Social Mobile

Social Media on smartphones and iPhones IS the future. In a report on the homepage of this website the industry predictions are that in two years more people will access the internet on their mobiles than on their PC's. This represents a BIG opportunity for someone at the moment interested in making money as pay per click marketing onto mobiles is so new the coct per click on major keywords are at ridiculous levels. Click this banner to view a very informative video in this regard

 

The early success of Twitter is intrinsically linked to mobile devices, thanks to the ability to send and receive updates via SMS. Likewise, the 140-character nature of Twitter was immediately easy to grasp by users who were already familiar with the limits of standard SMS and MMS messages.

Instant messaging and e-mail were the killer features of the BlackBerry and Sidekick devices of yesteryear. Today, that has evolved into the ability to post to Twitter and Facebook. In the current battle for smartphone supremacy, how well a phone integrates with social networks is a big part of how manufacturers and brands differentiate their devices.

Facebook’s mobile usage is off the charts and a tiny industry was created just around Twitter mobile applications — at least until Twitter started to release its own apps.

We’re entering a phase in social application and network development that doesn’t just treat the mobile web as a consideration, but as a central tenant and requirement.

For The Moment, Email Dominates Mobile Web Time

AUGUST  2010
 

Email, portals stay ahead of social networking—at least on mobile devices

Social networking has become such a staple of online activity in the US that, according to Nielsen, internet users spent more time on social networking sites and blogs than doing any other activity in June 2010. Games, which came in second, took up less than half as much time.

On the mobile internet, however, more traditional activities still reign. Email dominated the mobile picture even more strongly than social networking did the desktop: If all time spent on the mobile web was condensed into a single hour, US internet users would have spent 25 minutes in June checking email. Portals would have received another 7 minutes, with social networks not far behind.

Time Spent* on Mobile Internet Activities by US Internet Users, June 2010 (mins:secs)

Nielsen reported that social networking has been closing the gap in time spent on the mobile internet, gaining share since last year as portals dropped in importance over the same period.

But email remains one of the most popular mobile internet activities not just by time spent but also by penetration. According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 34% of all US mobile subscribers used email on their phone in May 2010, compared with 23% who used a social networking site.

comScore also reported mobile email usage via a browser ahead of social networking. That research found search had the highest penetration of any mobile browsing activity, but search is less time-intensive than email or social sites.

Leading Categories for Mobile Browsing Among US Mobile Subscribers, Mar 2010 (% of total mobile subscribers)

Social should continue to make gains in the mobile realm, however. comScore reported it was the fastest-growing mobile internet activity between 2009 and 2010, rising 80% in usage, while email grew more slowly. Bridge Ratings predicted in June that mobile social networking would grow twice as quickly as email during the next 12 months.

The growing penetration of smartphones will be

a key factor in increased mobile social networking

According to comScore, 53% of smartphone users participated in social networking activities on the go, compared with just 11% of feature phone owners.