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#1NWebinar
Marketing in a Post-Mobile World
20 July 2015
2 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Welcome
Kalev Peekna
Managing Director, Strategy
Kalev and his team design digital marketing strategies and
interactive experiences for complex, relationship-based
organizations. His team works with clients on channel strategies,
user research, brand alignment, content strategy, information
architecture and the user-experience of professional websites and
other interactive properties.
3 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Today
•  Review of current data on mobile as a marketing platform
•  Three phases of mobile strategy
–  Phase 1: The Squeeze
–  Phase 2: The Mobile Moment
–  Phase 3: Post-Mobile
It’s a mobile, mobile
world after all.
In Eight Short Years…
Sources: NY Daily News, CNN
From 1995 to 2014: Internet Usage
6 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
61%
0%
12%
22%
5%
1995: 35M+ Users
10%
23%
28%
19%
21%
2014: 2.8B+ Users
USA
China
Asia (ex. China)
Europe
Rest of World
Source: Mary Meeker, Internet Trends
2015 – Code Conference
kpcb.com/InternetTrends
From 1995 to 2014: Mobile Usage
7 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
100%
0%
1995: 80M+
Users
60%
40%
2014: 5.2B+ Users
Feature Phone
Smartphone
Source: Mary Meeker, Internet Trends
2015 – Code Conference
kpcb.com/InternetTrends
Mobile now reaches
73% of the world’s
population.
8 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Mobile is Now Our Favorite Screen
2.2
2.3
2.4 2.6 2.5 2.3 2.4 2.4
0.3
0.3
0.4
0.8
1.6
2.3
2.6
2.8
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 YTD
Hoursperday
Time spent per day with digital media, USA Adults
Mobile
Desktop
Other
Source: Mary Meeker, Internet Trends 2015 – Code Conference
kpcb.com/InternetTrends
51% of
Total
And as mobile grows,
we have better data
about it’s used.
10 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Google Mobile Planet
Google Mobile Planet is an
interactive data resource that
allows you to create custom
charts based on their
research.
You can also download the
full data set and crunch the
numbers directly.
11 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Google Mobile Planet
Selecting specific dimensions
reveals interesting trends that are
hard to see in the larger data set.
In this example, you can see:
•  Regardless of age, a strong
majority find mobile web use as
easy as it is on other media.
•  Younger people are more
emotionally attached, and less
likely to consider giving up
their mobile device.
12 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
comScore Mobile Metrix
comScore offers regular free
reports on general trends in
mobile and internet usage.
A paid option includes direct
comparison of your mobile
sites against direct
competitors, as well as more
granular demographics.
13 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
comScore Mobile Metrix
comScore’s data includes information on how device preferences change
according to the time of day, as well as the specific task or activity.
What all this data means
15 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Mobile Continues to Rise in Influence
Nearly every available data point confirms that:
•  More people have mobile devices.
•  People use mobile more often, for more
reasons.
•  People depend on mobile to conduct
business.
•  People expect mobile interactions to “just
work.”
•  Trends march upwards across all measured
dimensions and user groups.
So what does
mobile dominance mean for
mobile strategy?
17 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Three Phases of Mobile Strategy
Since the rise of smartphones in 2007, the pursuit of an
effective mobile strategy can be tracked across three phases:
1: The Squeeze 2: Mobile Moments 3: Post-Mobile
Building out the operational
basics of a mobile presence.
•  Responsive Design
•  Performance
•  SEO
Refining the mobile experience to
fit specific needs and contexts.
•  Location awareness
•  Time awareness
•  Use-case specificity
•  Micro-interactions
(Wait for it….)
2008 2014 2020
Phase 1: The Squeeze
18 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
19 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Phase 1: The Squeeze
The first phase of mobile strategy started in 2007
with the rise of the iPhone and Android platforms.
Mobile Strategy at this point focused primarily on
the operational aspects of a decent mobile
experience:
•  Responsive Design
•  Performance
•  SEO AKA, the “how do I fit all
my stuff on this small
screen” strategy.
