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Whitepaper: Mobile Media Survival Guide
- 2. 2 Mobile Media Survival Guide
PrEAMBLE
In 2010, the entire newspaper industry in the US made the same amount of money
as it had 60 years earlier1.
PRINT AND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING REVENUE
ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION, 1950-2011
PRINT AND NEWSPAPER advertising REVENUE
ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION, 1950-2011
$70,000
Millions of 2011 Dollars
$60,000
$50,000
$40,000
$30,000
$20,000
$10,000
1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Source: Newspaper Assosciation of America, mjperry.blogspot.com
The history of the media industry has always been a narrative of ebbs and flows.
However, it is clear that the destruction of value that the industry is currently facing
is more than an ebb but a reset of who will produce content, when it will be made
available for consumption and where it will be consumed.
Traditional media companies need not lay waste to the effort and investments they
have made to-date. There are some early examples of organizations that have reset
to this new reality.
This whitepaper will look at how the traditional media organization can survive and
in fact thrive by making use of digital tools and distribution techniques to return and
protect value in their organizations.
1
“CARPE DIEM.” : Newspaper Ad Revenues Fall to 60-Yr. Low in 2011. Web. 11 Apr. 2012. <http://mjperry.blogspot.ca/2012/02/
newspaper-ad-revenues-fall-to-50-year.html>.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 3. 3 Mobile Media Survival Guide
Index
Preamble ............................................................................................................. 2
Business transformation in the media industry ..................................................... 4
A fragmented world becomes more fragmented ................................................... 4
What platform should I start with? ....................................................................... 5
Can developing in HTML5 solve all my problems? ................................................. 7
Will native apps ever be obsolete? ....................................................................... 8
What can media publishers do to be future-proof? ............................................... 9
Content for different device sizes and contexts .................................................... 10
Where does the time go? ................................................................................... 11
Winning with digital distribution ............................................................................ 11
Future-proof survival guide .................................................................................. 12
The Final Curtain .............................................................................................. 13
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 4. 4 Mobile Media Survival Guide
Business transformation in the media industry
To frame our discussion, the prevailing model in the media industry is:
Reach Engagement Monetization
That is, a brand must first achieve Reach, a critical mass of users that know and
understand the product, then Engage them over time before they can meaningfully
Monetize their activity.
This paper focuses primarily on Reach. For additional resources, please refer to the
Polar Mobile Resource Centre.
A fragmented world becomes more fragmented
In 2011, for the first time ever, more smartphones and tablets were sold worldwide
than laptop and desktop computers. In 2012, analysts predict that tablet computers
will have the same trajectory of growth and robust sales and every new version of
Apple iPad seem to support this.
This deluge of new devices can make it confusing about where energy should first
be focused to reach the greatest possible audience in the most economical way. At
the same time, broad device support and spectrum of HTML5 capabilities make it
possible to build rich and engaging experiences for consumers right in the mobile
web.
In the end, users want the best possible user experience (which points to a native
app experience) while app producers want the most economical means for delivery
(which points to a web-based experience).
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 5. 5 Mobile Media Survival GuideGlobal Internet Device Sales:
In a Few Years, the Number of Mobile
Devices will Dwarf the Number of PCs
Global Internet Device Sales
3,000
Millions
2,500
Tablet
2,000
We are here
1,500
1,000
Smartphone
500
Personal Computer
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012E 2013E 2014E 2015E 2016E
Sources: gartner, IDC, Strategy Analytics, company filings, BI intelligence estimates
Fortunately, a happy medium exists in “hybrid apps”, which treat the mobile browser
as a first-class component of native applications. This enables user interfaces and
business logic to be implemented with web technologies, while retaining the ability to
seamlessly blend in native-only functionality when required.
This model drives down the cost of ownership of apps both due to the type of
resources required to perform this development and the time-to-market for deploying
new code.
What platform should I start with?
When reach is considered as a precursor to monetization, not all platforms are created
equally. On a global scale, the Apple iPhone continues to claim a disproportionate
amount of the mobile media consumers, both paid and free.
While this user group cannot claim the biggest current install base, the revenue
potential by creating products for the iOS platform proves to be the greatest whether
it is through advertising, or some type of purchase. Additionally, it is more and
more the case that new whole and supporting technologies are built to support iOS
first before other platforms, giving iOS developers a chance to innovate with their
products first.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 6. 6 Mobile Media Survival Guide
August 2011
OS Market Share of OS Market Share of
Audience Installed Base Digital Traffic
15.4%
31.9%
43.1% 58.5%
34.1% 5%
iOS Android BlackBerry Other
Source: comScore, MobiLens
The reason for this disparity is the perceived ease of development on the iOS
platform, compared to others. An adage that holds is that user delight is preceded
by developer delight.
Meanwhile, the Android platform continues to grow at a rapid pace and has achieved
high rates of adoption by selling devices at the lower-end of the smartphone price
spectrum. The flexibility and opportunities to develop compelling products makes
it a formidable platform, but the sheer number of Android devices running a variety
of Android operating systems makes it a challenge for many developers to support.
