SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 26
Baixar para ler offline
How new devices, networks, and
consumer habits will change the web
experience
By Amy Cravens
January 22, 2013




This research was underwritten by Akamai.



        Mobile
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Executive summary ................................................................................................................................... 4

Introduction ............................................................................................................................................... 6

   The challenge........................................................................................................................................ 7

   Poor experiences equal lost sales ......................................................................................................... 8

Factors impacting web experience: Device ............................................................................................... 9

Factors impacting web experience: Browser ........................................................................................... 11

Factors impacting web experience: Network ........................................................................................... 13

   CDN placement ................................................................................................................................... 13

   IPv6 ..................................................................................................................................................... 14

Factors impacting web experience: Web design ..................................................................................... 15

   Page-size bloat ................................................................................................................................... 15

   Native apps vs. web apps.................................................................................................................... 16

Case studies ........................................................................................................................................... 18

   Financial Times ................................................................................................................................... 18

       CHALLENGE ...................................................................................................................................... 18

       PHILOSOPHY ..................................................................................................................................... 18

       MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY .................................................................................................................. 19

       MOBILE STRATEGY ............................................................................................................................ 19

   Wal-Mart ............................................................................................................................................. 21

       CHALLENGE ...................................................................................................................................... 21

       PHILOSOPHY ..................................................................................................................................... 21

       MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY .................................................................................................................. 21

       MOBILE STRATEGY ............................................................................................................................ 22

Meeting the challenge ............................................................................................................................. 24




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                                                                 2
About Amy Cravens ................................................................................................................................ 26

About GigaOM Pro .................................................................................................................................. 26




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                                                       3
Executive summary
Delivering a positive web experience has become exceedingly more complex as the access environment
has shifted from a desktop-centric vision to one that is increasingly focused on mobile devices — and with
potential for other consumer devices in the near future. Website owners must now consider the customer
experience across both desktop and mobile devices and their browsers, a reality that is alarming for many
companies. As the access environment has evolved to include mobile devices in addition to desktop ones,
it has created pain points in delivering a web experience from the network to the device to the browser
and finally to the web design itself. Mobilizing web design is a catch-22; adjusting to design challenges is
costly, but not adjusting is equally costly, because a poor mobile web experience results in a loss of
revenue.

This report will examine what drives content consumption today and illustrate what the changing
consumption of content has meant to the development and delivery of web and mobile content. It will
also examine the evolution of the web experience and explore the challenges of content delivery to both
mobile and desktop devices with a focus on four primary areas: device differences, browser distinctions,
network variations, and application performance. Through case studies, the report will provide detailed
analysis of individual company experiences and next-generation strategies for dealing with these
challenges.

Key issues the report will address include:

       How the multi-device environment has increased the complexity of delivering web content
       How website owners, while struggling to assimilate multiple devices and browsers, are trying to
        maintain a consistent user experience
       How browser fragmentation, a result of the current multitude of browsers, creates an opportunity
        for optimization
       The necessary balance between delivering the best experience for a given device and managing
        overhead costs
       Multiple mobile experiences that incorporate both the mobile web and native apps
       The company’s desired relationship with its customers as an important consideration in
        determining its mobile strategy
       How an innovative multi-device strategy will be disruptive to the status quo




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                  4
   How a quality mobile experience can advance customer relationships and how a poor experience
        can terminate relationships




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                          5
Introduction
The web, and how we experience it, is very different from what it was a decade ago. While the web
experience has become more sophisticated with the heavier incorporation of graphics and multimedia
elements, its performance is faster because of the advancement of networks as well as of content-delivery
and optimization techniques. However, perhaps the single biggest shift in the web experience over the
past decade has been in how we access it. What was delivered just a few years ago over a fixed network to
the desktop is now just as likely to go over a mobile network and be consumed on any number of
connected devices.

Since the iPhone launched, smartphone shipments have skyrocketed. GigaOM Research expects
shipments to have reached 528 million units globally in 2012. Currently 40 percent of adults have a
smartphone; that number will likely reach 70 percent in a few short years. Add to these numbers the
growing tablet market, with an expected 118 million units to have shipped in 2012 (up from just 60
million units in 2011), and the enormity of the mobile web becomes evident. Growth in the smartphone
and tablet markets has caused a significant disruption in the web experience, so those along the web-
delivery chain must rethink and revise their strategies.

Table 1. Global smartphone and tablet shipments in millions, 2010–2012
                                         2010                  2011                          2012
Tablet shipments (in millions)            17                    62                            118
Smartphone shipments (in                 270                   447                           528
millions)
                                                                                      Source: GigaOM Research


Complexities in delivering and managing the web experience extend beyond the growth in mobile.
Companies are also faced with new challenges in the desktop environment, including browser
fragmentation, network evolution, and client-side technologies, so they must invest now to maintain a
quality web experience in the desktop environment as well as to create an optimized experience for the
very distinct mobile market. Otherwise, they risk losing business to competitors who have made this
investment.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                               6
The challenge
Although users access the web in many ways across a wide range of conditions, performance expectations
across these varying situations remain fairly consistent. Variable conditions and static expectations have
created a significant challenge in the delivery of web content.

Sites are using richer media and connecting to other applications like Facebook, Twitter, and analytics
monitoring. Although content is becoming more dynamic and less cacheable, consumers still want it fast.

       Akamai, a provider of internet content-delivery technologies, notes in its August 2012 “State of the
        Internet” report that the global average connection speed is 2.6 Mbps. The report found that
        mobile data traffic, which doubled from the first quarter of 2011 to the first quarter of 2012,
        ranges in average connection speed from 322 Kbps to 6.0 Mbps, a variance that can have a
        significant impact on mobile web performance. Despite the variances in connectivity rates,
        consumers often expect mobile web experiences to emulate, if not improve upon, desktop web
        experiences.
       Tealeaf, an IBM company focused on customer-behavior analysis, found that consumers expect
        mobile transactions to be easier than they are offline (51 percent) or on a desktop computer (50
        percent).
       Gomez, now a division of Compuware, found in 2011 that 71 percent of mobile phone users expect
        websites to load as quickly on their mobile phones as on their desktops, up from 58 percent in
        2009.
       An e.Digital benchmark study found that customers expect the same brand experience and
        product choice they would find on desktop sites and that they also expect the same features.
       Google reported in its “New Multi-Screen World” graphic that 90 percent of consumers begin a
        task on one device (typically a smartphone) and then complete it on another device. Of those
        using multiple devices sequentially, 98 percent move among devices within a given day.
        Smartphones are the most common starting place for online activities, while desktops are the
        most common starting place for more complex activities.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                7
Poor experiences equal lost sales
Businesses cannot afford this inconsistency in customer experience. Consumers expect always-on
connectivity with nearly zero latency on a mobile device as well as on a desktop, an expectation that is
often unmet. Multiple studies link poor mobile and website performance with lost revenue and damaged
brands:

       Wal-Mart has shown a sharp decline in conversion rate as average site-load time increased from
        1 second to 4 seconds.
       Amazon has found that every 100-millisecond improvement in page-load time led to a
        1 percent increase in revenue.
       Torbit, a provider of web analytics, has found that as the seconds it took to load the first page
        increased, so did the bounce rate, with the steepest incline between 2 seconds and 6 seconds (the
        bounce rate increased from 30 percent to 40 percent over that timeframe).
       Research from Econsultancy (2011) shows that out of those consumers who conducted a mobile
        transaction, 83 percent experienced a problem. Of those experiencing a problem, 16 percent
        became more likely to buy from a competitor.
       Gomez found that 60 percent of mobile web users had a problem when accessing a website on
        their phone. Furthermore, if dissatisfied with website performance, more than 40 percent of
        smartphone and tablet users are unlikely to visit the site again and more than 25 percent are less
        likely to purchase from that company across all channels.
       Strangeloop Networks reported in its “2012 State of Mobile Ecommerce Performance” that the
        average load time for DSL was 7.1 seconds compared to 11.5 seconds on an iPhone (over 3G
        connection).
       Mobile commerce-platform provider MoPowered found that 79 percent of respondents felt
        shopping on a mobile device was slow and difficult to navigate and that 30 percent abandoned a
        transaction because the experience was bad.
       Epsilon and the Direct Marketing Association found in research conducted during the first quarter
        of 2012 that while email-open rates had increased since the previous year and the previous
        quarter, click-through rates had declined, likely because emails are abandoned after consumers
        open them on mobile devices and discover the messages are not optimized. Click-through rates
        decreased 0.5 percentage points from the last quarter of 2011 and 5.2 percent from the first
        quarter of 2011.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                8
Factors impacting web experience: Device
The broadening device landscape is the most tangible of the four pain points in the evolution of delivering
a web experience. Just as screen size impacts how information is consumed, environmental context
guides the type of information being sought. While desktop and tablet users often search for deeper
information, the mobile user is often seeking small snippets of easily consumed information compatible
with the context.