20 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Core Design Strategy: Responsive Design
“Responsive Design” arrived late to the scene in 2010.* Before that, the two
main options were a dedicated mobile site or a platform app:
* “Responsive Design”, A List Apart, 25 May 2010 • http://alistapart.com/article/responsive-web-design
Mobile Site
•  Separate from main site
•  Dedicated, but limited
functionality
•  Fragmented experience
•  Dual content maintenance
Platform App
•  Enhanced functionality
•  High “cool” factor
•  Restricted to specific
platforms (iOS or Android)
•  Frequent updates required
•  Low engagement
Responsive Design
•  All users, all devices
•  Consistent experience
•  Future-proofed
•  Standards-aligned
•  Reduced maintenance
21 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Responsive Design: Last Man Standing
The debate over design approaches is now over. Responsive Design is
currently the only choice for websites that are primarily driven by content:
22 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Performance Matters
Brad Frost is right. Your visitors care that
your site operates and performs well,
regardless of the device they use.
Responsive Design solves the first part
(operation) but it by no means guarantees
the second part (performance).
Mobile Strategy means paying attention to
speed as a critical aspect of the user’s
overall experience.
“Your visitors don’t give a s*** if your site is responsive” — Brad Frost
How long you have until you begin to lose
your first visitors1 sec
of observed users will abandon a page if it
takes longer than 3 seconds to load40%
of users said they might leave a site if it
took longer than 4 seconds to load75%
Sources: http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2014/07/22/responsive-web-design-should-not-be-your-only-mobile-strategy
https://blog.kissmetrics.com/loading-time/ /
23 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Measuring Performance
Responsive Design isn’t the solution to performance, but it
also isn’t the problem. Proper code, content, and design all
a play a role in reducing unnecessary complexity.
There are many tools that help measure how your site
performs:
Google PageSpeed Insights Web Page Test Pingdom
24 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Mobilegeddon: Mobile SEO Becomes a Thing
On 21 April 2015, Google released a major update to its core engine
intended to improve search for mobile users. Here’s the essence of what
many started calling “Mobilegeddon”:
•  For mobile users only, Google started
prioritizing “mobile friendly sites” in
its search results.
•  Sites that were not “mobile friendly”
started to appear lower in results
from mobile devices.
25 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Mobile SEO is Real
Less than two weeks later (5 May 2015), Google
revealed that mobile devices now generated more
searches than desktops in the US and Japan.
According to ADI’s estimate, sites that were non-
mobile-friendly sites have suffered almost a 10%
drop in traffic since 21 April 2015. Techniques like
paid search (adwords) stanched the bleeding for
some, but are increasingly ineffective.
Sources: http://adwords.blogspot.com/2015/05/building-for-next-moment.html
http://www.cmo.com/articles/2015/7/10/adi-mobilegeddon.html
https://developers.google.com/webmasters/mobile-sites/get-started/
26 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
How to Be “Mobile Friendly”
Google provides extensive guidance and tools
on how to ensure that a site is mobile friendly.
Here are some highlights:
•  Responsive design or dedicated mobile site
•  Proper URL redirects (not needed for
responsive design)
•  Readable and touch-friendly
•  Avoiding Flash, blocked Javascript and
other 3rd party software
•  High performance (i.e. fast)https://developers.google.com/webmasters/mobile-sites/get-started/
27 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Not Caught Up? Don’t Panic.
If you fear that your website does not
yet live up to these standards, you are
not alone.
Good News: these standards are now
well recognized and well understood.
Bad News?: like all best practices,
these mobile “strategies” can no longer
offer innovation or differentiation. They
are table stakes.
Source: http://marketingland.com/82-sites-use-responsive-web-design-2015-try-11-8-114050
According to Google:
82% of surveyed web owners
are pursuing responsive design.
According to Akamai:
18.7% of the top 1000
websites are currently responsive
11.8% of the top 100 websites
are currently responsive
Phase 2: Mobile Moments
29 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
The Mobile Moment
The first phase is (ironically) not very strategic in its attitude
to mobile. It’s fundamentally about enabling what you
already do.
The next phase approaches mobile not as a device or
channel, but as a context with its own unique
opportunities.
Schadler, Bernoff and Ask of Forrester Research call the
focus of their new strategy the Mobile Moment:
A mobile moment is a point in time and space when someone
pulls out a mobile device to get what he or she wants
immediately, in context.
Schadler, Ted; Bernoff, Josh; Ask, Julie (2014).