Platforms like Windows Phone and Research In Motion’s BlackBerry still earn
significant revenue, but do not have strong stakes in the most revenue-rich consumer
markets, or are only very successful in narrow market niches.
Still, we are interested in reaching the greatest portion of our audience, so the best
solution is one that easily allows us to cover as many endpoints as possible with a
branded experience.
NB: It is very important to prioritize support for devices based on the geography and
type of consumer your business is targeting, regardless of the prevailing industry
statistics.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 7. 7 Mobile Media Survival Guide
iOS VERSUS ANDROID PROJECT STARTS
iOS Versus Android Project STarts
18
Android iOS
16
14 27%
25%
12
10
27%
8 37%
6 75% 73%
4 73%
63%
2
Q1 2011 Q2 2011 Q3 2011 Q4E 2011
Source: Flurry Analytics, January-December 2011
Can developing in HTML5 solve all my problems?
Though HTML5, JavaScript and CSS have emerged as browser standards that
make it easier to build big brand-worth products, there are still a number of gaps in
the capabilities of native mobile and web implementations.
The enhanced performance of JavaScript engines (for back-end development) and
the addition of Graphics Processing Unit-driven devices (for richer graphics) have
pushed web applications to new heights. Moreover, HTML5 now enjoys enhanced
access to traditional native structures such as local storage and the GPS. It is clear
that the gap between native and HTML5 has decreased substantially.
Despite these advancements, there are important opportunities that have yet to be
integrated into the standard HTML5 toolset. In particular, native (and hybrid apps)
can support a brand’s reach, engage, and monetization goals through app store
distribution, push notifications, and in-app purchase.
Users have become app store savvy, providing brands a unique avenue to drive
distribution and access highly-engaged audiences. The Apple App Store has driven
over 25 billion downloads in less than 4 years2. Furthermore, some apps that have
taken advantage of the vertically integrated iOS Newsstand have driven upwards of a
14x increase in downloads3. The prevalence of the mobile app store as a mechanism
for reach may be too large to ignore.
“IOS.” Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 04 Oct. 2012. Web. 10 Apr. 2012. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IOS>.
2
3
”Apple Newsstand Already Increasing Sales For Digital Publishers.” - 10,000 Words. Web. 10 Apr. 2012. <http://www.mediabistro.
com/10000words/apple-newsstand-already-increasing-sales-for-digital-publishers_b7809>.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 8. 8 Mobile Media Survival Guide
HTML5 Native
P Local Storage P Local Storage
P Cross-Platform Development P Device Consistent UX
P Leverage technical skills of current P Discovery via App Stores
staff (HTML, CSS, JavaScript) P Push Alerts
P Discovery via Search P In-App Purchase
P Branding and UX Flexibility
O Browser Fragmentation O OS Fragmentation
Native applications provide support and infrastructure that simply isn’t easily available
on the web today. Push notifications are mechanism that facilitates an avenue to
reactivate and retain users.
Finally, it has been said that “If 2010 was the year of the paywall, 2011 was the
year the paywall worked”4. Though web apps have the ability to set paywalls online,
they lack fully integrated user experiences like one-click transactions, which has
proven to be extremely successful in sales conversion. Studies have shown that
Apple’s In-App Purchase drives upwards of 70% of total app revenue5. Additionally,
the paywall provides an opportunity to bring subscriber revenue back to traditional
media businesses.
Due to the fact that the software platforms participate in the financial transactions they
enable, it is highly unlikely that they will make these important experiences available
entirely on the web. A number of third-party platforms have sprung up to simplify
the use of some native services, like Urban Airship, that simplify push, paywall and
subscription services for some developers.
Will native apps ever be obsolete?
Native mobile applications will continue to exist, though the situations they will
be used in will become more limited. There are still cases where the app feature
requirements and budget exist to support a native app build.
Native apps will continue to have an edge in terms of performance because they tap
into on-device services that are not available to the mobile browser and access a
device’s processing power more directly, making richer experiences possible.
“Featured in Social Media.” Mashable. Web. 10 Apr. 2012. <http://mashable.com/2011/12/28/digital-journalism-2011/>.
4
5
”72% of IPhone App Revenue Comes from In-app Purchases.” IntoMobile. Web. 10 Apr. 2012. <http://www.intomobile.
com/2011/09/23/72-iphone-app-revenue-comes-inapp-purchases/>.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 9. 9 Mobile Media Survival Guide
When tablets began reaching mass consumer adoption, there were calls that
prevailing experience would be an extension of the desktop web. In many cases,
this has proven to be true, except for media experiences.
The market reality is that most of the digital media apps available for download are
native or hybrid implementations, for the types of user experience considerations we
have outlined here.
As we have seen, many of the consensus bets placed in recent years have proven
unsuccessful. In light of this, what must a media company do to ensure its investments
are well-placed for future generations of its business?
What can media publishers do to be future-proof?