Figure 1. Current web content-viewing landscape and environments




                        Former Web Content                         Emerging Web Content
                           Environment                                 Environment


                                                                                          Source: GigaOM Research




When mobile-device users access websites dependent on Flash or Ajax, common problems they
encounter include usability hindrances, navigation paradigm clashes, and screen real-estate management
issues.

Those companies with available resources are now developing multiple web experiences — at minimum, a
standard and mobile-optimized website. Figure 2 provides an example of a traditional and mobile-
optimized website as they each appear on a typical smartphone. However, some companies lack the
budget to manage multiple web experiences; others are unwilling to allocate the resources.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                  9
Figure 2. Comparison of standard and mobile websites as they each appear on a mobile device




                                                                                          Source: GigaOM Research




Solutions that allow for better performance of a single website across multiple devices are emerging,
though still at a cost to website owners. Capabilities such as responsive design, a web-design technique in
which a site is crafted to provide an optimal viewing experience across a wide range of devices, improve
the cross-device functionality of a single site. Responsive design reduces resizing, panning, and scrolling
so that reading and navigation are improved on smaller screens. It also utilizes media queries and
breakpoints along with other tools to aid in adapting content to different screen-form factors.

Site-rendering for multiple-device viewing is spurring a new field that has given rise to several startup
businesses. Netbiscuits, for example, is a small company specializing in tools such as an XML-coding
optimizer, which helps developers build pages that will display optimally on any device.

Improving the viewing experience for smaller screens is important, but screen size is only one element
that differs on devices. Operating systems, processing power, and memory also affect web performance.
Device variance is highlighted in a study from the third quarter of 2012 conducted by website-
optimization provider Strangeloop Networks. The company tested 200 leading retail websites over 3G
and LTE networks using six Android and iOS devices: the iPhone 4, iPhone 5, Samsung Galaxy S
smartphone, Samsung Galaxy S3 smartphone, iPad 2, and Samsung Galaxy tablet. The results show that
pages loaded 9 percent faster on the Samsung Galaxy S3 than on the iPhone 5 (over LTE) and that pages
loaded 22 percent faster on the iPad 2 than on the Samsung Galaxy tablet (over 3G). Again, these
variances in performance can have a significant impact on the consumer’s level of satisfaction with a web
experience.

Some companies are adapting the web experience to the device model. In other words, they are serving
the full site to iPad 2 users but a mobile version to Galaxy tablet users. Device-specific website
management is cumbersome and will become increasingly so as the tablet market continues to diversify.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                 10
Factors impacting web experience: Browser
Browser diversity amplifies the complexity of a broadening device landscape. Websites could once be
optimized for just one or two browsers, but now most are viewed on as many as 10 different browsers and
platforms.

These variances are evident even within a device category; for example, Google Chrome performance on a
Mac desktop is different from Internet Explorer (IE) performance on a Windows desktop. Each website
creates a profile based on the browser used by the visitor, creating unique performance characteristics.
These variances are even more significant when comparing desktop and mobile experiences. Figure 3
illustrates the average page-load times across multiple desktop browsers versus browsing speeds on
multiple mobile browsers.

Figure 3. Average page-load times across leading desktop and mobile browsers

                      12
                                         Desktop                                Mobile
                      10

                       8

                       6

                       4

                       2

                       0




                       Source: Torbit


                                                                                         Source: GigaOM Research


In early 2011, Mozilla announced it would adopt a significantly shorter development cycle for Firefox
browser releases so that it can accelerate browser development and avoid losing further market share to
Google Chrome.

Key trends in browser evolution and their impact on delivering a web experience include:

       HTML5, largely driven by Google and Apple support:




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                11
o   Application-caching makes applications accessible without an internet connection by
                allowing web applications to be cached locally on a phone. Application-caching increases
                speed because cached resources load faster, and it reduces server load by only
                downloading updates or changes from the server.
            o   HTML5 enables local storage of page data within the user’s browser. Web storage is faster
                and more secure than cookies.
            o   Supported by HTML5, web worker is a JavaScript that runs in the background
                independently of other user-interface scripts without affecting the performance of the
                page.
       CSS3 support enables further programming options for web fonts, animations, gradients, and
        shadows.
       Performance improvements engendered through upgrades support faster JavaScript processing,
        parallel download of JavaScript scripts, more parallel connections, resource pre-fetching, and
        multi-threading in JavaScript.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                              12
Factors impacting web experience: Network
User interactions with web content require new strategies in content delivery network (CDN) placement.
Furthermore, the industry is encountering capacity issues as online activity continually increases. This is
spurring a gradual but necessary transition to Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6).

Discrepancies in mobile networks have a significant impact on end-user experiences. In building out the
LTE network, carriers promise mobile connectivity up to 10 times greater than 3G, but a Strangeloop
Networks study indicated that web content loaded only 27 percent faster on LTE than on 3G. In addition,
4G/LTE is an all-IP-based network that passes information between phone and carrier as efficiently as a
web browser communicates with the internet.

One important trend in carrier-network capacity management is offloading mobile devices to Wi-Fi
networks to decrease the drain of data traffic on the cellular network. Even so, hotspots have not been
fully utilized as a carrier-network offload option, due to the complexity of differing logins and difficulty
connecting. Efforts such as the Wi-Fi Alliance’s Passpoint program, which removes the multiple-login
barrier and turns hotspots into roaming networks, aim to improve usability of Wi-Fi as a mobile offload
network.

Network performance is also affected by the efficiency in routing traffic across the network. Latency, the
speed at which network components talk to one another, is higher for wireless connections and grows
with distance. Table 2 provides a comparison of average bandwidth and latency across network types.

Table 2. Average bandwidth and latency with cable, 3G, 4G, and Wi-Fi

                                           3G                    4G              Wi-Fi              Cable
Download speed (Mbps)                   .5 to 3.0              3 to 10          5 to 600          25 to 100
Upload speed (Mpbs)                     .5 to 1.5               1 to 6          5 to 600            2 to 8
Latency (ms)                           110 to 120             20 to 40            31.9            20 to 30
                                                                                           Source: GigaOM Research


CDN placement
With an increasing density of users and high-bandwidth traffic, CDNs emerged to help websites ensure
that pages are delivered efficiently, typically by caching popular pages closer to likely users. CDNs and
their strategic placement in the network can have a significant impact on website performance on both
mobile and desktop devices.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                  13
IPv6
A final factor impacting network performance for wired and wireless networks alike is the need to
transition to IPv6. The internet is quickly running out of Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) addresses, an
addressing scheme created 40 years ago based on 32-bit addresses and supporting 4.3-billion connected
devices. IPv6, a newer addressing scheme, uses 128-bit addresses and can support a virtually limitless
number of devices.

IPv6, however, is not backwards-compatible with IPv4. Some carriers and web content providers are
using translation mechanisms such as carrier-grade NATs and IPv4 address-sharing to be able to support
both protocols without significant additional cost; however, such translations could slow performance,
resulting in the deterioration of a user's web experience.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                             14
Factors impacting web experience: Web design
Site developers must consider the type of content and how it will appear across environments when
deciding whether to create multiple unique websites for each device or optimize a single site and even to
determine if a website is ultimately the best means for delivering web content. How developers and
website owners create a site affects performance just as the network, hardware, or software do.




Page-size bloat
As website owners and designers increase the complexity of pages with images and third-party scripts like
analytics, ads, and social-sharing buttons, the size of the average page has grown to nearly 1.3 MB,
according to November 2012 stats from HTTP Archive. This page-size bloat has disproportionately
impacted mobile users. Downloading 1.3 MB pages can rapidly deplete a mobile user’s monthly data
quota (that would be roughly 1,600 page views for a 2 GB plan or 50 page views per day, which does not
account for any video or audio consumption). Bloated pages also take longer to download, which is both
frustrating to the user and costly to the website owner.

Figure 4. Average page size in kilobytes (KB), December 2010 to September 2012


                                                         Average Page Size
                                      1200
                                                                                       1068
                                      1000                              965                   1098
                                                                                1008
                                                            784
                     Page Size (KB)




                                      800    726                  831
                                      600          735

                                      400

                                      200

                                        0



                   Source: HTTP Archive




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                               15
Native apps vs. web apps
In the mobile environment, website owners must consider whether they will deliver content through the
mobile web or through a native app. Native apps can provide a richer experience than the mobile web, but
they are often limited in functionality, costly to develop, and unwieldy to maintain for multiple platforms.
The mobile web, while offering cross-device flexibility, does not afford as rich of a user experience.
Website owners must consider a variety of factors, including user experience, performance, and cost,
when determining which path to take (see Figure 5).