The Mobile Mind Shift: Engineer Your Business To Win in
the Mobile Moment
30 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
What’s Different about the Mobile Moment
Mobile essentially expanded the how, when, and
where of of our digital interactions. The Mobile
Moment therefore asks you to change the default
order of your thinking. Instead of asking how to
get your stuff in front of the user, it asks you to
think deeply about what the user is doing before
you interact.
In other words, the Mobile Moment is all about
context-sensitivity.
Customer
Device
Platform
Firm
START HERE!
A valid context for mobile strategy is any aspect of the user’s mindset or world that
impacts what they are trying to accomplish and how they want to interact.
The key is to develop a full understanding of these contexts for mobile, and let that
drive your plan for platforms, content, and design.
31 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
What Kinds of Contexts are Relevant to B2B?
Date/Time
• Before/during/after
work
• Weekends
• Quarter or year-
end
Location
• Country or market
• Language
• Home
• Office
• Traveling
• Commuting
Activity
• Keeping up to date
• Reviewing
• Researching
• Writing / producing
• Communicating
Relationships
• Company
• Business network
• Industry
• Social groups
What does a
Mobile Moment look like?
33 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Transforming Creepy into Useful
•  Let you know exactly when to leave for
the airport, based on traffic & flight status
•  Point out nearby restaurants – just as it
gets to be dinner time
•  Point out local events & activities during
leisure times
•  Give you sports scores – if you’re into
watching grownups play for a living
•  Notify you when your favorite show or
podcast has new shows to watch
•  Suggest news, articles, recipes – or
really any other kind of content
•  Remind you of tasks and meetings
•  Tell you the weather of where you are,
and where you will be
It is a truth universally acknowledged that Google knows basically everything about all of us.
-- How Pride & Prejudice would have started if written in 2015
Google Now’s stated goal is to deliver “the right information at just the right time.”
Without the user entering a single keyword, Google Now can:
34 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Google Now Makes a Virtue of Total Knowledge
35 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
World’s Least Interesting Bank Nails Mobile
Even throughout the financial crisis, USAA was known as a
reliable, safe bank focused on serving a specific community.
It’s never been a risk-taker.
It also has one of the most advanced mobile apps in retail banking:
•  Deposits
•  Balance checks
•  Transfers
•  Bill pay
•  Peer-to-peer pay
•  ATM Finder
•  Roadside
assistance
•  Rental car locator
•  Accident checklist
•  Claims
submission
•  Loan calculator
•  Face recognition
•  Voice recognition
•  Natural language
commands
What does it take to create a
Mobile Moment?
37 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Adopting a Design-Oriented Strategy
Schadler, Bernoff and Ask recommend a four-step
process for defining and pursuing your mobile
strategy called “IDEA”.
Identify and understand mobile context
Design the mobile engagement
Engineer the platforms, processes & people
Analyze the results
Look familiar? It should. These are the basic steps
in any good user-centric design process.
38 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Mobile Moments Must Be Designed
The core of the Mobile Moment strategy is about relevance,
refinement, and engagement. Design-oriented strategy is
uniquely equipped to attain these goals through:
•  Context-sensitivity
•  Gestures (physical interaction)
•  Animations
•  Transitions
•  Visual & emotional feedback
In other words, design is the key to providing unique value
that can’t be delivered on any other kind of platform.
39 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
What is Really the Mobile Moment Shift?
You can think of this new phase in mobile strategy as a shift from platforms to
design:
If there’s any flaw to this new phase of mobile strategy, it’s the emphasis on
moments and details. “Micro-interactions” are inspiring and effective, but they can
easily become fragmented and disconnected.
1: The Squeeze 2: Mobile Moments 3: Post-Mobile
Building out the operational
basics of a mobile presence.
PLATFORMS
Refining the mobile experience to
fit specific needs and contexts.
DESIGN
What’s left?
2008 2014 2020
Phase 3: Post-Mobile
But First:
Dialing it Back to 1996
42 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Remember When the Internet was a Thing?
Barely 20 years ago, the Internet was a business topic in
and of itself. It was new. It was exciting. It was changing
everything.
It become a new way to solve problems:
“I know! I can use the INTERNET to do X!”
“Did you know you can find X on the INTERNET now?”
“Can you teach me how to INTERNET stuff?”
“I really like to spend time on the INTERNET.”
43 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Evidence of Epic Basicness
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A81IwlDeV6c
44 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Even Betty White Knows How to Internet
Why don’t we “internet” any more?
