Ask most US consumers whether they want to receive mobile-marketing messages on their cell phones, and they will usually answer with a resounding "No."

Consumers have been presold that allowing such advertising on their cell phones means they'll start receiving unwanted Viagra ads and messages from a prince in Kenya who wants to give them $10 million.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

Mobile Coupons Are Opt-In Only

Mobile marketing, as well as mobile coupons, is opt-in marketing, which means companies cannot send you mobile-marketing messages unless you've given them permission to do so.

Now, that's not to say the rule isn't violated. But mobile marketing will never be like email marketing.

With mobile marketing, there is an intrinsic cost to send a text message, whereas with email marketing there is no definable hard cost to send more spam. Hence, sending spam to cell phones with no targeting wouldn't work nearly as well from an ROI perspective.

Mobile-Coupon Growth

The mobile phone is quickly becoming the go-to medium for couponing. As mobile advertising struggles to gain acceptance, it is chipping away at the 300 billion paper coupons issued every year in the United States.

According to a recent study by Scarborough Research, virtual coupons sent via text message are making strides and are a significant force to be reckoned with.

Where We Get Our Coupons

Coupon distribution in the United States is still dominated by the old-fashioned Sunday-newspaper insert (according to Scarborough Research):

  • Sunday newspaper: 51%
  • In-store: 35%
  • US mail: 31%
  • Loyalty programs: 21%
  • Circulars: 20%
  • Weekday newspaper: 17%
  • Product packaging: 16%
  • Magazines: 15%
  • Email or text messages: 8%
  • Websites: 7%

Advertisers are always seeking the young and affluent, and mobile coupons pinpoint that market of early adopters. College graduates are 51% more likely to get their coupons from their mobile phone.

Not surprisingly, mobile-coupon users also tend to be young adults; those age 18-24 are 14% more likely to be mobile-coupon users, most of whom are female.

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Mobile Coupons: Your Message on the Move

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bob Bentz is president of Advanced Telecom Services (www.advancedtele.com), which provides a mobile-marketing solution for advertisers and advertising agencies at 84444.com.