A company’s decision about which path to take can have significant implications on consumer
perceptions. Facebook, for instance, whose iPhone app was exceedingly slow and prone to crashing,
received terrible reviews on the iTunes App Store, which adversely affected general user perceptions of
the company. Facebook has revamped the app with a focus primarily on increasing speed, converting
from an HTML5-based app to one written primarily in Objective-C.

But increasingly, website owners do not have to simply choose between an unresponsive mobile web
strategy or an unwieldy app strategy. New technologies, including responsive design, HTML5, and hybrid
apps, are introducing new flexibility in delivering a mobile web experience.

       Responsive design. The responsive design process optimizes the user experience by
        reformatting content to adapt to each screen. Performance tests run by WebPagetest indicate that
        sites implementing responsive design supported similar load times across screen resolutions
        spanning from 320x480 to 1600x1200. However, responsive design does not alter the amount of
        data delivered based on the device type; a mobile user has to download a page that is in desktop
        proportions on a constrained device across a high-latency/low-bandwidth network, resulting in a
        poor user experience.
       HTML5. HTML5 affords website owners and developers a “write once, run everywhere” strategy.
        The promise that HTML5 will function the same on a desktop, tablet, or smartphone is not yet
        reality because HTML5 is still in development. However, HTML5 can be utilized to better
        optimize a mobile website, or it can be merged with mobile apps to create a hybrid app.
       Hybrid apps. A growing opportunity for app design is the hybrid app, a half-browser, half-native
        app. Hybrid apps are developed in HTML5 and then “wrapped” with native code and deployed to
        app stores. Hybrid apps maintain the cross-platform capabilities of the mobile web approach
        (because they are written using web technologies), but they also have access to native APIs, run
        locally (offline potential) on the device, and have app store distribution.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                              16
Figure 5. Comparison of native apps, mobile web, and hybrid apps

                                                                Apps                                             Mobile Web
                                            Pros                                                Pros
                                               Richer experience                                  Cross-platform capability
                                               Access to native APIs/resources                    Discovery--limited engagement
                                               Long-term relationship                             Bite-size, timely, topical information
                                               One-touch access                                   Short time to market
                                               Device-specific look/feel                          Performance optimization approaches
                                               Faster graphics performance                        Centralized updates
                                               App store distribution/monetization                Written with web technologies
                                               Runs locally, supports offline                     Open standards
                                               Native access to phone's data                      No dependency on app store

                                            Cons                                                Cons
    F                                         Expensive to develop for multiple                  Limited functionality
    U
    N
                  Apps                      
                                               platforms
                                               Difficult to build and maintain
                                                                                                
                                                                                                
                                                                                                   No access to most native resources
                                                                                                   Performance optimization difficult to
                                              Monetization complicated                            master
    C                                         Need to maintain backwards                         Device testing a challenge
    T                                          compatibility                                      No marketing through app store
    I                                         Long time to launch/approval ques
    O                                         Increased support costs

    N
    A                      Hybrid                                      Pros
                                                                                        Hybrid

    L                                                                     Cross-platform capability
    I                                                                     Lower cost for multi-platform
                                                                          Written with web technologies
    T
                                                                          Access to native APIs/resources
    Y                                   Mobile                            Runs locally, supports offline
                                                                          App store distribution/monetization
                                         Web
                                                                       Cons
                                                                         Decreased user experience for mobile
                                                                          web delivered content
                       FLEXIBILITY                                       Offline access for mobile web screens
                                                                         Multi-platform wrapper requires native
                                                                          and mobile web technology know-how




                                                                                                                   Source: GigaOM Research




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                                                17
Case studies
Table 3. Case studies overview

                                        Financial Times                                  Wal-Mart

                           Develop a multi-device strategy that           Leverage the web across multiple
Challenge                  creates a unified experience for               devices; provide the best online and
                           subscribers                                    in-store shopping experience

                           Build a subscription model that                Integrate in-store and online retailing
Philosophy                 provides multi-channel distribution            and create continuity between
                           and supports new devices                       channels

                           “One customer, one access”                     Multi-device strategy seeking to
Multi-device
                           experience; direct relationship with           enhance and unite online, mobile, and
strategy
                           readers                                        in-store shopping

                           Marry the convenience of online with
                                                                          “One Wal-Mart” experience,
                           the relation of flipping through a
Mobile strategy                                                           embracing mobile’s disruptive nature
                           newspaper; create a dynamic, fully
                                                                          by leveraging it to enhance the in-store
                           automated offering with cross-device
                                                                          experience
                           support
                                                                                               Source: GigaOM Research




Financial Times
CHALLENGE

The challenge for the Financial Times (FT) is to devise a multi-device strategy that creates a unified
experience for subscribers and allows for simple incorporation of new platforms and devices.

PHILOSOPHY

The Financial Times’ overriding strategy for the delivery of web content in a multi-device environment is
to build a subscription model that provides multi-channel distribution and allows for the assimilation of
new device types.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                       18
MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY

The FT bases its unified multi-device strategy on creating a “one customer, one access” experience. With
readers accessing content across multiple devices, the FT’s systems must work across platforms and
devices. Consumption patterns do differ by device type (bite-size information delivered on mobile, more
in-depth information on tablets and desktops), and content should be targeted to those patterns. The FT
works to achieve a balance between delivering the best experience for a particular device type and
managing overhead, so it has created sophisticated APIs and a web app that reduce the editorial overhead
of packaging content for different devices.

The second element of the FT strategy is maintaining a direct relationship with its readers, which is
crucial in developing customers and selling digital subscriptions directly to the consumer. Publishers
essentially must become internet retailers and maintain those communication and sales capabilities with
customers. The need to maintain these capabilities was key in determining FT’s mobile strategy.

MOBILE STRATEGY

The FT’s mobile strategy is “the pleasure of leisurely newspaper browsing with the immediacy and
interactivity of a website." The publisher seeks to provide an experience that feels tailored to the device.
To create this experience, the FT thinks of mobile in buckets of screen size: small, medium, large, and
large-wide. It then structures content for delivery on one of the four screen types.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                  19
Figure 8.              Financial Times mobile strategy grid

                                                                                                                                FT
                                                                                                                            Positioning

Type of offering                  Print facsimile                                                          Fully dynamic offering

                                                                                                              FT
                                                                                                          Positioning

(Not sure what this is?)          Editorially lead                                                                       Fully automated

                                                                                   FT
                                                                               Positioning

Deployment model                  Fully native       Native hybrid                           Mobile CSS                 Responsive design

                                                                                                    FT
                                                                                                Positioning


Platform support                  Android/iOS only                                                              Full cross device support

                                                                              FT
                                                                          Positioning

Business model                    App store—paid for      Cross device—paid for                      Ad supported                    Free


                                                                                                                                    Source: GigaOM Research


    The FT strives to create a dynamic, fully automated offering with cross-device support and the ability to
    maintain a direct relationship with the reader. The client relationship was the foundation for the FT’s
    mobile-strategy shift. In June 2011, the FT introduced a web app to replace the original native iOS app.
    Driving this shift in strategy was a new iTunes App Store policy that assumed control over all user
    relationships of apps within the store. The primary reason the FT launched an HTML5-based web app
    was to maintain a direct relationship with its customers. The FT valued the ability to continue to offer
    customers flexibility and freedom of choice with access to content. The web app, accessible at app.ft.com,
    offers an excellent user experience and drove an increase in iOS traffic of 70 percent after the transition.
    The often-mistaken notion of discoverability issues with web apps did not prove true for the FT, which
    reported 3.4-million users accessing their content via the web app as of November 2012.

    The FT has also leveraged its iOS strategy on other devices through a hybrid strategy that involved
    creating an app that is 90-percent HTML with a thin wrapper, a move that extends the FT footprint
    across all three major tablet platforms: Windows, Apple, and Android. This allows a quick and cost-
    effective launch on new devices, giving the FT an advantage in adapting to a rapidly evolving mobile-
    device landscape. This flexibility is increasingly important for the FT and other publishers as mobile




    How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                                                       20
activity continues to grow. The FT reports that mobile generates 25 percent of all traffic on FT.com and 15
percent to 20 percent of new digital consumer subscriptions each week.

Additional statistics of interest:

       The FT’s overall digital readership continues to grow strongly, with digital subscriptions exceeding
        print circulation for the first time at the end of June 2012.
       FT.com’s tablet audience is up 111 percent year-on-year (YoY) (PricewaterhouseCoopers-assured,
        May 2011 to 2012)
       Smartphone audience is up 133 percent YoY (PricewaterhouseCoopers-assured, May 2011 to
        2012)
       30 percent of FT.com subscriber page views are on mobile, showing that its core audience is
        enthusiastically adopting these channels
       14 percent of the FT’s total audience read the FT on more than one channel, an increase of 27
        percent YoY (May 2011 to 2012)




Wal-Mart
CHALLENGE

The Wal-Mart challenge is to leverage the web across multiple devices and environments to provide the
best online and in-store shopping experience.

