How to make your content reach more mobile customers
It’s 2012. Do you know where your web-site visitors are?
More to the point, is your web site — and all the content on it — readable to visitors using handhelds and tablets? Couple of years ago, Morgan Stanley wowed the marketing world with some predictions about the way people would be consuming information in the year 2012. They projected this year as the tipping point when sales of handheld devices would exceed desktops and laptops combined. The year when your marketing content, to accomplish its mission, would have to accommodate “the small screen”.
Admittedly, not many long-form whitepapers and case studies are going to be read on an iPhone. But think about it. Chance are you, or someone you know, is reading the latest best-seller on an e-reader, right? Message: if your web site demands that your visitors plunk themselves down at a desk, it’s a site that’s just not working as smart or as hard as your visitors are working today. And sometimes this means working on a tablet, or a smart phone, for a large chunk of the day. Indeed, we described this requirement last year for EndPlay, a web content management (WCM) developer. Sophisticated
consumers demand entirely new levels of site interactivity and customized content. And this demand far outstrips the capabilities of today’s fast-aging and decentralized tools and technology.
So how does this impact your online marketing materials? Generally speaking, to borrow from our colleague Newt Barrett, your customers want to:
- connect and communicate wherever they are, whenever they want
- consume information via the Internet, including e-mail, news, web-based content
- get their social media fix
- consume locally based information from word processing documents, spreadsheets, PDF files, etc.
- write a short e-mail or text messages
- listen to music, watch videos, watch TV or movies
- play a game now and then
With this in mind, to cite Barrett, here’s how to exploit this mobile tipping point:
- Make your website readable on the most important mobile devices: iPhones, Androids, and iPads. Lose Flash. Any flash on your website must assume a secondary role on your home and landing pages today.
- Create an iPhone or an iPad app that leverages these these devices. Think about how the touchscreen might improve visitor interaction with your content.
- Get social with Facebook, Twitter or other applications where your customers will likely be when they’re in a research (or buying) mood. Most people today actively pursue social media opportunities on their handheld devices.
- Don’t make people print something out if they can simply show it on their mobile device.
Your customers are on the move today. Right his minute. Make it easy to connect with them, for them to connect with you. Of course, all of this assumes that you have great content for them to consume. You do, don’t you?