Because we are internetting all the
time. Everywhere. All Day.
It’s not that the Internet stopped to exist or
became something else. Its pervasiveness
simply makes it silly to talk about “as a thing.”
45 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
We are Fast Becoming Post-Mobile
All the data and trends we’ve reviewed
point to the same fate for mobile.
Ask yourself, when did you last say:
“I know! I’ll use my phone to do X.”
“Did you know you can do X on a
phone now?”
“I’m going to go on my phone for a
couple hours.”
From a late 2013 survey of senior (Director &
above) buyers of consulting services:
•  100%+ had a smartphone and 2 or
more laptops/desktops they used
daily
•  80%+ also had a tablet
•  Average user switched devices 5 to
7 times during the day
•  None thought of themselves as
“technically advanced.”
Thanks for Waiting
47 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Phase 3: Post-Mobile is about Continuity
In a world where mobile is so pervasive that we stop
noticing its specialness, mobile strategy moves beyond
the “moment.”
Mobile will be about Continuity:
q  Connecting interactions with all other online and
offline activities
q  Actions starting on one device, completed on another
q  Experience so seamlessly aligned that we no longer
have to think about devices
48 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Bonobos – Making Swagger Happen
Bonobos is a natively digital men’s clothier that understands how to align all online
and offline actions. It also got me to the ball on time:
Browse Decide to Purchase Complete
Call because I
screwed up
49 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Kindle & Audible
The real magic behind the Kindle or Audible experience is not just that you can
access the content on almost any kind of device, but that switching devices is
completely seamless.
50 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Apple Handoff
Apple has gone farther than anyone else to
ensure continuity. Its “Handoff” feature
allows easy switching of not just content,
but of complex and in-depth actions:
Phone & SMS – answer on any device.
Switch devices.
Email – start draft and finish on another
device (with no “save”)
Documents – edit and always pick up
where you left off
Web – see & change to any open tab on
any device
51 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
What It Will Take: Laying the Foundation
It’s too early to delineate the “best practices” of a mobile strategy that
focuses on Continuity. But we can observe how forward-thinking
organizations are creating the necessary infrastructure:
UX & Strategy
Brand & Design
Technology & Platforms
52 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
UX & Strategy: Ethnographic Focus
For a mobile strategy focused on Continuity you need an understanding of your
users beyond “what they want.” To get it, B2B corporations are turning more often
to “ethnographic research.”
Unlike other kinds of market research, ethnographic research is relevant even (or
especially) when your business has a limited number of buyers.
Ethnographic User Research:
•  Is open ended & holistic
•  Is embedded in their world (not yours)
•  Explores default habits & preferences
•  Focuses on flow and process (how)
•  Searches for friction
•  Does not ask what people want
New products & ideas
Differentiation
Opportunities to delight
Priorities
Reductions in complexity
53 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Brand & Design: From Looks to Experience
Leading companies are shifting the
attention of their brand & visual design
from “how things look” to “how things
feel.”
Visuals and copy remain critical. But
now design is defined and
contextualized in terms of the
experience it creates.
That focus helps designers understand
how to address different contexts
flexibly, while still maintaining brand
consistency.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/gel
https://www.google.com/design/articles/expressing-brand-in-material/
54 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Technology: Connected Ecosystems
The magic of the Bonobos, Kindle, Apple, and
Google experiences is possible because no
matter where you come from, they know who
you are.
Most B2B companies have lots of information
about their users, but it’s rarely connected in
the right way.
To achieve the same experience, B2B and
professional services companies will have to
create data ecosystems that are both
connected and user-centric.
User
Web
Research
Email
Finance
Social
Events
Training
Work
Product
Final Thoughts
56 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
Where is This All Heading?
You can think of the final phase in mobile strategy as a shift from design to overall
experience:
1: The Squeeze 2: Mobile Moments 3: Continuity
Building out the operational
basics of a mobile presence.
PLATFORMS
Refining the mobile experience to
fit specific needs and contexts.
DESIGN
2008 2014 2020
Connecting mobile into an overall
brand experience.
EXPERIENCE
57 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
What Does It All Mean?
The progress of mobile strategy leads to one overarching
conclusion:
MOBILE = DIGITAL = STRATEGY
In the not far future, you will stop talking about mobile strategy.