PHILOSOPHY

Wal-Mart’s web strategy of providing customers anytime-anywhere access to Wal-Mart is driven by an
effort to better integrate in-store and online retailing and to create continuity between channels. Wal-
Mart envisions a seamless experience across environments, whether in-store, on a mobile device, or at
home on a desktop. The company is highly focused on associating intended use with the appropriate
platform and technology in the appropriate context to enhance the shopping experience. This strategy’s
effectiveness is then tested and validated through analytics.

MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY

Wal-Mart has set online sales targets at $9 billion by fiscal year 2014 and is taking aggressive action in
bolstering its web presence so that it can achieve that goal. The company is taking a multi-device strategy




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                21
in seeking to enhance and unite online, mobile, and in-store shopping. Much of the emerging web
strategy is being driven by Wal-Mart Global eCommerce, the Silicon Valley-based team that has been
tasked with developing core technology to propel Wal-Mart into the next generation of ecommerce.

Several innovations – including internal search, social media incorporation, ecommerce enhancements,
and mobile developments – have been introduced over the past year. For example, the company is using
Facebook and other social media to drive in-store sales through campaigns such as customers voting on
which merchandise they would like to see "rollbacks" (temporary discounts) on.

Wal-Mart is well-versed in monitoring the results of these strategies, in web performance in general, and
in understanding the impact that performance has on business. When running performance tests in
January 2012, Wal-Mart discovered that page-load times for the slowest 5 percent of users was reaching
24 seconds, a time that was too slow and causing lost sales. The company was able to shave off 8 seconds
on average load time for the slowest 5 percent, which resulted in increased conversion rates.

Figure 9. Wal-Mart correlation of page-load times to conversion rates




                                                                                                Source: Wal-Mart


MOBILE STRATEGY

Wal-Mart’s mobile strategy unites the online and in-store experience and is poised to be disruptive to
retail. The way people experience a store has not changed in 20 years, but now, more than half of




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                22
shoppers walk into the store carrying a smartphone and present the potential to disrupt the status quo.
Wal-Mart is embracing mobile’s disruptive nature by leveraging it to enhance the in-store experience.
Wal-Mart envisions one Wal-Mart that seamlessly blends the power of various channels, including
online, mobile, and in-store.

Wal-Mart has recently enhanced its mobile app to promote this merging of mobile and physical retail.
The new in-store mode feature of the Wal-Mart app enables customers to create shopping lists, view local
ads, and access local store pricing and the aisle location of products. Wal-Mart is the only major retailer
offering in-store mode on a massive scale, with the app functioning across 4,000 stores in the U.S.
Features of the in-store mode include:

       Price checker. Scan product barcodes to check prices and review product details.
       Mobile shopping list. View local pricing and more for mobile shopping list items.
       Aisle location. Find items faster by viewing aisle numbers for all mobile shopping list items.
       QR code reader. Scan QR codes for special offers in Wal-Mart stores.
       Interactive local ad. View local ads for store-specific information, including savings and events.
       What’s new? See new merchandise and rollbacks available in local Wal-Mart stores.

The in-store mode feature was created to incorporate the in-store element without creating an entirely
separate app. The retailer wished to maintain a singular experience with an app that can flip over into in-
store mode to access relevant shopping information and then, with one tap, flip back to ecommerce
mode. Twelve percent of Wal-Mart’s daily sales on the mobile app occur when a customer is actually in a
store and using the in-store mode. The mobile website, which is closer to a traditional online experience,
continues to drive more sales than the app, but this integration of the app with the in-store experience,
bringing context to mobile, is having a significant effect on how consumers shop.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                 23
Meeting the challenge
The task of web content delivery is undoubtedly becoming more challenging. The complexities of the
modern access environment, with its multiple device types, networks, and usage scenarios, requires a
heightened level of consideration among all those involved in delivering the web experience. Not only do
companies need to make the leap of faith to invest in mobile web-content delivery, but they also are faced
with the conundrum of how to allocate these scarce resources among the numerous pain points currently
associated with delivering the web experience. New solutions are meeting these challenges, from more
robust and better-designed networks to improved device and browser performance to site-design tools
that will optimize the user experience.

Among the emerging solutions are:

       Analytics. With myriad web-access situations, the need to understand the user’s situation
        (device type, network type, and environment) has become increasingly important; being able to
        adapt to changing situations dynamically and efficiently will continue to be an important trend for
        the industry.
       Browser evolution. While a rapidly changing browser landscape can introduce additional
        complexity, it also allows for rapid incorporation of new functionality to improve the web
        experience. One example came in the third quarter of 2012 with the launch of the new Nokia
        Xpress Browser, which is capable of compressing websites and reducing data traffic by up to 90
        percent.
       Front-end optimization. Front-end encompasses all browser processes involved in generating
        a webpage, including fetching embedded objects, parsing style sheets, and executing JavaScript.
        As applications have become more complex and mobile-device usage has skyrocketed, the
        majority of user wait-time for any given page is spent on the front-end. Front-end optimization
        aims to reduce the number of requests and the size of the objects required to generate a page
        while also accelerating visual rendering. This can significantly improve overall website
        performance across browsers, networks, and devices.
       Intelligent traffic routing. Content delivery technologies are being incorporated into mobile
        networks and allowing mobile operators to manage and prioritize content delivery on their
        networks. For example, Ericsson will integrate Akamai’s CDN technology into its network
        equipment, thus allowing more intelligent traffic-routing and introducing edge-caching
        capabilities to mobile networks.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                             24
   LTE. The transition to 4G/LTE networks will provide an increase in bandwidth for wireless data
        traffic, bringing the speeds for mobile data closer to those for landline service and thus narrowing
        the performance gap on mobile devices versus desktops (or Wi-Fi-connected tablets).

While these emerging solutions are targeted at networks and devices, website owners must also
implement techniques that improve the functioning of their individual sites. They cannot rely on carrier
networks to deliver a clunky mobile site at desktop speeds. An un-optimized website is not going to
perform as well as one optimized for mobile, no matter what the browser capabilities are.

Web experience is becoming an increasingly important component of a company’s competitive strategy. A
user’s perception of a website is not just based on the speed of a page load but also on how quickly that
page loads compared to other sites the user visits. If a company is not optimizing its site for a specific
context – whether that is the user’s device, location, or intent – it is at a disadvantage to its competitors
and risks losing revenue. The web experience must be tailored to the specific browser, network, and
device combination being utilized to deliver the optimum experience. The diversity of user experiences
has created many moving targets that impact web performance. Emerging products will work to simplify
these challenges and deliver a consistent experience. Going forward, web strategies will be a marriage of
efforts from multiple parties, from carrier adoption of LTE enhanced with CDN and analytic capabilities
to device and browser evolution to website design incorporating capabilities such as responsive web
design or optimization. The complexity of today’s web environment thus requires similar complexity in
solution.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                   25
About Amy Cravens
Amy Cravens is a longtime technology market analyst with domain expertise across a number of areas,
including telecommunications, networking, media, software, and hardware. From 2001 to 2003, she was
a lead analyst for In-Stat, helping to pioneer the company’s hotspot and Wi-Fi analysis. Since 2006, she
has been involved in a number of projects for companies and market research vendors as an independent
analyst.


About GigaOM Pro
GigaOM Pro gives you insider access to expert industry insights on emerging markets. Focused on
delivering highly relevant and timely research to the people who need it most, our analysis, reports, and
original research come from the most respected voices in the industry. Whether you’re beginning to learn
about a new market or are an industry insider, GigaOM Pro addresses the need for relevant, illuminating
insights into the industry’s most dynamic markets.

Visit us at: pro.gigaom.com




© 2012 Giga Omni Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This publication may be used only as expressly permitted by license from GigaOM and may not be accessed, used, copied,
distributed, published, sold, publicly displayed, or otherwise exploited without the express prior written permission of GigaOM.
For licensing information, please contact us.




