Mobile Internet Usage & Attitudes Study

dotMobi and AKQA Mobile announced the results of an extensive consumer study of mobile Internet usage and attitudes.

AKQA Mobile, the mobile division of the global independent creative agency and dotMobi, announced the results of an extensive consumer study of mobile Internet usage and attitudes. Conducted by the AKQA's Research & Insights department in conjunction with dotMobi, the survey reveals key insights into the importance of a better mobile Web for consumers in the U.S. and U.K.

The survey findings indicated a strong consumer desire for practical mobile content on phones. Rather than basic entertainment and ringtones, consumers stated that their most-wanted mobile activities included phone-optimized banking and travel planning.

Further illustrating the desire for utility-focused mobile Web sites, nearly 90 percent of consumer respondents stated that they would be more likely to choose an airline with mobile check-in facilities over one that did not offer them.

Additionally, trust in the mobile Web was inherent throughout the results of the study. In demanding access to mobile banking and mobile commerce abilities for basic utilities such as groceries, plane tickets and books, Consumers said they trust the mobile Web to keep their personal information secure, as opposed to the PC-based Internet, where security remains of utmost importance.

Other results from the mobile Internet usage and attitudes study include:

  • Approximately 90 percent of the 2,000 respondents in the online panel provided by Research Now are interested in learning about the mobile Web, demonstrating a need for brands to make their mobile properties findable via mobile search, marketing and advertising campaigns. Fifty percent of respondents were unaware that there are mobile sites optimized for use on mobile phones and the vast majority - 86 percent of participants - said they were interested in knowing which sites are easily accessible on a mobile phone.
  • Nearly 50 percent of respondents said that a poor experience on their initial use of the mobile Web made them "reluctant to access" either the site - or the Internet in general - on their mobile phones again.
  • Only 2 percent of participants in the survey who have purchased a phone in the past six months chose an iPhone. This indicates that brands that don't optimize their mobile services for a variety of mobile phones will provide a substandard mobile Internet experiences for a vast majority of consumers.
  • Poor site display and layout remain top reasons for mobile Web dissatisfaction among consumers.
  • Almost two-thirds of participants stated that they would consider purchasing theater tickets, take-out food and travel tickets via a mobile phone.
  • Finally, 63 percent of survey respondents said they would be more likely to give up their money than their mobile "smart phone" if they were mugged.

Daniel Rosen, managing director of AKQA Mobile, said, "The enormous popularity of mobile devices has had a profound effect on the lifestyle of the consumer, unleashing new levels of connectivity and personal mobility. When planning campaigns, global brands need to ensure they take into account the role the mobile device can play in helping them engage with customers, and that they create campaigns that have been developed specifically for mobile applications. The survey's findings show how easily consumers were turned off by earlier, ill-conceived mobile campaigns. With mobile devices more ubiquitous, powerful and sophisticated than ever, there is a real opportunity for brands to deliver ground-breaking mobile campaigns that captivate, engage and entertain their customers."

"The results from this research signify the need for a better mobile experience, something that dotMobi is committed to making available to consumers globally," said Amy Mischler, vice president of Identity and Brand Services at dotMobi. "The free services that dotMobi offers - like DeviceAtlas, ready.mobi and the dotMobi Developer Forum - ensure that developers and marketers can give consumers a mobile Web experience that is useful, and complementary to the mobile lifestyle."

"The .mobi domain quickly lets consumers know that a site will work on a mobile phone. It's also the most widely used naming convention among the Nielsen top 10 Web sites, so consumers are learning to 'guess .mobi' when trying to find a site on a mobile phone. They're seeing that they'll have a more positive Internet experience on their mobile phone anytime and anywhere," Mischler said. "And now that more than 1 million .mobi names have been registered, the availability of rich, diverse content for mobile consumers is growing daily."

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thanx!

Well we in WAP land are busy creating .mobi compliant sites but unfortunately the mobile operators seem to ignoring the mobile web completely in many cases as far as offering fixed web or mobile web search results to mobile surfers
using google/ yahoo ?
Reformatted web sites seem to be the preference that a) look awful on a small screen b) don't work in most cases
c) have no mobile billing mechanism should a visitor try to purchase a peice of content that in any case was never designed for delivery to a mobile device.
With mobile operators in the mix who can expect anything like common sense?

Despite all the hype about the iphone the fact is, the vast majority of mobile web users surf on a 'normal' mobile device. xhtml,wap billing, device detection /optimisation , ???? you need all these to provide a good mobile web experience. Not reformatted web pages !

Finally- do mobile operators display/promote reformatted web sites 'on deck' ? NO ! They of couse insist on correctly designed mobile sites that work accross all devices the operator promotes-
However as soon as the surfer goes off deck its another story entirely.The operators have a responsibilty to their subscribers to provide the best mobile web experience they can if they expect their subscribers to use it !

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