But it won’t disappear. Instead, you will be talking about
marketing and business strategy, with the assumption that it
can all be delivered through digital, and that means mobile
as well.
Questions?
#1NWebinar
Marketing in a Post-Mobile World
20 July 2015

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Mobile_Webinar_20150720

  • 1. #1NWebinar Marketing in a Post-Mobile World 20 July 2015
  • 2. 2 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Welcome Kalev Peekna Managing Director, Strategy Kalev and his team design digital marketing strategies and interactive experiences for complex, relationship-based organizations. His team works with clients on channel strategies, user research, brand alignment, content strategy, information architecture and the user-experience of professional websites and other interactive properties.
  • 3. 3 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Today •  Review of current data on mobile as a marketing platform •  Three phases of mobile strategy –  Phase 1: The Squeeze –  Phase 2: The Mobile Moment –  Phase 3: Post-Mobile
  • 4. It’s a mobile, mobile world after all.
  • 5. In Eight Short Years… Sources: NY Daily News, CNN
  • 6. From 1995 to 2014: Internet Usage 6 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth 61% 0% 12% 22% 5% 1995: 35M+ Users 10% 23% 28% 19% 21% 2014: 2.8B+ Users USA China Asia (ex. China) Europe Rest of World Source: Mary Meeker, Internet Trends 2015 – Code Conference kpcb.com/InternetTrends
  • 7. From 1995 to 2014: Mobile Usage 7 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth 100% 0% 1995: 80M+ Users 60% 40% 2014: 5.2B+ Users Feature Phone Smartphone Source: Mary Meeker, Internet Trends 2015 – Code Conference kpcb.com/InternetTrends Mobile now reaches 73% of the world’s population.
  • 8. 8 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Mobile is Now Our Favorite Screen 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.6 2.5 2.3 2.4 2.4 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.8 1.6 2.3 2.6 2.8 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 YTD Hoursperday Time spent per day with digital media, USA Adults Mobile Desktop Other Source: Mary Meeker, Internet Trends 2015 – Code Conference kpcb.com/InternetTrends 51% of Total
  • 9. And as mobile grows, we have better data about it’s used.
  • 10. 10 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Google Mobile Planet Google Mobile Planet is an interactive data resource that allows you to create custom charts based on their research. You can also download the full data set and crunch the numbers directly.
  • 11. 11 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Google Mobile Planet Selecting specific dimensions reveals interesting trends that are hard to see in the larger data set. In this example, you can see: •  Regardless of age, a strong majority find mobile web use as easy as it is on other media. •  Younger people are more emotionally attached, and less likely to consider giving up their mobile device.
  • 12. 12 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth comScore Mobile Metrix comScore offers regular free reports on general trends in mobile and internet usage. A paid option includes direct comparison of your mobile sites against direct competitors, as well as more granular demographics.
  • 13. 13 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth comScore Mobile Metrix comScore’s data includes information on how device preferences change according to the time of day, as well as the specific task or activity.
  • 14. What all this data means
  • 15. 15 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Mobile Continues to Rise in Influence Nearly every available data point confirms that: •  More people have mobile devices. •  People use mobile more often, for more reasons. •  People depend on mobile to conduct business. •  People expect mobile interactions to “just work.” •  Trends march upwards across all measured dimensions and user groups.
  • 16. So what does mobile dominance mean for mobile strategy?
  • 17. 17 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Three Phases of Mobile Strategy Since the rise of smartphones in 2007, the pursuit of an effective mobile strategy can be tracked across three phases: 1: The Squeeze 2: Mobile Moments 3: Post-Mobile Building out the operational basics of a mobile presence. •  Responsive Design •  Performance •  SEO Refining the mobile experience to fit specific needs and contexts. •  Location awareness •  Time awareness •  Use-case specificity •  Micro-interactions (Wait for it….) 2008 2014 2020
  • 18. Phase 1: The Squeeze 18 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth
  • 19. 19 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Phase 1: The Squeeze The first phase of mobile strategy started in 2007 with the rise of the iPhone and Android platforms. Mobile Strategy at this point focused primarily on the operational aspects of a decent mobile experience: •  Responsive Design •  Performance •  SEO AKA, the “how do I fit all my stuff on this small screen” strategy.
