have anything particular to buy. How many other stores can you name that have a similar effect? I’m struggling to name any other that offers a consumer something similar. Any suggestions?

 

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September 29th, 2010 by Rebecca Gregory

Apple’s PR Armageddon?

A depiction by Gustave Doré.

Image via Wikipedia

Recent journalist reactions to the recent furore over Steve Jobs’ email exchange with journalist student Chelsea Isaacs, have been interestingly split. There are two camps. Camp 1 sees Steve as the big bad wolf dressed as a little old grandma devouring the innocent student for breakfast. Camp 2 sees Chelsea more as a Goldilocks figure, demanding that Apple provide her with company information given that it’s her basic right to be provided all information that she requires, at any given time.

When her initial efforts to get information from the press office failed, Chelsea went straight to the top and emailed Steve Jobs. Always a smart option (when it’s a justifiable problem).

It does have to be acknowledged that, yes it is notoriously hard for journalists to get through to Apple’s press office (confirmed by ex-Apple press team members and journalists alike). But it is also worth noting that a press office is employed to respond to media requests, not to hand out information for academic dissertations. Academic enquires to a press office aren’t unusual and most PRs I know will politely respond if able to help or not. Given that the Apple one of the largest tech companies in the world I think it’s safe to assume that their press office is inundated with press enquires (that it alone can decide whether to respond to or not), let alone emails from students and the crazy people.

Camp 1 considers Chelsea’s role as a budding journalist as cause for concern (I’m sure Steve is quivering in his knees at the thought of Chelsea starting out on her journalist career with the one aim of taking down Apple. It’s like Lex Luther and Superman, just not as plausible).  Her wherewithal to go direct to the CEO is applauded as showing excellent journalist promise. I suspect Camp 2 sees it smacking of self importance, and naivety. Here’s a quote from Chelsea:

“I was incredibly surprised to find Apple’s Media Relations Department to be absolutely unresponsive to my questions, which (as I had repeatedly told them in voicemail after voicemail) are vital to my academic grade as a student journalist.”

This man is the CEO of one of the biggest brands in the world, that he replied at all is pretty impressive/amusing; she must have really p*ssed him off.

Camp 2 is right; it’s not Apple’s responsibility to help her get a good grade. It does have a responsibility to provide good customer support, but she wasn’t getting in touch regarding a product malfunction! If she was, then good on her – go straight to the CEO once the customer services department is a no go.

The long term impact? It will do her career no harm; no doubt Chelsea will land a jammy role as an investigative journalist pretty sharpish. As for Jobs, back to not being known as Mr Laughsalot and the day job of running a multi-billion dollar company and eating students for breakfast. Naturally, I would never advise a CEO to engage directly with a customer in this manner, but as a PR crisis, it’s hardly Armageddon.

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June 7th, 2010 by michael.frier

Daily News – 04/06

The Register – Vince Cable: Feel my mighty SME love

New Coalition government biznovation minister Vince Cable has set out his stall in a speech given yesterday at a business school in London. He pledged to cut the red tape stifling small businesses, and said he would compel banks to lend to SMEs.

SC Magazine - IT security professionals hack their own networks for penetration testing

Half of IT security professionals have admitted that they hack their own networks, with 73 per cent doing so to test the strength of their own network defences.

Computing.co.uk – Broadband customers buy on price, switch on speed

The main reason why consumers switch broadband supplier is because of disappointment with connectivity speed, but when they choose a new provider, they do so based on price, a recent survey has found.

The Daily Telegraph – Microsoft is ‘number five’ in the mobile market

Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, has admitted that the technology giant is losing the battle in the smartphone space with its Windows Phone offering, saying its currently ranked fifth in the market.

IT Pro – BT gets go-ahead for watered down broadband unbundling

The European Commission has said it agrees with regulator Ofcom that BT should be able to offer only virtual unbundling for its fibre broadband networks for the time being.

ComputerWorldUK – PC is not dead, device form is changing

Apple CEO Steve Jobs may believe that the personal computer – Mac and Windows PCs – will diminish in importance in the near future, but Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer sees thing differently. Ballmer, during an interview at the Wall Street Journal’s D8 conference, told the Journal’s Walt Mossberg that PCs will continue to evolve but will remain popular, even in a world where more and more people carry smartphones and tablet devices like the iPad.

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June 3rd, 2010 by michael.frier

Daily News – 03/06

BBC – Apple boss defends conditions at iPhone factory

Apple boss Steve Jobs has defended conditions at a Taiwanese electronics firm that products the firm’s popular iPhone, following a spate of suicides.

BBC – The Hurt Locker producers to sue illegal file-sharers

Voltage Pictures, the company behind Oscar-winning film The Hurt Locker, has filed lawsuits against alleged illegal file-sharers of the movie in the US.

CIO – Government to release IT contract financial details

The coalition government will publish all new IT contracts it signs from July, as part of what prime minister David Cameron has called “greater transparency”.