Most of the media world produces a highly perishable product, which must be
intimately cared for at each stage of its distribution. It is not a stretch to say that the
media business is quite similar to the ice cream business.
In fact, an ice cream maker spends a significant amount of time thinking about what
happens between mixing ingredients and having it consumed by end users.
ice cream and CONTENT DISTRIBUTION
Ingredients Blending Storage Transportation Retail
Content Content Management System API and RSS Outlets
NB: This is a simplified analogy to focus on one aspect of the content ecosystem – after all, this is a
linear process while most content processes are much more intricate and non-linear.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 10. 10 Mobile Media Survival Guide
It could be said that the quiet heroes in the story of ice cream are mixers, storage and
transporters that preserve the product until consumers are ready to enjoy it.
Similarly, effective content distribution requires the same sophisticated care by the
people and technology between content creation and final consumption.
Content for different device sizes and contexts
A well-organized content management system also removes barriers to managing
the different sizes and contexts of content that are hallmarks of this new generation
of content syndication .
After all, you will have all the trouble you need ensuring consistency of presentation
on the multitude of devices themselves.
Mobile content takes on many forms from very small nuggets like mobile alerts all the
way to feature length articles, photo galleries and videos. At the same time, content
that is laid out for magazines can take for granted the relative order and spacing
of other content elements, while digital distribution takes regular advantage of the
interchangeability of content to maximize engagement in live products.
There are regularly cases of mobile websites not optimized for all devices, with
components that fail or are completely unusable. These are the marks of content
systems that are not primed to deliver content distinctly to the devices they purport
to serve.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 11. 11 Mobile Media Survival Guide
Where does the time go?
In an informal study with Polar Mobile’s customers, a startling metric emerged. While
most Publishers agree that what differentiates their content offering is their brand and
unique presentation to end users, only about 20% of the time and resources in the
business is spent focusing on this end.
The remaining 80% of the time is spent on all orders of business related to the content
management system and infrastructure that goes into supporting the distribution of
content.
Now, what if publishers could re-allocate the resources spent on technology back
into the branding and design of their outlet destination. HTML5 promises to simplify
production of end user interfaces, but not
the many ancillary integrations and on-
“ he variable cost in serving
T going support that is required to keep these
each individual reader drops businesses viable.
rapidly to near zero with digital
What publishers need now is not only
distribution, which is a unique
more flexible and robust technology, but
opportunity that could save the
also an opportunity to get more out of
entire media industry.”
their presentation and distribution – the
differentiator to their business (and last
stage in our ice cream analogy). Few tools are prepared to handle the broad tasks
of maintaining the user interfaces and experiences across a broad spectrum of
connected devices like MediaEverywhere™.
Winning with digital distribution
One must remember that when content is syndicated to mobile, there is greater
opportunity to profit as readership grows. The variable cost in serving each reader
drops rapidly to near zero with digital distribution, which is a unique opportunity that
could save the entire media industry.
A number of media businesses are undergoing the business transformation now to
earn more meaningful revenue from their digital business, and many more are sure
to follow.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 12. 12 Mobile Media Survival Guide
Future-proof survival guide
A number of forward-thinking publishers have set the standard in becoming future-
proof in the media business, led by The Guardian newspaper and their staff6. Their
focus on API and RSS feeds early on has made the difference in their ability to put
out new products on brand new platforms and devices at launch.
Here is a short summary of activities to defend
your business in the coming future of device
fragmentation and complexity:
1) ork with platforms that abstract unnecessarily complicated components of
W
your digital media business. These components usually evolve at a rapid rate,
and can take a disproportionate amount of time to manage.
2) uild your API and RSS as strengths to simplify media distribution. You’ll be
B
glad you did when they can easily be leveraged for new digital media opportunities.
3) emember “screens” means more than phone and tablet. Where once there
R
were only a few options to address, there is now an innumerable lot growing daily.
4) ecognize the types and value of different sizes and contexts of content, and
R
plan for them early in the content tagging and storage process.
5) Do your homework. Not every great technology is a great business. It can be
easy to get caught up in the launch of something new, but it takes the right mix
of features and business model to make a profitable product.
6
“How the Guardian’s Custom CMS API Helped Take Content Strategy to a Traditional Publisher.” Currybetdotnet. Web. 10 Apr. 2012.
http://www.currybet.net/cbet_blog/2011/09/csforum11-martin-belam.php.
© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com
- 13. 13 Mobile Media Survival Guide
The Final Curtain
Business transformation in the media industry is an exercise in managed creative
destruction as lucrative long-time business lines rapidly contract. Though this is a
painful process for most publishers, it is also an opportune time to think about where
investments can be made for the next generation of content consumption.
Clear patterns are emerging about consumer behaviours that can be extrapolated
to make the case for increased investment in digital distribution. At a time digital
content can easily be licensed from any number of sources to create a publication,
differentiation through brand and design are important factors in the success of a
reputable media brand.
We would like to hear your feedback.
Please visit our website at www.polarmobile.com for more information.
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© 2012 Polar Mobile, www.polarmobile.com