  • 20. 20 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Core Design Strategy: Responsive Design “Responsive Design” arrived late to the scene in 2010.* Before that, the two main options were a dedicated mobile site or a platform app: * “Responsive Design”, A List Apart, 25 May 2010 • http://alistapart.com/article/responsive-web-design Mobile Site •  Separate from main site •  Dedicated, but limited functionality •  Fragmented experience •  Dual content maintenance Platform App •  Enhanced functionality •  High “cool” factor •  Restricted to specific platforms (iOS or Android) •  Frequent updates required •  Low engagement Responsive Design •  All users, all devices •  Consistent experience •  Future-proofed •  Standards-aligned •  Reduced maintenance
  • 21. 21 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Responsive Design: Last Man Standing The debate over design approaches is now over. Responsive Design is currently the only choice for websites that are primarily driven by content:
  • 22. 22 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Performance Matters Brad Frost is right. Your visitors care that your site operates and performs well, regardless of the device they use. Responsive Design solves the first part (operation) but it by no means guarantees the second part (performance). Mobile Strategy means paying attention to speed as a critical aspect of the user’s overall experience. “Your visitors don’t give a s*** if your site is responsive” — Brad Frost How long you have until you begin to lose your first visitors1 sec of observed users will abandon a page if it takes longer than 3 seconds to load40% of users said they might leave a site if it took longer than 4 seconds to load75% Sources: http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2014/07/22/responsive-web-design-should-not-be-your-only-mobile-strategy https://blog.kissmetrics.com/loading-time/ /
  • 23. 23 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Measuring Performance Responsive Design isn’t the solution to performance, but it also isn’t the problem. Proper code, content, and design all a play a role in reducing unnecessary complexity. There are many tools that help measure how your site performs: Google PageSpeed Insights Web Page Test Pingdom
  • 24. 24 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Mobilegeddon: Mobile SEO Becomes a Thing On 21 April 2015, Google released a major update to its core engine intended to improve search for mobile users. Here’s the essence of what many started calling “Mobilegeddon”: •  For mobile users only, Google started prioritizing “mobile friendly sites” in its search results. •  Sites that were not “mobile friendly” started to appear lower in results from mobile devices.
  • 25. 25 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Mobile SEO is Real Less than two weeks later (5 May 2015), Google revealed that mobile devices now generated more searches than desktops in the US and Japan. According to ADI’s estimate, sites that were non- mobile-friendly sites have suffered almost a 10% drop in traffic since 21 April 2015. Techniques like paid search (adwords) stanched the bleeding for some, but are increasingly ineffective. Sources: http://adwords.blogspot.com/2015/05/building-for-next-moment.html http://www.cmo.com/articles/2015/7/10/adi-mobilegeddon.html https://developers.google.com/webmasters/mobile-sites/get-started/
  • 26. 26 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth How to Be “Mobile Friendly” Google provides extensive guidance and tools on how to ensure that a site is mobile friendly. Here are some highlights: •  Responsive design or dedicated mobile site •  Proper URL redirects (not needed for responsive design) •  Readable and touch-friendly •  Avoiding Flash, blocked Javascript and other 3rd party software •  High performance (i.e. fast)https://developers.google.com/webmasters/mobile-sites/get-started/
  • 27. 27 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Not Caught Up? Don’t Panic. If you fear that your website does not yet live up to these standards, you are not alone. Good News: these standards are now well recognized and well understood. Bad News?: like all best practices, these mobile “strategies” can no longer offer innovation or differentiation. They are table stakes. Source: http://marketingland.com/82-sites-use-responsive-web-design-2015-try-11-8-114050 According to Google: 82% of surveyed web owners are pursuing responsive design. According to Akamai: 18.7% of the top 1000 websites are currently responsive 11.8% of the top 100 websites are currently responsive
  • 28. Phase 2: Mobile Moments
  • 29. 29 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth The Mobile Moment The first phase is (ironically) not very strategic in its attitude to mobile. It’s fundamentally about enabling what you already do. The next phase approaches mobile not as a device or channel, but as a context with its own unique opportunities. Schadler, Bernoff and Ask of Forrester Research call the focus of their new strategy the Mobile Moment: A mobile moment is a point in time and space when someone pulls out a mobile device to get what he or she wants immediately, in context. Schadler, Ted; Bernoff, Josh; Ask, Julie (2014). The Mobile Mind Shift: Engineer Your Business To Win in the Mobile Moment
  • 30. 30 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth What’s Different about the Mobile Moment Mobile essentially expanded the how, when, and where of of our digital interactions. The Mobile Moment therefore asks you to change the default order of your thinking. Instead of asking how to get your stuff in front of the user, it asks you to think deeply about what the user is doing before you interact. In other words, the Mobile Moment is all about context-sensitivity. Customer Device Platform Firm START HERE!