The Register – No-good scareware varmints exploit Wild West game

Varmints are exploiting interest in a treasure hunt tied to popular Wild West-themed game Red Dead Redemption to lay scareware traps.

IT PRO – Thieves steal virtual items from hotel
While the Habbo Hotel thefts were virtual, there were still real financial ramifications.

Total Telecom – Google sites increase share of online video viewing – comScore
YouTube accounted for bulk of Google’s 13.09 billion videos viewed online in April.

ComputerWorldUK – Government to release IT contract financial details
The coalition government will publish online all new IT contracts it signs from July, as part of what prime minister David Cameron has called “greater transparency”.

The Daily Telegraph – Sony: ebooks to overtake print within five years

Sales of ebooks will overtake print books within the next five years, Sony has predicted.

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May 4th, 2010 by michael.frier

Daily News – 04/05

BBC – Smartphones to get novel memory material

Smartphones could have their battery life extended by up to 20 per cent by changing what type of memory they use. Samsung has announced plans to produce memory modules built of what is known as a phase change material.

BBC – Student convicted of hacking Sarah Palin e-mail account

A jury in Tennessee has convicted a former student of hacking the e-mail account of Sarah Palin. David Kernell, 22, was found guilty of obstructing justice and unauthorised access to a computer.

The Register – Internet Explorer drops below 60 per cent market share

Less than two thirds of surfers are now using Microsoft’s browser on the web as Google’s Chrome continues its northward assault.

CIO – Adobe CEO responds to Steve Jobs Flash attack

Grab your ringside seats, gang: Apple and Adobe are at it again, and this time, the fighting’s turning fierce. In one corner, you have Steve Jobs, decorated CEO of what may be both the most loved and most hated company in technology. In the other corner, you have Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen, who can’t understand why Jobs won’t allow his Flash software onto the iPhone, iPod, or iPad

The Financial Times – Apple shifts 1m iPads in first month

Apple has sold 1m units of the iPad in the four weeks since it went on sale in the US, suggesting that demand for the touch screen tablet computer is higher than anticipated. However, the company faced criticism from users who complained that the 3G iPad, released at the weekend, was delivering poor video performance over AT&T’s network.

The Daily Telegraph – Head teacher calls for Facebook ban

The principal of a school in New Jersey has asked students to join a voluntary ban on social networking and text messaging to prevent cyber bullying. Anthony Orsini, head teacher at Benjamin Franklin Middle School in Ridgewood, New Jersey, sent an email asking parents to help wean their children – aged between 11 and 14 – off social networking websites such as Facebook, and to keep a careful track of their text messages.

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March 31st, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 31/03

BBC – US tech coalition calls for new online privacy law

US technology firms and privacy groups have called for an overhaul of privacy laws, saying the government has too much access to private online data.

The Register – Google mocks Steve Jobs with Chrome-Flash merger

When Steve Jobs met Google boss Eric Schmidt for coffee late last week, they may or may not have reached some common ground on certain hot-button subjects. But odds are, they didn’t see eye-on-eye on Adobe Flash.

The Register – Your internet policy sucks, US tells Aussies

Critics of the Australia’s proposed internet filtering scheme just keep on coming. This week, it’s the turn of one of Australia’s biggest and most formidable allies, the United States, to put the boot into a scheme that would turn Australia into the free world’s strictest regulator of internet content.

Total Telecom – Spain shifts from analog to digital TV
Spain’s government switched off analog TV signals in key regions Tuesday as the country shifts to digital terrestrial television in a move that will expand Spain’s TV market.

ZDNet – Apple shows off iPad productivity apps

Apple posted demonstration videos on Monday that showed various applications running on the iPad, due for US release on Saturday and UK release in late April. Included were four videos showing the iPad’s email app and three office productivity apps: Keynote for presentations, Pages for document creation and Numbers for spreadsheets.

The Daily Telegraph – UK must do more for child safety online

Prof Tanya Byron, the Government’s online child safety tsar, has said that the politicians and the technology industry need to work even more closely with parents. Launching a progress report on her initial policy document, “Safer Children in a Digital World”, she said that although the UK is a world leader in keeping young people safe online, more work still needs to be done.

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February 22nd, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 22/02

The Guardian – Google attacks ‘traced to Chinese schools’

Chinese authorities have not commented on NY Times reports that intelligence has linked the hacking strikes to two schools.

IT PRO -Microsoft browser ballot to arrive next week

Microsoft will start offering its web browser choice screen to UK users from next week.

The Register – iPad pitch to the Wall Street Journal laid bare

Steve Jobs took the iPad to the Wall Street Journal to explain why the paper should drop Adobe’s Flash, to a cool reception.

Computerworld UK – Mobile banking doubles every year

In 2015, about 244 million people worldwide will carry out financial transactions with their banks using their mobile phones.

Computerworld UK – Facebook more popular than Yahoo

Facebook is now the second most popular website in the United States, passing Yahoo with 133 million unique visitors in January, according to new research.