How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience                                                      26

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Mobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lw
Mobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lwMobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lw
Mobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lw
CarolineFlamand
 
Mobile marketing
Mobile marketing Mobile marketing
Mobile marketing
Paul Cowman
 
Mobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivated
Mobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivatedMobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivated
Mobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivated
Jason Cross
 
2012 consumer tech report final
2012 consumer tech report final2012 consumer tech report final
2012 consumer tech report final
Petit Web
 
Alliance for Audited Media
Alliance for Audited MediaAlliance for Audited Media
Alliance for Audited Media
Ivila Bessa
 

Mais procurados (18)

TV and the Second Screen: A Red Bee Media and Decipher white paper
TV and the Second Screen: A Red Bee Media and Decipher white paperTV and the Second Screen: A Red Bee Media and Decipher white paper
TV and the Second Screen: A Red Bee Media and Decipher white paper
 
Going mobile: Web Self-Service for Students
Going mobile: Web Self-Service for StudentsGoing mobile: Web Self-Service for Students
Going mobile: Web Self-Service for Students
 
Mobile applications
Mobile applicationsMobile applications
Mobile applications
 
Mobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lw
Mobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lwMobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lw
Mobile exalead-whitepaper-a4-8-lw
 
HOW FUTURISTIC TECHNOLOGY CAN CHANGE FUTURE OF MOBILE APP DEVELOPMENT
HOW FUTURISTIC TECHNOLOGY CAN CHANGE FUTURE OF MOBILE APP DEVELOPMENTHOW FUTURISTIC TECHNOLOGY CAN CHANGE FUTURE OF MOBILE APP DEVELOPMENT
HOW FUTURISTIC TECHNOLOGY CAN CHANGE FUTURE OF MOBILE APP DEVELOPMENT
 
Mobile Open Software Platforms - Ecosystem Strategies & Challenges
Mobile Open Software Platforms - Ecosystem Strategies & ChallengesMobile Open Software Platforms - Ecosystem Strategies & Challenges
Mobile Open Software Platforms - Ecosystem Strategies & Challenges
 
Q2 Mid Year Trends 2008
Q2 Mid Year Trends 2008Q2 Mid Year Trends 2008
Q2 Mid Year Trends 2008
 
The mobilerevolutionandb2b
The mobilerevolutionandb2bThe mobilerevolutionandb2b
The mobilerevolutionandb2b
 
Mobile marketing
Mobile marketing Mobile marketing
Mobile marketing
 
Mobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivated
Mobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivatedMobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivated
Mobile retail summit 26 1-12 - incentivated
 
Com score 2012 mobile future in focus
Com score 2012 mobile future in focusCom score 2012 mobile future in focus
Com score 2012 mobile future in focus
 
The state Of Mobility Post 2012
The state Of Mobility  Post 2012The state Of Mobility  Post 2012
The state Of Mobility Post 2012
 
Tech Trends 2012
Tech Trends 2012Tech Trends 2012
Tech Trends 2012
 
Mobile megatrends 2012
Mobile megatrends 2012Mobile megatrends 2012
Mobile megatrends 2012
 
2012 consumer tech report final
2012 consumer tech report final2012 consumer tech report final
2012 consumer tech report final
 
Alliance for Audited Media
Alliance for Audited MediaAlliance for Audited Media
Alliance for Audited Media
 
Winning the Game
Winning the GameWinning the Game
Winning the Game
 
IDC Q3 2012 Mobile Developer Report
IDC Q3 2012 Mobile Developer ReportIDC Q3 2012 Mobile Developer Report
IDC Q3 2012 Mobile Developer Report
 

Semelhante a How New Devices, Networks, and Consumer Habits Will Change the Web Experience

Mobile Website Optimization
Mobile Website OptimizationMobile Website Optimization
Mobile Website Optimization
hebsyesh
 
Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...
Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...
Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...
Vasileios Xanthopoulos
 

Semelhante a How New Devices, Networks, and Consumer Habits Will Change the Web Experience (20)

Radware Mobile Ecommerce Performance 2013
Radware Mobile Ecommerce Performance 2013Radware Mobile Ecommerce Performance 2013
Radware Mobile Ecommerce Performance 2013
 
Future of Telecom - from automation to atonomy
Future of Telecom - from automation to atonomyFuture of Telecom - from automation to atonomy
Future of Telecom - from automation to atonomy
 
Trends in Software Development for 2023
Trends in Software Development for 2023Trends in Software Development for 2023
Trends in Software Development for 2023
 
Trends in Software Development for 2023
Trends in Software Development for 2023Trends in Software Development for 2023
Trends in Software Development for 2023
 
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
 
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise SuccessMobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
 
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
Mobile Web – Strategy for Enterprise Success
 
Future of connectivity An initial perspective by Hossein Moiin, EVP and CTO a...
Future of connectivity An initial perspective by Hossein Moiin, EVP and CTO a...Future of connectivity An initial perspective by Hossein Moiin, EVP and CTO a...
Future of connectivity An initial perspective by Hossein Moiin, EVP and CTO a...
 
Mobile Website Optimization
Mobile Website OptimizationMobile Website Optimization
Mobile Website Optimization
 
Wi-Fi Driving Mobile Internet Explosion in Next Generation Networks
Wi-Fi Driving Mobile Internet Explosion in Next Generation NetworksWi-Fi Driving Mobile Internet Explosion in Next Generation Networks
Wi-Fi Driving Mobile Internet Explosion in Next Generation Networks
 
Internet of things Emerging Network Technology Assessment Report
Internet of things Emerging Network Technology Assessment ReportInternet of things Emerging Network Technology Assessment Report
Internet of things Emerging Network Technology Assessment Report
 
ur mobile - build your mobile world
ur mobile - build your mobile worldur mobile - build your mobile world
ur mobile - build your mobile world
 
Equinix Performance Hub gives Enterprise Networks a Giant Boost
Equinix Performance Hub gives Enterprise Networks a Giant BoostEquinix Performance Hub gives Enterprise Networks a Giant Boost
Equinix Performance Hub gives Enterprise Networks a Giant Boost
 
Whitepaper - A Consumer Cloud Solution - White Label or Build
Whitepaper - A Consumer Cloud Solution - White Label or BuildWhitepaper - A Consumer Cloud Solution - White Label or Build
Whitepaper - A Consumer Cloud Solution - White Label or Build
 
Winning the Game
Winning the GameWinning the Game
Winning the Game
 
Impact of Consumer Broadband on Internet Infrastructure
Impact of Consumer Broadband on Internet InfrastructureImpact of Consumer Broadband on Internet Infrastructure
Impact of Consumer Broadband on Internet Infrastructure
 
Delivering Web to Mobile. Informe. CETIS
Delivering Web to Mobile. Informe. CETISDelivering Web to Mobile. Informe. CETIS
Delivering Web to Mobile. Informe. CETIS
 
Ijcet 06 09_002
Ijcet 06 09_002Ijcet 06 09_002
Ijcet 06 09_002
 
Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...
Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...
Heuristics for developing and evaluating smartphone mobile websites - Vasilei...
 
BP110: The Mobile Distruption - Why XPages Development is targeting Mobile First
BP110: The Mobile Distruption - Why XPages Development is targeting Mobile FirstBP110: The Mobile Distruption - Why XPages Development is targeting Mobile First
BP110: The Mobile Distruption - Why XPages Development is targeting Mobile First
 

Mais de Scott Valentine, MBA, CSPO

Mais de Scott Valentine, MBA, CSPO (20)

@ValaAfshar - 50 Powerful Statistics About Tech MegaTrends Affecting Every Bu...
@ValaAfshar - 50 Powerful Statistics About Tech MegaTrends Affecting Every Bu...@ValaAfshar - 50 Powerful Statistics About Tech MegaTrends Affecting Every Bu...
@ValaAfshar - 50 Powerful Statistics About Tech MegaTrends Affecting Every Bu...
 
The Pay-per-Action Model for Online Advertising
The Pay-per-Action Model for Online AdvertisingThe Pay-per-Action Model for Online Advertising
The Pay-per-Action Model for Online Advertising
 
Silverpop_7 Emails Marketers Should Automate
Silverpop_7 Emails Marketers Should AutomateSilverpop_7 Emails Marketers Should Automate
Silverpop_7 Emails Marketers Should Automate
 
Smartphone Comparison
Smartphone ComparisonSmartphone Comparison
Smartphone Comparison
 
A Nation of Serial Switchers
A Nation of Serial SwitchersA Nation of Serial Switchers
A Nation of Serial Switchers
 
TV Untethered: Measuring the Shifting Screen
TV Untethered: Measuring the Shifting ScreenTV Untethered: Measuring the Shifting Screen
TV Untethered: Measuring the Shifting Screen
 
Marketing Loyalty Report
Marketing Loyalty ReportMarketing Loyalty Report
Marketing Loyalty Report
 
The Social CEO: Executives Tell All
The Social CEO: Executives Tell AllThe Social CEO: Executives Tell All
The Social CEO: Executives Tell All
 
Email Validation for Improved Deliverability and Marketing Results
Email Validation for Improved Deliverability and Marketing ResultsEmail Validation for Improved Deliverability and Marketing Results
Email Validation for Improved Deliverability and Marketing Results
 
The Social Media ROI Cookbook
The Social Media ROI CookbookThe Social Media ROI Cookbook
The Social Media ROI Cookbook
 
AMA_Corporate Attitudes and Adoption Trends of Multi-Channel and Omni-Channel...
AMA_Corporate Attitudes and Adoption Trends of Multi-Channel and Omni-Channel...AMA_Corporate Attitudes and Adoption Trends of Multi-Channel and Omni-Channel...
AMA_Corporate Attitudes and Adoption Trends of Multi-Channel and Omni-Channel...
 
