via MillenialMedia
Interesting study from MilleniaMedia.
Some “facts & figures” concerning the focus of mobile application development platform.
Developer & Publisher snapshot
cross-posted on the Innoveo blog
via MillenialMedia
Interesting study from MilleniaMedia.
Some “facts & figures” concerning the focus of mobile application development platform.
cross-posted on the Innoveo blog
via ReadWriteMobile
ReadWriteMobile is publishing an interesting post about the coming and emerging 10 Mobile Trends for 2011 based on a Forrester Research study. Some of them seem to be relevant also for us at Innoveo:
2) 2011 is the Year of the “Dumb” Smartphone User
Smartphones will become more affordable, thanks to handset subsidies. And these new users will be less engaged and active than smartphone early adopters. Forrester expects they’ll download fewer apps on average, but will consume more mobile media thanks to consumer education and convenience provided by the phones.
Despite the fact that these former “dumb phone” users may download fewer apps than early adopters, the overall app forecast is still good. In fact, Gartner also just released a report that stated mobile app store revenue will pass $15 billion in 2011.
3) The Mobile Fragmentation Problem will Continue
Forrester says it expects fragmentation to continue, but it’s not just referring to the multiple variations of a single OS. It means that some customers have smartphones, some have feature phones, some use apps, some use SMS, plus there are multiple OS’s in existence, in multiple versions, with multiple screen sizes and there are a higher number of devices out there. In short: fragmentation. The costs of porting, maintaining and promoting apps will remain high.
4) The “Apps vs. Internet” Debate Will Continue…to be Irrelevant
Says Forrester, it’s not a question of “either/or” when it comes to a choice between apps vs. the mobile Web, but both. Frequent and intense users of services like banking and brokerage will want curated experiences in the form of apps, but the Internet will remain the fallback for more occasional information and needs.
8) Companies will Invest First in Convenient Services for Consumers
Forrester says that mobile product and service professionals, particularly in the travel industry, will invest first to keep their most lucrative customers happy. And in the hierarchy of benefits that mobile offers – revenue generation, cost savings and convenience – convenience will reign during 2011.
10) “Mobile” Will Mean More than Mobile Phones
Consumer adoption of tablets, eReaders, portable media devices and other mobile products has grown in 2010 and this will continue in 2011. Apps and services will need to work across devices and consumers will want ubiquitous access to content and services. This will force service providers to sync content via the cloud to maintain a consistent experience across platforms.
cross-posted on the Innoveo Blog