The Daily Telegraph – Apple ‘obsessed’ American couple marry at New York store on Valentine’s Day

An American couple, Josh and Ting Li, who are obsessed with Apple products, have become the first to marry inside one of the technology giant’s stores. The couple, from New York, said “iDo” at the city’s Apple store on Fifth Avenue, at 12.01 on Valentine’s Day in a ceremony dominated with the company’s products and references to them. The pair, who met in the Apple store, had their priest dressed as Steve Jobs, the company’s chief executive, read their vows from their iPhones, while the rings were tied to a ribbon wrapped around a first generation iPod.

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February 17th, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 17/02

Silicon.com – BlackBerry: ‘Blazingly fast’ browser and ‘super-apps’ unveiled

BlackBerry-maker RIM has given a glimpse of the next-generation of the BlackBerrry web browser that will be based on WebKit technology.

BBC – SeeSaw internet TV service launches in UK

SeeSaw’s online TV service has launched in full for British internet users after less than a month of beta testing on 20,000 users. The service offers viewers the chance to catch up for free on 3,000 hours of archive and recent programmes from the BBC, Channel 4 and Five.

BBC – Facebook launch ‘Zero’ site for mobile phones

The world’s biggest social network has revealed details of a stripped-down, text-only version of its mobile site called Facebook Zero.

Computerworld UK – Google Android & processor squeezed onto SIM

The SIM cards in cellular telephones might be smaller than a postage stamp and less than a millimetre thick but that hasn’t stopped South Korea’s SK Telecom from cramming all the major components needed to run Google’s Android OS inside one of them.

The Daily Telegraph – Steve Jobs to ‘cooperate’ on his first official biography

Steve Jobs, the chief executive of Apple, is allowing and helping an author to write his official biography for the first time, according to reports. Several authors have written biographies about the man who reversed Apple’s fortunes, but they have all been without Jobs’s consent or help.

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February 1st, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 01/02

The Times – Bill Gates pledges $10bn for a ‘decade of vaccine’

Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder and philanthropist, is to make the largest ever single charitable donation with a pledge of $10 billion (£6 billion) for vaccine work over the next decade.

IT PRO – UK’s big firms to use more free software in 2010
Big companies are increasingly looking at free alternatives to costly software suites in a bid to keep costs down, a new survey has shown.

The Register – Steve Jobs dubs Google’s ‘don’t be evil’ motto ‘bulls**t’

Steve Jobs has dubbed Google’s “don’t be evil” mantra “bullshit.” Or at least “a load of crap.”

Computerworld UK – Google winds down support for IE6

The warnings over Internet Explorer 6 are beginning to have some effect; Google has said it will end support for IE6.

The Guardian – After the iPad, what unicorns are there for Apple to unleash?

We’ve had the iPhone, and now we’ve got the iPad. But that won’t stop the fans inventing fresh products or services that theyr’e sure Apple has hidden in the cupboard

Computer Weekly – Fujitsu claims ownership of iPad brand

Fujitsu has laid claim to the iPad brand within hours of Apple unveiling its latest gadget under that name. The Japanese technology company’s iPad is a mobile device for verifying the price of retail goods, checking inventory data and confirming sales. The Fujitsu iPad has a colour touch-screen, an Intel processor, wi-fi and Bluetooth connectivity, and supports VoIP telephone calls. The company is consulting lawyers about what to do next.

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January 28th, 2010 by John Brown

Speed on the iPad

Quick fire comments from around our office.  A mixed bag to say the least!:

Stephen Waddington (@wadds): Undoubtedly a delightful product. But what’s the market?

Steve Earl (@mynameisearl): I hate the way that the warm-up hype from Apple made me feel it assumed the media would stop everything and write about nothing but iPad on launch day. But I admire the arrogance.

Nicola Savage (@nicky_savage): Haven’t bothered – will look when the real version comes out in a few months time.

Nick Bishop (@nbishop): Looks like a small coffee table, without legs of course. Only if you squint.

Ruth Jones (@ruthjones): It looks cool, but seems rather pointless. What would you use it for?

Rebecca Gregory (@rebecca_g): Surely, just the natural next step for Apple and the iPhone… It’s not exactly unexpected. Is it?!

Nicole Hudspith (@nicolehudspith): What’s the point? Waste of space!

Neil Carter (@coq_au_ginge): As always, Apple create things that put huge smile on your face. But from a “work” view, it’s not a replacement for peoples laptops. To sum up, it’s a thing of beauty, I want one, but I won’t be getting one… yet.

Sophie Hodgson (@Sophie_Hodgson): So basically I now need an iPhone, an iPad and a Mac Book to ensure all my browsing and communication needs are covered? How’s about bollocks.

Matthew Watson (@mpwatson): iFad. But I still want one.

Katie Swan (@klswan): I know I want one but I don’t know what i’d use it for. The iPhone is more portable and a laptop has multi-tasking.

John Brown (@brownbare): I think this will greatly enhance my sex appeal as I sip a mochachino in a Soho Starbucks – on my shopping list.

Richard Morgan (@richardspeed): It’s a big iPod Touch, I want one!

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