Qualcomm

MSG DEBUT VIDEO: Xiam Talks Targeting & Filtering; Make Way For The Personalized Web!

Author: Peggy Anne Salz

Several weeks into MSG’S exciting line-up of mobile industry projects (mobile advertising and mobile search), and I am impressed by the pivotal importance the majority of interviewees place on context. Whether it’s advertising or contextual search, the new business mantra is personalization. It’s all about delivering the right advertising/content/app/results to the right person in the right context.

But this time it’s more than warm-and-fuzzy lip-service. This time it’s hard-nosed business. Two developments – flat sales of  more traditional mobile entertainment offers such as games and ringtones (albeit at a high level), and the phenomenal popularity of apps and app stores – exacerbate the content discovery dilemma, forcing companies and operators alike to admit that better personalization is a must if higher revenues are the goal.

Last week I directed your attention to this excellent column from Mark Lowenstein, who drives home a point the significance of which I cannot overstate: “The most important way to differentiate in this growing but increasingly crowded market is to deliver a more personalized, contextual applications experience.” He was referring to app stores, where we are forced to sift through thousands of apps. (Déjà vu! It was our frustration with scrolling up and down mobile operator portals and hierarchical menus that opened the door for a variety of mobile search and content discovery solutions and providers that promised to take the pain out of finding and buying content.)

Put simply, personalization is not just central to app store schemes. It is critical to the delivery of content and advertising we will likely appreciate because it is in tune with our lifestyles (through profiling) as well as the important clues we leave behind though our browsing behavior, purchase patterns, and download history. (JumpTap, for example, has built a business connecting the dots between these data points to match relevant advertising to relevant consumer segments. As this MSG post recounts, the company  first released tapLink, a platform that builds targeting intelligence from multiple sources including search queries, browsing history, demographic and location data, and then followed up with the recent launch of tapMatch, its pay-per-click (PPC) performance mobile ad marketplace.)

As I have written many times on MSG, the new paradigm is personalized content-push based on a deep understanding of the individual. It’s even more compelling if the technology can learn users’ likes and dislikes over time to dynamically and consistently deliver the right content mix.

One company making its mark is Xiam Technologies, a Qualcomm company that I have tracked from the start. I recently caught up with Colm Healy, Xiam CEO, in a video interview to discuss the role of recommendation and personalized discovery techniques. (My personal thanks to Martin Clancy, Xiam Marketing Manager, for arranging the interview, and to Curtis Shmigelsky and the rest of the great people at bnetTV for including it in MSG video jukebox!)

I encourage you to check out the video interview in the sidebar. A highlight: Colm’s comments on the opportunities in personalization for mobile operators. As he puts it: “Mobile is a uniquely personal device and if you [operator/service provider] aren’t taking advantage of that by building in recommendations and personalized discovery techniques, you’re missing a beat.”

Almost as exciting as the array of business opportunities Colm describes, is his view of filtering. To cover all the material we did in a reality short video didn’t allow us the time to explore this topic as deeply as I would have liked. However, Martin has kindly offered to set up another interview following this week’s debut to delve into Colm’s vision for filters and systems that will – as he hinted in the video interview – “filter out the noise around us to focus in on the things that really make a difference to me.” His vision: “What you need is to get to a situation where a service becomes like a personal assistant that’s helping you get through the clutter and find what you really want.”

My take: Colm’s sharp focus on improving our mobile experiences – through improved personalization and, moving forward, the development and implementation of better filters – is the way to go. It’s also a perfect fit with a milestone, must-watch keynote speech by Clay Shirky, aptly entitled It’s not information overload. It’s filter failure. In this address, Clay puts his finger on the problem of our times: “What we’re dealing with now is not the problem of information overload, because we’re always dealing (and always have been dealing) with information overload…Thinking about information overload isn’t accurately describing the problem; thinking about filter failure is.” If we apply it to mobile, content and apps aren’t stalled because we don’t appreciate them or want to purchase them; we are confronted by a content overload problem and we need better filters that will help us find and buy what we – as individuals (hence the critical role of personalization) – appreciate even before we know we want it.

BTW: Qualcomm, which recently beefed up the personalization element in its Plaza suite of solutions to include Plaza Retail, has also reached out for a briefing to walk me through improvements to the storefront, and the nuts and bolts of the modular toolset it introduced for creating or managing app stores, and personalizing the content experiences they offer.

Disclaimer: Xiam sponsored the creation of the video, but did not influence the questions/topics covered in the interview.

May 28, 2009

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