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All-Podcast-Secrets

Mobile Phones vs. Ipod-Can Mobile Operators Win ? 

July 15th, 2007

Mobile Phones vs. iPod - Can Mobile Operators Win?

It is the strangest thing. The iPod and podcasting have proven that users will gladly overcome complex routines in order to take their entertainment with them when they are on the go. Some of us transfer MP3 files from the PC and enjoy music. Others subscribe to podcasts. Both usages requires a user to actively connect a media device to a PC and transfer content – an action which I personally find technically challenging. Yet people do it. Over 100,000,000 iPods have been sold so far.

On the other hand, the cellular industry has repeatedly tried to get us to use data entertainment services on our phones. Internet became Mobile Internet. Television became Mobile TV. Despite the investment of billions of dollars in data networks, spectrum, devices and marketing campaigns, users have not adopted these services.

Can the mobile phone compete with the iPod as the user’s device of choice? For example, can podcasting become a service enjoyed on mobile phones? Clearly, podcasting is very suitable for the mobile phone. First, it is an “on-the-go” experience. Second, audio content is not effected by the handset’s small screen. Third, mobile phones already support video and high-quality audio. Four, content can be delivery directly to the handset with superb user experience.

If podcasting on the mobile fails, the mobile industry will have difficulty explaining why. Indeed, one may argue that such a failure is final proof that the phone is simply not a media devices, and that convergence is just hype.

This series of articles analyzes the critical issues that must be addressed if mobile podcasting is to succeed and prove that the phone has worth as a media device. In this first article, we now address fundamental user issues:

First, is there a clear scenario where users will consume podcasts/content on the mobile phone? The answer is yes. If the service is user friendly, compelling and affordable, people will do what many already do on with iPod. Many of us have clearly definable windows of dead time where we are a captive audience, such as while commuting to and from work. Also, enjoying audio content can be done in parellel to other activities.

Second, will people use their phones for media consumption? The experts say yes. “So the split where the phone world and this Windows PC world have been two separate worlds - that’s changing utterly,” says Bill Gates. “You’ll have the PC and then you’ll have your mobile phone. And the mobile phone and that PC will be working together in a rich way.”

All of us carry our phones with us everywhere. We like our phones. Phones are getting smarter, with better user experience. The iPod is great, if you have one. Most do not. An iPod also means carrying around two devices. I do not. Given a compelling user experience and fair and clear pricing, many will gladly listen to great audio content during dead-time.

Third, will people pay for a mobile podcast service? After all, most content (including podcasts) is free on the web, with the perception being that content (even if pirated) should remain free.

Whether people will pay for a mobile service depends of factors such as easy of use, content quality, and price. True, Podcasts are available free on-line. But I personally would pay a small premium to receive unique Brand content on my mobile phone rather than buy an iPod and have to bother with transferring podcasts from my computer every day. Sure.

Finally, as will be discussed in the following articles, there is one more critical factor on which the success of mobile podcasting depends. Mobile operator involvement. Issues of easy of use, compelling content and price are all under the operator’s control. Major mobile operators are designing and will soon launch podcast applications with great client expereince. As to content, Vodafone, T-Mobile and Orange are closing deals with Brand new media – the recent announcements of Vodafone with YouTube and My Space to name a few. As to price, operators control the cost of data on their networks. Adopting clear flat monthly fees for mobile podcasting services is mandatory to attract the mass-market user.

Will operators commit to mobile podcasting? They must. The success of the iPod is a strategic threat to them for several reasons: (a) If iPod becomes the user’s mobile media device of choice, the phone will remain only a voice-only device. (b) iPhone will allow Apple to work one operator against another, such as by entering into an exclusivity deal with Vodafone at the exclusion of others - see Apple and ATT in the US. (c) Once iPod goes WIFI, the operator is out of the loop altogether.

Monte Silver
World Podcast Forum

http://www.worldpodcastforum.com/


Pocket Tweets for Your IPhone 

July 10th, 2007

PocketTweets: Twitter For Your iPhone
PocketTweets is a Web-based Twitter client for the Apple iPhone. See the latest tweets from your contacts, update your status remotely, or see what’s happening around the world by viewing the public timeline. — all via EDGE or WiFi. PocketTweets was built from the ground up to support Apple’s new phone platform. We hope you enjoy it.
Features
• Update your Twitter status from anywhere using your iPhone
• View your friends’ twitter status updates
• View direct messages that are sent to you
• View the public timeline
• Gorgeous iPhone-exclusive interface
• Download
• There is no download. Just visit http://www.pockettweets.com/ on your iPhone and start using it today!
• If you find Pocket Tweets useful, please consider making a donation to help fund future development and offset hosting costs.

Hard Work [perry marshal] 

July 1st, 2007

Lately I’ve been talking a lot about the importance of hard work, passion and how we all need to beware the “anyone can do it” promises of some marketing gurus out there.

Yeah, I know, I’m supposed to tell you how easy and effortless it’s gonna be.

Well there’s plenty of others who happily tell you that.

For those of you who are still with me, I have this advice:

Find a Land of the Blind where you can be King. If we made a list of every niche market that exists, 80% of them would not require you to possess very much “Art Factor” at all. A good criteria for choosing a market, then, is little or no Art Factor required.

If you’re mining copper in The Congo, you get yourself a half-dozen issues of Copper Miner Monthly and curl up on the couch for some enjoyable reading. You make an astonishing discovery: There ain’t a soul in this industry who knows how to market anything.

Look, here’s a company that spends $200,000 a year on marketing and they only get one new customer a month. Hey, that means if I can get them a new customer for less than sixteen grand, they’re getting a good deal.

Congratulations, sir, you have just found a Land of the Blind. Go be king.

Be a Marketing Maniac. If you’re going to crawl inside this thing… if you’re going to have a feeling for it, then you need to be marketing obsessed. Look for vital clues about human psychology everywhere. Find stuff in today’s newspaper, in fundraising campaigns, in today’s mail… go to the doctor and while he’s checking the lymph nodes under your groin, ask yourself, “How did he manage to sell me on this idea of feeling me out down there in the first place?”

You know you’re a Marketing Maniac when:

People start giving you their junk mail because they “thought you might be interested.” And you find, oddly, that you are interested.

Welcome to the Marketing Maniac Hall of Fame.

Know thyself and act accordingly. Make a list of microcosms you’ve belonged to in your life.

Every club you’ve been a member of…write it down.
Every political organization…write it down
Every job and career you’ve been in…write it down
Every subject you liked in school,
Every sport you played,
Every magazine you’ve ever subscribed to,
Every cause or religious organization,
Every hobby…

…it all goes on the list.

You now have a very large number of markets you can investigate.

Do They Spend Money? How Much? Go through the list … do people spend money in political organizations? Uh, yes, they most definitely do. Could be a place where you could be paid to generate results. Could also be a place where you test your marketing chops as a volunteer. How about all those jobs you’ve had, do people spend money in those professions? On advertising? Which ones spend the most?

Go forth and conquer.

Perry Marshall

Clicky Web Analytics

1131 Lake Street #295
Oak Park, IL 60301



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