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SoMoLo - The Retail Perspective

Forbes has an excellent piece on SoMoLo and the importance of this to retailers.  Naturally we're in full agreement, but would extend that to all types of information and content that people want to get out to their customers.

​Viafo's Service Gateway's core functionality is to make it easy and cost effective to integrate Social Mobile and Location services into your existing mobile apps, but we're starting to look at wider use cases than that, as the solution we just delivered for Classic Accessories up here in the Pacific Northwest shows. 

In that project, we've used our gateway and technology not just to deliver SoMoLo content direct to people when they go shopping, but we also integrated into their BazaarVoice CRM system and also provided a complete, hosted solution for delivering HTML5 micro-apps for any smartphone.​

The future is going to be about giving customers and consumers all the information they need, in an interactive and viral way straight to their phone or mobile device!​

Drop us a line if you're interested in learning more or having a demo of our technology for retailers.​

Is your app relevant?

We've been saying for a long time that Interactive Features are what make apps relevant.  But you don't need to take our word for it.  Dick Costolo said the same thing at Mobile World Congress in his Keynote, and comScore said as much last year.

We're in the process of working on and then releasing a survey we've conducted of the leading brand apps and how they use interactive media, which has led to a lot of thought here at Viafo about how brands and consumer facing applications are making use of Social, Location and other web services.  Naturally, our goal with this is to get people using our Gateway to make it easier to manage and control these services, but without giving our conclusions away, I did want to outline some things that we believe everybody should have in their mind as they're getting apps created for them.

1. Social Networking is core to most people's use of the web.  comScore found last year that Social Networking on Mobile was the fastest growing use of mobile applications.  So why is it that many, many apps aren't taking advantage of something core to most peoples' lives?

  •  It's not about sharing that they have an app - who cares?
  • It IS about sharing that something in the app interests them - a feature of a car, a new dress, a type of bag - make it easy for users to share that across multiple networks, sure, make sure that it is tagged as coming from YOUR app, but people want to read about interesting things
  • You're spending a small fortune on your social presence?  You've got people full time on Twitter and Facebook managing your tags, @messages and wall - are you sharing these into your mobile app?  If not, why not?
  • If a user posts from your app, do you know about it right away?  If not, why not?

2. Location

  • Location is much, much more than "Where's my nearest…"
  • Are you using location to deliver coupons and offers?
  • Are you letting users Check-In to their favorite check-in service from inside the app?
  • Are you letting users share their thoughts on where they are and what they're doing?

3. Uploading

  • Can users easily share images of your product?  Are you running contests for them?

4. Protecting your brand

  • Are you letting people share from inside your app and sending that straight to the web?
  • Do youhave any control over what people are saying and how?  If not why not?

Obviously, this is a slightly loaded set of questions because they're all core to what Viafo's Gateway does.  But if you sit back and think about it, are you really taking full advantage of the power of social and location services?

While our goal is to get the Gateway in use with as many people as possible, we're also happy to help people understand the impact on their retail and brand experience.  So do feel free to drop me a line: david@viafo.com

 

The Challenge of Retail

As I mentioned a few months ago, the problem of building interesting Retail Solutions isn't going away, in fact, if this article from Advertising Age is to be believed, it's becoming a serious issue for all marketing departments.

This is great news from our perspective as more and more potential clients realize that mobile isn't just about getting content out on the device, but figuring out what you do with it when it gets there.  We've been putting a lot of thought into this over the last few months and we're close to releasing a Case Study on our findings, where we'll consider how any modern retail strategy needs to have a Tripod of supporting online services.

The three legs of the tripod are:

  • Conventional Web
  • Social Networking Tracking
  • Mobile Delivery

The issue isn't having all 3 of these, I think that most retailers now have that, or are aiming to.  But how you connect them.  Users with web access want what they look at to seamless sync with their phones, you want users to interact with Social Networks from your web and mobile properties and be able to easily track what they're doing and you want your apps to maximize your penetration into geographies and markets, and, ideally have a location component.

At the moment, only Viafo have a simple solution for this, in my next post I'll aim to talk about that more too.

Mobile, Retail and Brand Presence

We had a meeting with a potential customer today where the topic was a retail application.

We certainly see that there are great retail uses for Viafo's technology in that sector but a lot of interesting questions came up as part of the discussion.

The core of the discussion was what are the uses for mobile apps for retail brands?

It was particularly interesting to have the discussion with somebody who has been given responsibility for mobile, but fully admitted to never having downloaded an application, not used Twitter, never heard of Foursquare and only occasionally had a look at Facebook.

When you're in the heart of the mobile and web business you tend to get an extremely blinkered view of the technologies in play.  We see this more often in discussions with customers about the iPhone - I'll blog on that another time.

So the interesting thing to come out of this discussion is what do you offer to somebody who at a fundamental level is having to design a service for people unlike themselves?

Now, I don't see this as too much of a challenge, even accepting that the concept of brand mobilization is quite new, there are several pretty universal marketing issues you should be addressing without even dealing with the thorny issue of whether or not you want your mobile app to be used for purchase.

Tackling that for a moment: do you want people to be able to buy with your mobile app?  I'd suggest it depends on your business - the data is sparse at the moment but I'm guessing we'll see a split around impulse and small purchases (movie tickets, drinks, vouchers) versus large items (clothing, cars, electronics) - that might be my age showing but I can't see myself spending any real time on the phone buying some shoes - to be fair, I don't do all that much on the PC either.

Anyway, that's also another entire post.

Where I really see mobile and retail coming into their own is in driving traffic and mind-share - not just to your bricks and mortar store but to the web side too.

So, what does that mean in practice?

Firstly, integrated Social Networking - and this isn’t just about having Twitter or Facebook or Foursquare hooks into your mobile app, but also having those cross-linked into your web and general social networking strategy.  If you're a retailer this means having a global AND local strategy - who Tweets for your brand?  Do you stores have individual or managed online identities?  How do you control your brand in there?  It's a powerful thing to have "From the XXX App" on Twitter, less so if it's somebody mouthing off.

Secondly, manage your Social Networking - true story - I recently had an issue with Qwest over our Internet Connection.  The helpdesk had been a time wasting joke.  I tweeted about my experience and had an @message from a Qwest Rep who fixed the problem - THAT is brand management.  If you want help with that, we can hook you up.

Thirdly, location, location, location - manage and make use of search - build location services into apps.  Drive physical traffic.  Make use of Foursquare - I don't myself but millions do and if you're offering freebies to the Mayor of somewhere, it's worthwhile being ready for that.

Fourth: Brochureware - see how far this is down the list?  It's actually not the thing that makes things sticky - it's a by product of doing the rest of the app right.  Make sure that these are cross-linked back to your website and to your prospects web accounts.  Let them share information.  They find a Widget they like online at work - make sure they can have that image on their phone when they use the app to find the store.

That way they can use their Foursquare "Mayor" discount and Tweet about how you rock.

Obviously, I'm blowing our horn, because this is the area that we designed Viafo to operate in.  However, regardless of who or how you do it, an integrated mobile, web, store strategy is a must for retail and brands - regardless of who you get to do the work.