  • 31. A valid context for mobile strategy is any aspect of the user’s mindset or world that impacts what they are trying to accomplish and how they want to interact. The key is to develop a full understanding of these contexts for mobile, and let that drive your plan for platforms, content, and design. 31 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth What Kinds of Contexts are Relevant to B2B? Date/Time • Before/during/after work • Weekends • Quarter or year- end Location • Country or market • Language • Home • Office • Traveling • Commuting Activity • Keeping up to date • Reviewing • Researching • Writing / producing • Communicating Relationships • Company • Business network • Industry • Social groups
  • 32. What does a Mobile Moment look like?
  • 33. 33 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Transforming Creepy into Useful •  Let you know exactly when to leave for the airport, based on traffic & flight status •  Point out nearby restaurants – just as it gets to be dinner time •  Point out local events & activities during leisure times •  Give you sports scores – if you’re into watching grownups play for a living •  Notify you when your favorite show or podcast has new shows to watch •  Suggest news, articles, recipes – or really any other kind of content •  Remind you of tasks and meetings •  Tell you the weather of where you are, and where you will be It is a truth universally acknowledged that Google knows basically everything about all of us. -- How Pride & Prejudice would have started if written in 2015 Google Now’s stated goal is to deliver “the right information at just the right time.” Without the user entering a single keyword, Google Now can:
  • 34. 34 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Google Now Makes a Virtue of Total Knowledge
  • 35. 35 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth World’s Least Interesting Bank Nails Mobile Even throughout the financial crisis, USAA was known as a reliable, safe bank focused on serving a specific community. It’s never been a risk-taker. It also has one of the most advanced mobile apps in retail banking: •  Deposits •  Balance checks •  Transfers •  Bill pay •  Peer-to-peer pay •  ATM Finder •  Roadside assistance •  Rental car locator •  Accident checklist •  Claims submission •  Loan calculator •  Face recognition •  Voice recognition •  Natural language commands
  • 36. What does it take to create a Mobile Moment?
  • 37. 37 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Adopting a Design-Oriented Strategy Schadler, Bernoff and Ask recommend a four-step process for defining and pursuing your mobile strategy called “IDEA”. Identify and understand mobile context Design the mobile engagement Engineer the platforms, processes & people Analyze the results Look familiar? It should. These are the basic steps in any good user-centric design process.
  • 38. 38 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Mobile Moments Must Be Designed The core of the Mobile Moment strategy is about relevance, refinement, and engagement. Design-oriented strategy is uniquely equipped to attain these goals through: •  Context-sensitivity •  Gestures (physical interaction) •  Animations •  Transitions •  Visual & emotional feedback In other words, design is the key to providing unique value that can’t be delivered on any other kind of platform.
  • 39. 39 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth What is Really the Mobile Moment Shift? You can think of this new phase in mobile strategy as a shift from platforms to design: If there’s any flaw to this new phase of mobile strategy, it’s the emphasis on moments and details. “Micro-interactions” are inspiring and effective, but they can easily become fragmented and disconnected. 1: The Squeeze 2: Mobile Moments 3: Post-Mobile Building out the operational basics of a mobile presence. PLATFORMS Refining the mobile experience to fit specific needs and contexts. DESIGN What’s left? 2008 2014 2020
  • 41. But First: Dialing it Back to 1996
  • 42. 42 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Remember When the Internet was a Thing? Barely 20 years ago, the Internet was a business topic in and of itself. It was new. It was exciting. It was changing everything. It become a new way to solve problems: “I know! I can use the INTERNET to do X!” “Did you know you can find X on the INTERNET now?” “Can you teach me how to INTERNET stuff?” “I really like to spend time on the INTERNET.”
  • 43. 43 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Evidence of Epic Basicness https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A81IwlDeV6c
  • 44. 44 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Even Betty White Knows How to Internet Why don’t we “internet” any more? Because we are internetting all the time. Everywhere. All Day. It’s not that the Internet stopped to exist or became something else. Its pervasiveness simply makes it silly to talk about “as a thing.”