AberdeenGroup_Analytics for the CMO
AberdeenGroup_Analytics for the CMOAberdeenGroup_Analytics for the CMO
AberdeenGroup_Analytics for the CMO
 
GameScorpion_ Alternative App Markets
GameScorpion_ Alternative App MarketsGameScorpion_ Alternative App Markets
GameScorpion_ Alternative App Markets
 
Acxiom_LOYALTY IN TODAY’S MARKETPLACE DEMANDS BETTER CONNECTIONS WITH CUSTOMERS
Acxiom_LOYALTY IN TODAY’S MARKETPLACE DEMANDS BETTER CONNECTIONS WITH CUSTOMERSAcxiom_LOYALTY IN TODAY’S MARKETPLACE DEMANDS BETTER CONNECTIONS WITH CUSTOMERS
Acxiom_LOYALTY IN TODAY’S MARKETPLACE DEMANDS BETTER CONNECTIONS WITH CUSTOMERS
 
Data Quality and the Customer Experience
Data Quality and the Customer ExperienceData Quality and the Customer Experience
Data Quality and the Customer Experience
 
How will 2013 Unfold? Predictions and Premonitions for the Digital Marketer
How will 2013 Unfold? Predictions and Premonitions for the Digital MarketerHow will 2013 Unfold? Predictions and Premonitions for the Digital Marketer
How will 2013 Unfold? Predictions and Premonitions for the Digital Marketer
 
Big Brand Strategies for Mobile App Marketing
Big Brand Strategies for Mobile App MarketingBig Brand Strategies for Mobile App Marketing
Big Brand Strategies for Mobile App Marketing
 
The Digital Media Value Chain: A Path to Content Monetization
The Digital Media Value Chain: A Path to Content MonetizationThe Digital Media Value Chain: A Path to Content Monetization
The Digital Media Value Chain: A Path to Content Monetization
 
The Right Time for Real-Time Marketing
The Right Time for Real-Time MarketingThe Right Time for Real-Time Marketing
The Right Time for Real-Time Marketing
 
To Monetize Open Social Networks, Invite Customers to Be More Than Just “Frie...
To Monetize Open Social Networks, Invite Customers to Be More Than Just “Frie...To Monetize Open Social Networks, Invite Customers to Be More Than Just “Frie...
To Monetize Open Social Networks, Invite Customers to Be More Than Just “Frie...
 

