Can your company afford to ignore the rapidly expanding mobile marketplace?

A recent poll from the Mobile Marketing Association (see Figure 1) confirms that disregarding the mobile market is a mistake that marketers want to avoid, and tech research firm Gartner finds that global sales of  smartphones and tablets will surpass 1 billion units in 2013. ("Smart device sales to hit 1B next year," Mobile World Live); sales estimates for 2012 exceed 800 million.

As a marketer, are you ready to ease your organization into yet another cultural shift related to online marketing?

Yes, most of you have just finished with the social media shift and many are still working through the integration of analytics with your marketing programs. But, as noted by Pete Christothoulou, co-founder and president of Marchex, "Executives are demanding that their marketing departments have a mobile strategy." (AllThingsD).

The next cultural shift must be to ask that your organization pay attention to mobile marketing—at the strategic planning level (while building your mobile digital road maps) and at the tactical level (while you pick "low hanging mobile fruit").

With mobile culture-building and mobile leadership in mind, here are seven tips to consider within your organization.

1. Understand the context: mobile apps vs. mobile pages

In the most basic terms, mobile devices—smartphones and tablets—come in many forms; but, essentially, you have two main approaches to mobile for using those devices in marketing.

"Mobile Web" refers to browser-based access to the Internet or Web-based applications using a mobile device. "Mobile app" refers to a software application (it could also connect to your website) that usually resides on a smartphone or tablet.

Mobile apps take considerable time and money to develop and maintain. And after a mobile app has been created, you will most often need third-party infrastructure to help deploy (e.g., the Apple or Google app platforms).

Mobile Web development also has time and dollar costs associated with it; however, you can often use your website as its content and infrastructure base, allowing for a quicker deployment to your market.

2. Commercial Web services drive mobile visits

Today, various commercial Web services present/provide information in a mobile-compatible form. Visitors can navigate large service providers such as Facebook, YouTube, Google Search, and Amazon with browsers on their smart devices. Accordingly, the information your organization places within those services is also mobile-enabled, including organic search results pages commonly found from searches on Bing, Yahoo, and Google, or from your listing on eBay and Craigslist.

Finding your Web page should be just as easy for a Mobile Web user as it is for a desktop computer user. However, unless your Web pages are mobile-enabled, your visitors may not be receiving the experience you want them to receive when they click through from one of these services to visit you.

3. Your Web pages are a good place to start

Making your Web page "mobile-compatible" is a more practical way to join the mobile evolution that creating a mobile app. Many website content management systems offer responsive-design features that detect mobile device visits and display Web pages in a mobile-compatible manner.

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Seven Tips for Creating a Mobile-Aware Marketing Culture

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Joe Wozny

Joe Wozny is CEO of Concentric and author of The Digital Dollar: Sustainable Strategies for Online Success. He is a digital and business strategist and presenter on strategies that improve digital media initiatives, helping leaders advance their businesses and personal and product identities online.

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Twitter: @joewozny