  • 45. 45 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth We are Fast Becoming Post-Mobile All the data and trends we’ve reviewed point to the same fate for mobile. Ask yourself, when did you last say: “I know! I’ll use my phone to do X.” “Did you know you can do X on a phone now?” “I’m going to go on my phone for a couple hours.” From a late 2013 survey of senior (Director & above) buyers of consulting services: •  100%+ had a smartphone and 2 or more laptops/desktops they used daily •  80%+ also had a tablet •  Average user switched devices 5 to 7 times during the day •  None thought of themselves as “technically advanced.”
  • 47. 47 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Phase 3: Post-Mobile is about Continuity In a world where mobile is so pervasive that we stop noticing its specialness, mobile strategy moves beyond the “moment.” Mobile will be about Continuity: q  Connecting interactions with all other online and offline activities q  Actions starting on one device, completed on another q  Experience so seamlessly aligned that we no longer have to think about devices
  • 48. 48 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Bonobos – Making Swagger Happen Bonobos is a natively digital men’s clothier that understands how to align all online and offline actions. It also got me to the ball on time: Browse Decide to Purchase Complete Call because I screwed up
  • 49. 49 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Kindle & Audible The real magic behind the Kindle or Audible experience is not just that you can access the content on almost any kind of device, but that switching devices is completely seamless.
  • 50. 50 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Apple Handoff Apple has gone farther than anyone else to ensure continuity. Its “Handoff” feature allows easy switching of not just content, but of complex and in-depth actions: Phone & SMS – answer on any device. Switch devices. Email – start draft and finish on another device (with no “save”) Documents – edit and always pick up where you left off Web – see & change to any open tab on any device
  • 51. 51 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth What It Will Take: Laying the Foundation It’s too early to delineate the “best practices” of a mobile strategy that focuses on Continuity. But we can observe how forward-thinking organizations are creating the necessary infrastructure: UX & Strategy Brand & Design Technology & Platforms
  • 52. 52 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth UX & Strategy: Ethnographic Focus For a mobile strategy focused on Continuity you need an understanding of your users beyond “what they want.” To get it, B2B corporations are turning more often to “ethnographic research.” Unlike other kinds of market research, ethnographic research is relevant even (or especially) when your business has a limited number of buyers. Ethnographic User Research: •  Is open ended & holistic •  Is embedded in their world (not yours) •  Explores default habits & preferences •  Focuses on flow and process (how) •  Searches for friction •  Does not ask what people want New products & ideas Differentiation Opportunities to delight Priorities Reductions in complexity
  • 53. 53 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Brand & Design: From Looks to Experience Leading companies are shifting the attention of their brand & visual design from “how things look” to “how things feel.” Visuals and copy remain critical. But now design is defined and contextualized in terms of the experience it creates. That focus helps designers understand how to address different contexts flexibly, while still maintaining brand consistency. http://www.bbc.co.uk/gel https://www.google.com/design/articles/expressing-brand-in-material/
  • 54. 54 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Technology: Connected Ecosystems The magic of the Bonobos, Kindle, Apple, and Google experiences is possible because no matter where you come from, they know who you are. Most B2B companies have lots of information about their users, but it’s rarely connected in the right way. To achieve the same experience, B2B and professional services companies will have to create data ecosystems that are both connected and user-centric. User Web Research Email Finance Social Events Training Work Product
  • 56. 56 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth Where is This All Heading? You can think of the final phase in mobile strategy as a shift from design to overall experience: 1: The Squeeze 2: Mobile Moments 3: Continuity Building out the operational basics of a mobile presence. PLATFORMS Refining the mobile experience to fit specific needs and contexts. DESIGN 2008 2014 2020 Connecting mobile into an overall brand experience. EXPERIENCE
  • 57. 57 • #1NWebinar @kpeekna @OneNorth What Does It All Mean? The progress of mobile strategy leads to one overarching conclusion: MOBILE = DIGITAL = STRATEGY In the not far future, you will stop talking about mobile strategy. But it won’t disappear. Instead, you will be talking about marketing and business strategy, with the assumption that it can all be delivered through digital, and that means mobile as well.
  • 59. #1NWebinar Marketing in a Post-Mobile World 20 July 2015