How New Devices, Networks, and Consumer Habits Will Change the Web Experience

  • 1. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience By Amy Cravens January 22, 2013 This research was underwritten by Akamai. Mobile
  • 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive summary ................................................................................................................................... 4 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................... 6 The challenge........................................................................................................................................ 7 Poor experiences equal lost sales ......................................................................................................... 8 Factors impacting web experience: Device ............................................................................................... 9 Factors impacting web experience: Browser ........................................................................................... 11 Factors impacting web experience: Network ........................................................................................... 13 CDN placement ................................................................................................................................... 13 IPv6 ..................................................................................................................................................... 14 Factors impacting web experience: Web design ..................................................................................... 15 Page-size bloat ................................................................................................................................... 15 Native apps vs. web apps.................................................................................................................... 16 Case studies ........................................................................................................................................... 18 Financial Times ................................................................................................................................... 18 CHALLENGE ...................................................................................................................................... 18 PHILOSOPHY ..................................................................................................................................... 18 MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY .................................................................................................................. 19 MOBILE STRATEGY ............................................................................................................................ 19 Wal-Mart ............................................................................................................................................. 21 CHALLENGE ...................................................................................................................................... 21 PHILOSOPHY ..................................................................................................................................... 21 MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY .................................................................................................................. 21 MOBILE STRATEGY ............................................................................................................................ 22 Meeting the challenge ............................................................................................................................. 24 How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 2
  • 3. About Amy Cravens ................................................................................................................................ 26 About GigaOM Pro .................................................................................................................................. 26 How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 3
  • 4. Executive summary Delivering a positive web experience has become exceedingly more complex as the access environment has shifted from a desktop-centric vision to one that is increasingly focused on mobile devices — and with potential for other consumer devices in the near future. Website owners must now consider the customer experience across both desktop and mobile devices and their browsers, a reality that is alarming for many companies. As the access environment has evolved to include mobile devices in addition to desktop ones, it has created pain points in delivering a web experience from the network to the device to the browser and finally to the web design itself. Mobilizing web design is a catch-22; adjusting to design challenges is costly, but not adjusting is equally costly, because a poor mobile web experience results in a loss of revenue. This report will examine what drives content consumption today and illustrate what the changing consumption of content has meant to the development and delivery of web and mobile content. It will also examine the evolution of the web experience and explore the challenges of content delivery to both mobile and desktop devices with a focus on four primary areas: device differences, browser distinctions, network variations, and application performance. Through case studies, the report will provide detailed analysis of individual company experiences and next-generation strategies for dealing with these challenges. Key issues the report will address include:  How the multi-device environment has increased the complexity of delivering web content  How website owners, while struggling to assimilate multiple devices and browsers, are trying to maintain a consistent user experience  How browser fragmentation, a result of the current multitude of browsers, creates an opportunity for optimization  The necessary balance between delivering the best experience for a given device and managing overhead costs  Multiple mobile experiences that incorporate both the mobile web and native apps  The company’s desired relationship with its customers as an important consideration in determining its mobile strategy  How an innovative multi-device strategy will be disruptive to the status quo How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 4
  • 5. How a quality mobile experience can advance customer relationships and how a poor experience can terminate relationships How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 5
  • 6. Introduction The web, and how we experience it, is very different from what it was a decade ago. While the web experience has become more sophisticated with the heavier incorporation of graphics and multimedia elements, its performance is faster because of the advancement of networks as well as of content-delivery and optimization techniques. However, perhaps the single biggest shift in the web experience over the past decade has been in how we access it. What was delivered just a few years ago over a fixed network to the desktop is now just as likely to go over a mobile network and be consumed on any number of connected devices. Since the iPhone launched, smartphone shipments have skyrocketed. GigaOM Research expects shipments to have reached 528 million units globally in 2012. Currently 40 percent of adults have a smartphone; that number will likely reach 70 percent in a few short years. Add to these numbers the growing tablet market, with an expected 118 million units to have shipped in 2012 (up from just 60 million units in 2011), and the enormity of the mobile web becomes evident. Growth in the smartphone and tablet markets has caused a significant disruption in the web experience, so those along the web- delivery chain must rethink and revise their strategies. Table 1. Global smartphone and tablet shipments in millions, 2010–2012 2010 2011 2012 Tablet shipments (in millions) 17 62 118 Smartphone shipments (in 270 447 528 millions) Source: GigaOM Research Complexities in delivering and managing the web experience extend beyond the growth in mobile. Companies are also faced with new challenges in the desktop environment, including browser fragmentation, network evolution, and client-side technologies, so they must invest now to maintain a quality web experience in the desktop environment as well as to create an optimized experience for the very distinct mobile market. Otherwise, they risk losing business to competitors who have made this investment. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 6
  • 7. The challenge Although users access the web in many ways across a wide range of conditions, performance expectations across these varying situations remain fairly consistent. Variable conditions and static expectations have created a significant challenge in the delivery of web content. Sites are using richer media and connecting to other applications like Facebook, Twitter, and analytics monitoring. Although content is becoming more dynamic and less cacheable, consumers still want it fast.  Akamai, a provider of internet content-delivery technologies, notes in its August 2012 “State of the Internet” report that the global average connection speed is 2.6 Mbps. The report found that mobile data traffic, which doubled from the first quarter of 2011 to the first quarter of 2012, ranges in average connection speed from 322 Kbps to 6.0 Mbps, a variance that can have a significant impact on mobile web performance. Despite the variances in connectivity rates, consumers often expect mobile web experiences to emulate, if not improve upon, desktop web experiences.  Tealeaf, an IBM company focused on customer-behavior analysis, found that consumers expect mobile transactions to be easier than they are offline (51 percent) or on a desktop computer (50 percent).  Gomez, now a division of Compuware, found in 2011 that 71 percent of mobile phone users expect websites to load as quickly on their mobile phones as on their desktops, up from 58 percent in 2009.  An e.Digital benchmark study found that customers expect the same brand experience and product choice they would find on desktop sites and that they also expect the same features.  Google reported in its “New Multi-Screen World” graphic that 90 percent of consumers begin a task on one device (typically a smartphone) and then complete it on another device. Of those using multiple devices sequentially, 98 percent move among devices within a given day. Smartphones are the most common starting place for online activities, while desktops are the most common starting place for more complex activities. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 7
  • 8. Poor experiences equal lost sales Businesses cannot afford this inconsistency in customer experience. Consumers expect always-on connectivity with nearly zero latency on a mobile device as well as on a desktop, an expectation that is often unmet. Multiple studies link poor mobile and website performance with lost revenue and damaged brands:  Wal-Mart has shown a sharp decline in conversion rate as average site-load time increased from 1 second to 4 seconds.  Amazon has found that every 100-millisecond improvement in page-load time led to a 1 percent increase in revenue.  Torbit, a provider of web analytics, has found that as the seconds it took to load the first page increased, so did the bounce rate, with the steepest incline between 2 seconds and 6 seconds (the bounce rate increased from 30 percent to 40 percent over that timeframe).  Research from Econsultancy (2011) shows that out of those consumers who conducted a mobile transaction, 83 percent experienced a problem. Of those experiencing a problem, 16 percent became more likely to buy from a competitor.  Gomez found that 60 percent of mobile web users had a problem when accessing a website on their phone. Furthermore, if dissatisfied with website performance, more than 40 percent of smartphone and tablet users are unlikely to visit the site again and more than 25 percent are less likely to purchase from that company across all channels.  Strangeloop Networks reported in its “2012 State of Mobile Ecommerce Performance” that the average load time for DSL was 7.1 seconds compared to 11.5 seconds on an iPhone (over 3G connection).  Mobile commerce-platform provider MoPowered found that 79 percent of respondents felt shopping on a mobile device was slow and difficult to navigate and that 30 percent abandoned a transaction because the experience was bad.  Epsilon and the Direct Marketing Association found in research conducted during the first quarter of 2012 that while email-open rates had increased since the previous year and the previous quarter, click-through rates had declined, likely because emails are abandoned after consumers open them on mobile devices and discover the messages are not optimized. Click-through rates decreased 0.5 percentage points from the last quarter of 2011 and 5.2 percent from the first quarter of 2011. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 8
  • 9. Factors impacting web experience: Device The broadening device landscape is the most tangible of the four pain points in the evolution of delivering a web experience. Just as screen size impacts how information is consumed, environmental context guides the type of information being sought. While desktop and tablet users often search for deeper information, the mobile user is often seeking small snippets of easily consumed information compatible with the context. Figure 1. Current web content-viewing landscape and environments Former Web Content Emerging Web Content Environment Environment Source: GigaOM Research When mobile-device users access websites dependent on Flash or Ajax, common problems they encounter include usability hindrances, navigation paradigm clashes, and screen real-estate management issues. Those companies with available resources are now developing multiple web experiences — at minimum, a standard and mobile-optimized website. Figure 2 provides an example of a traditional and mobile- optimized website as they each appear on a typical smartphone. However, some companies lack the budget to manage multiple web experiences; others are unwilling to allocate the resources. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 9
  • 10. Figure 2. Comparison of standard and mobile websites as they each appear on a mobile device Source: GigaOM Research Solutions that allow for better performance of a single website across multiple devices are emerging, though still at a cost to website owners. Capabilities such as responsive design, a web-design technique in which a site is crafted to provide an optimal viewing experience across a wide range of devices, improve the cross-device functionality of a single site. Responsive design reduces resizing, panning, and scrolling so that reading and navigation are improved on smaller screens. It also utilizes media queries and breakpoints along with other tools to aid in adapting content to different screen-form factors. Site-rendering for multiple-device viewing is spurring a new field that has given rise to several startup businesses. Netbiscuits, for example, is a small company specializing in tools such as an XML-coding optimizer, which helps developers build pages that will display optimally on any device. Improving the viewing experience for smaller screens is important, but screen size is only one element that differs on devices. Operating systems, processing power, and memory also affect web performance. Device variance is highlighted in a study from the third quarter of 2012 conducted by website- optimization provider Strangeloop Networks. The company tested 200 leading retail websites over 3G and LTE networks using six Android and iOS devices: the iPhone 4, iPhone 5, Samsung Galaxy S smartphone, Samsung Galaxy S3 smartphone, iPad 2, and Samsung Galaxy tablet. The results show that pages loaded 9 percent faster on the Samsung Galaxy S3 than on the iPhone 5 (over LTE) and that pages loaded 22 percent faster on the iPad 2 than on the Samsung Galaxy tablet (over 3G). Again, these variances in performance can have a significant impact on the consumer’s level of satisfaction with a web experience. Some companies are adapting the web experience to the device model. In other words, they are serving the full site to iPad 2 users but a mobile version to Galaxy tablet users. Device-specific website management is cumbersome and will become increasingly so as the tablet market continues to diversify. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 10
