DATA POINTS: iPhone Users Are Into Paid Apps; More Mobile Adspend Gains Predicted (Not?); Mobile TV Not Seeing Much Use; M-Commerce Slow To Take Off; Opera Mini Sees GetJar Milestone
HALF OF IPHONE USERS AND FORTY PERCENT OF IPOD TOUCH USERS DOWNLOAD A PAID APP PER MONTH, says AdMob in its latest mobile metrics report. This compares to just 19 percent of Android users, but users of both platforms spend a lot of time using apps: over half of them spend more than 30 minutes per day using apps.
In absolute terms, though, it’s an average of 1 paid app per month on Android, 2.6 paid apps on iPhone and 2.0 on iPod Touch. Broken down into those who “regularly” download paid apps, they tend to download 5 paid apps per month, spending $9.
Another interesting observation from the report is that iPod Touch users download an average total of 18 apps per month – whereas iPhone users grab 10 each month. Source
The bottom line: Apple’s App Store remains the gold standard, demonstrating that consumers will download – and pay for — apps when it’s easy to browse and simple to install. At this point, most of the other app stores out there are poor imitators that don’t pay enough attention to the usability aspects of their offerings and how they integrate into the installation process of compatible devices. Meanwhile, iPhone users are dropping some decent money on paid apps, and creating advertising opportunities with free ones.
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MOBILE NET ADSPEND TO QUADRUPLE TO $2 BILLION BY 2014, according to Juniper Research. The firm says that mobile internet ad spending worldwide will approach $500 million this year, and almost reach $2 billion by 2014.
This doesn’t even include SMS advertising, which Juniper says will be overtaken by mobile Internet ad spending this year. Overall, total mobile ad spending will hit $1.4 billion this year, and $6 billion in 2014. Source
The bottom line: Over the past several weeks, we’ve seen a lot of predictions like this, highlighting the expected growth in the mobile advertising market. Perhaps the most important thing to takeaway is that these predictions signal the high interest in mobile advertising – but to hit these lofty targets, the entire ecosystem will have to work to deliver the right solutions for brands and consumers.
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THE U.S. AD MARKET WILL FALL BY $1.6 BILLION THIS YEAR, says the Yankee Group in a new report. Spending on TV advertising will fall by $2 billion alone, the firm says, as budgets shrink and consumers shift to the I nternet on both PC and mobile. Another key factor the report cites is the booming amount of inventory available on these platforms, which it says put constant downward pressure on prices. Source
The bottom line: Like the previous point, there have been several of these reports lately, showing a significant drop in ad spending, but they typically show mobile as one bright spot. Again, the opportunity is there for mobile advertising to grow and take dollars away from other platforms – but only if the ecosystem can deliver the right opportunities.
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HARDLY ANYBODY’S WATCHING MOBILE TV, according to a new report from In-Stat (that shouldn’t really surprise anybody in mobile). Despite mobile TV’s failure to live up to the hype that’s surrounded it for several years, the firm says that 54 million people will watch analog free-to-air TV on their mobile this year, reaching 300 million in 2013. That’s an important distinction: in many developed markets, analog TV isn’t available on mobiles, or it’s somewhere in the process of being switched off in favor of digital terrestrial broadcasts. This means that growth will come largely in developing markets.
The report, it should be mentioned, was conducted on behalf of a mobile TV chip company and contains many of the type of stats that other reports about mobile TV have mentioned: those who use it tend to use it several times a week, and spend a decent amount of time watching. But the issue remains that there simply aren’t very many people at all using mobile TV. Source
The bottom line: The report’s author says that free-to-air programming supported by advertising would boost the mobile TV market. That might be true, but the lack of uptake seems to be largely built on a real lack of interest for mobile TV among consumers. Furthermore, if mobile TV accesses freely available signals, cutting the operators out of the picture, they’re unlikely to want to subsidize handsets that would support it.
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M-COMMERCE IS MOVING SLOWLY, at least in the U.S., says a new report from eMarketer. One survey it cites says retailers say budget constraints are the biggest factor keeping them from expanding their efforts, with consumer apathy apparently not even included in the survey. Another poll in the report says that more than half of U.S. consumers would be willing to buy pizza or movie/event tickets by mobile, with just 34 percent saying they’d buy games and just 24 percent saying they’d purchase mobile video/TV content.
The report talks about one more survey, which says that the most popular form of purchase via mobile among US m-commerce users is, as you’d expect, mobile content. Next, is consumer electronics, which it says has been bought by half the people who have used m-commerce. A small sample size (just 137) could help explain that figure. Source
The bottom line: Perhaps the biggest factor holding back m-commerce is a lack of real demand. For many types of goods, shopping on mobile isn’t a great experience. But for other kinds of products – in particular, services that are consumed on the go like events or travel – some market may emerge.
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OPERA MINI SEES 25 MILLION DOWNLOADS on GetJar alone, the site says. GetJar says Opera Mini is the most downloaded mobile app of all time, and that it alone has served up 7.5 million downloads of the latest version of the app since the beginning of the year. Source
The bottom line: Two main takeaways here: Opera Mini, as most readers probably already know, is a hugely popular app across multiple platforms and app stores. Second, the smartphone app stores aren’t the only places sending mobile users lots of downloads.
Tags: AdMob, Adspend, Android, app store, Apple, GetJar, In-Stat, iPhone, m-commerce, Mobile Advertising, Mobile Internet, Mobile TV, Opera Mini









September 4th, 2009 at 6:02 pm
[...] 1 votes vote DATA POINTS: iPhone Users Are Into Paid Apps; More Mobile Adspend Gains Predicted (Not?); Mobile TV … HALF OF IPHONE USERS AND FORTY PERCENT OF IPOD TOUCH USERS DOWNLOAD A PAID APP PER MONTH, says [...]