  • 11. Factors impacting web experience: Browser Browser diversity amplifies the complexity of a broadening device landscape. Websites could once be optimized for just one or two browsers, but now most are viewed on as many as 10 different browsers and platforms. These variances are evident even within a device category; for example, Google Chrome performance on a Mac desktop is different from Internet Explorer (IE) performance on a Windows desktop. Each website creates a profile based on the browser used by the visitor, creating unique performance characteristics. These variances are even more significant when comparing desktop and mobile experiences. Figure 3 illustrates the average page-load times across multiple desktop browsers versus browsing speeds on multiple mobile browsers. Figure 3. Average page-load times across leading desktop and mobile browsers 12 Desktop Mobile 10 8 6 4 2 0 Source: Torbit Source: GigaOM Research In early 2011, Mozilla announced it would adopt a significantly shorter development cycle for Firefox browser releases so that it can accelerate browser development and avoid losing further market share to Google Chrome. Key trends in browser evolution and their impact on delivering a web experience include:  HTML5, largely driven by Google and Apple support: How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 11
  • 12. o Application-caching makes applications accessible without an internet connection by allowing web applications to be cached locally on a phone. Application-caching increases speed because cached resources load faster, and it reduces server load by only downloading updates or changes from the server. o HTML5 enables local storage of page data within the user’s browser. Web storage is faster and more secure than cookies. o Supported by HTML5, web worker is a JavaScript that runs in the background independently of other user-interface scripts without affecting the performance of the page.  CSS3 support enables further programming options for web fonts, animations, gradients, and shadows.  Performance improvements engendered through upgrades support faster JavaScript processing, parallel download of JavaScript scripts, more parallel connections, resource pre-fetching, and multi-threading in JavaScript. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 12
  • 13. Factors impacting web experience: Network User interactions with web content require new strategies in content delivery network (CDN) placement. Furthermore, the industry is encountering capacity issues as online activity continually increases. This is spurring a gradual but necessary transition to Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). Discrepancies in mobile networks have a significant impact on end-user experiences. In building out the LTE network, carriers promise mobile connectivity up to 10 times greater than 3G, but a Strangeloop Networks study indicated that web content loaded only 27 percent faster on LTE than on 3G. In addition, 4G/LTE is an all-IP-based network that passes information between phone and carrier as efficiently as a web browser communicates with the internet. One important trend in carrier-network capacity management is offloading mobile devices to Wi-Fi networks to decrease the drain of data traffic on the cellular network. Even so, hotspots have not been fully utilized as a carrier-network offload option, due to the complexity of differing logins and difficulty connecting. Efforts such as the Wi-Fi Alliance’s Passpoint program, which removes the multiple-login barrier and turns hotspots into roaming networks, aim to improve usability of Wi-Fi as a mobile offload network. Network performance is also affected by the efficiency in routing traffic across the network. Latency, the speed at which network components talk to one another, is higher for wireless connections and grows with distance. Table 2 provides a comparison of average bandwidth and latency across network types. Table 2. Average bandwidth and latency with cable, 3G, 4G, and Wi-Fi 3G 4G Wi-Fi Cable Download speed (Mbps) .5 to 3.0 3 to 10 5 to 600 25 to 100 Upload speed (Mpbs) .5 to 1.5 1 to 6 5 to 600 2 to 8 Latency (ms) 110 to 120 20 to 40 31.9 20 to 30 Source: GigaOM Research CDN placement With an increasing density of users and high-bandwidth traffic, CDNs emerged to help websites ensure that pages are delivered efficiently, typically by caching popular pages closer to likely users. CDNs and their strategic placement in the network can have a significant impact on website performance on both mobile and desktop devices. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 13
  • 14. IPv6 A final factor impacting network performance for wired and wireless networks alike is the need to transition to IPv6. The internet is quickly running out of Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) addresses, an addressing scheme created 40 years ago based on 32-bit addresses and supporting 4.3-billion connected devices. IPv6, a newer addressing scheme, uses 128-bit addresses and can support a virtually limitless number of devices. IPv6, however, is not backwards-compatible with IPv4. Some carriers and web content providers are using translation mechanisms such as carrier-grade NATs and IPv4 address-sharing to be able to support both protocols without significant additional cost; however, such translations could slow performance, resulting in the deterioration of a user's web experience. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 14
  • 15. Factors impacting web experience: Web design Site developers must consider the type of content and how it will appear across environments when deciding whether to create multiple unique websites for each device or optimize a single site and even to determine if a website is ultimately the best means for delivering web content. How developers and website owners create a site affects performance just as the network, hardware, or software do. Page-size bloat As website owners and designers increase the complexity of pages with images and third-party scripts like analytics, ads, and social-sharing buttons, the size of the average page has grown to nearly 1.3 MB, according to November 2012 stats from HTTP Archive. This page-size bloat has disproportionately impacted mobile users. Downloading 1.3 MB pages can rapidly deplete a mobile user’s monthly data quota (that would be roughly 1,600 page views for a 2 GB plan or 50 page views per day, which does not account for any video or audio consumption). Bloated pages also take longer to download, which is both frustrating to the user and costly to the website owner. Figure 4. Average page size in kilobytes (KB), December 2010 to September 2012 Average Page Size 1200 1068 1000 965 1098 1008 784 Page Size (KB) 800 726 831 600 735 400 200 0 Source: HTTP Archive How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 15
  • 16. Native apps vs. web apps In the mobile environment, website owners must consider whether they will deliver content through the mobile web or through a native app. Native apps can provide a richer experience than the mobile web, but they are often limited in functionality, costly to develop, and unwieldy to maintain for multiple platforms. The mobile web, while offering cross-device flexibility, does not afford as rich of a user experience. Website owners must consider a variety of factors, including user experience, performance, and cost, when determining which path to take (see Figure 5). A company’s decision about which path to take can have significant implications on consumer perceptions. Facebook, for instance, whose iPhone app was exceedingly slow and prone to crashing, received terrible reviews on the iTunes App Store, which adversely affected general user perceptions of the company. Facebook has revamped the app with a focus primarily on increasing speed, converting from an HTML5-based app to one written primarily in Objective-C. But increasingly, website owners do not have to simply choose between an unresponsive mobile web strategy or an unwieldy app strategy. New technologies, including responsive design, HTML5, and hybrid apps, are introducing new flexibility in delivering a mobile web experience.  Responsive design. The responsive design process optimizes the user experience by reformatting content to adapt to each screen. Performance tests run by WebPagetest indicate that sites implementing responsive design supported similar load times across screen resolutions spanning from 320x480 to 1600x1200. However, responsive design does not alter the amount of data delivered based on the device type; a mobile user has to download a page that is in desktop proportions on a constrained device across a high-latency/low-bandwidth network, resulting in a poor user experience.  HTML5. HTML5 affords website owners and developers a “write once, run everywhere” strategy. The promise that HTML5 will function the same on a desktop, tablet, or smartphone is not yet reality because HTML5 is still in development. However, HTML5 can be utilized to better optimize a mobile website, or it can be merged with mobile apps to create a hybrid app.  Hybrid apps. A growing opportunity for app design is the hybrid app, a half-browser, half-native app. Hybrid apps are developed in HTML5 and then “wrapped” with native code and deployed to app stores. Hybrid apps maintain the cross-platform capabilities of the mobile web approach (because they are written using web technologies), but they also have access to native APIs, run locally (offline potential) on the device, and have app store distribution. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 16
  • 17. Figure 5. Comparison of native apps, mobile web, and hybrid apps Apps Mobile Web Pros Pros  Richer experience  Cross-platform capability  Access to native APIs/resources  Discovery--limited engagement  Long-term relationship  Bite-size, timely, topical information  One-touch access  Short time to market  Device-specific look/feel  Performance optimization approaches  Faster graphics performance  Centralized updates  App store distribution/monetization  Written with web technologies  Runs locally, supports offline  Open standards  Native access to phone's data  No dependency on app store Cons Cons F  Expensive to develop for multiple  Limited functionality U N Apps  platforms Difficult to build and maintain   No access to most native resources Performance optimization difficult to  Monetization complicated master C  Need to maintain backwards  Device testing a challenge T compatibility  No marketing through app store I  Long time to launch/approval ques O  Increased support costs N A Hybrid Pros Hybrid L  Cross-platform capability I  Lower cost for multi-platform  Written with web technologies T  Access to native APIs/resources Y Mobile  Runs locally, supports offline  App store distribution/monetization Web Cons  Decreased user experience for mobile web delivered content FLEXIBILITY  Offline access for mobile web screens  Multi-platform wrapper requires native and mobile web technology know-how Source: GigaOM Research How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 17
  • 18. Case studies Table 3. Case studies overview Financial Times Wal-Mart Develop a multi-device strategy that Leverage the web across multiple Challenge creates a unified experience for devices; provide the best online and subscribers in-store shopping experience Build a subscription model that Integrate in-store and online retailing Philosophy provides multi-channel distribution and create continuity between and supports new devices channels “One customer, one access” Multi-device strategy seeking to Multi-device experience; direct relationship with enhance and unite online, mobile, and strategy readers in-store shopping Marry the convenience of online with “One Wal-Mart” experience, the relation of flipping through a Mobile strategy embracing mobile’s disruptive nature newspaper; create a dynamic, fully by leveraging it to enhance the in-store automated offering with cross-device experience support Source: GigaOM Research Financial Times CHALLENGE The challenge for the Financial Times (FT) is to devise a multi-device strategy that creates a unified experience for subscribers and allows for simple incorporation of new platforms and devices. PHILOSOPHY The Financial Times’ overriding strategy for the delivery of web content in a multi-device environment is to build a subscription model that provides multi-channel distribution and allows for the assimilation of new device types. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 18
  • 19. MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY The FT bases its unified multi-device strategy on creating a “one customer, one access” experience. With readers accessing content across multiple devices, the FT’s systems must work across platforms and devices. Consumption patterns do differ by device type (bite-size information delivered on mobile, more in-depth information on tablets and desktops), and content should be targeted to those patterns. The FT works to achieve a balance between delivering the best experience for a particular device type and managing overhead, so it has created sophisticated APIs and a web app that reduce the editorial overhead of packaging content for different devices. The second element of the FT strategy is maintaining a direct relationship with its readers, which is crucial in developing customers and selling digital subscriptions directly to the consumer. Publishers essentially must become internet retailers and maintain those communication and sales capabilities with customers. The need to maintain these capabilities was key in determining FT’s mobile strategy. MOBILE STRATEGY The FT’s mobile strategy is “the pleasure of leisurely newspaper browsing with the immediacy and interactivity of a website." The publisher seeks to provide an experience that feels tailored to the device. To create this experience, the FT thinks of mobile in buckets of screen size: small, medium, large, and large-wide. It then structures content for delivery on one of the four screen types. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 19
  • 20. Figure 8. Financial Times mobile strategy grid FT Positioning Type of offering Print facsimile Fully dynamic offering FT Positioning (Not sure what this is?) Editorially lead Fully automated FT Positioning Deployment model Fully native Native hybrid Mobile CSS Responsive design FT Positioning Platform support Android/iOS only Full cross device support FT Positioning Business model App store—paid for Cross device—paid for Ad supported Free Source: GigaOM Research The FT strives to create a dynamic, fully automated offering with cross-device support and the ability to maintain a direct relationship with the reader. The client relationship was the foundation for the FT’s mobile-strategy shift. In June 2011, the FT introduced a web app to replace the original native iOS app. Driving this shift in strategy was a new iTunes App Store policy that assumed control over all user relationships of apps within the store. The primary reason the FT launched an HTML5-based web app was to maintain a direct relationship with its customers. The FT valued the ability to continue to offer customers flexibility and freedom of choice with access to content. The web app, accessible at app.ft.com, offers an excellent user experience and drove an increase in iOS traffic of 70 percent after the transition. The often-mistaken notion of discoverability issues with web apps did not prove true for the FT, which reported 3.4-million users accessing their content via the web app as of November 2012. The FT has also leveraged its iOS strategy on other devices through a hybrid strategy that involved creating an app that is 90-percent HTML with a thin wrapper, a move that extends the FT footprint across all three major tablet platforms: Windows, Apple, and Android. This allows a quick and cost- effective launch on new devices, giving the FT an advantage in adapting to a rapidly evolving mobile- device landscape. This flexibility is increasingly important for the FT and other publishers as mobile How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 20
  • 21. activity continues to grow. The FT reports that mobile generates 25 percent of all traffic on FT.com and 15 percent to 20 percent of new digital consumer subscriptions each week. Additional statistics of interest:  The FT’s overall digital readership continues to grow strongly, with digital subscriptions exceeding print circulation for the first time at the end of June 2012.  FT.com’s tablet audience is up 111 percent year-on-year (YoY) (PricewaterhouseCoopers-assured, May 2011 to 2012)  Smartphone audience is up 133 percent YoY (PricewaterhouseCoopers-assured, May 2011 to 2012)  30 percent of FT.com subscriber page views are on mobile, showing that its core audience is enthusiastically adopting these channels  14 percent of the FT’s total audience read the FT on more than one channel, an increase of 27 percent YoY (May 2011 to 2012) Wal-Mart CHALLENGE The Wal-Mart challenge is to leverage the web across multiple devices and environments to provide the best online and in-store shopping experience. PHILOSOPHY Wal-Mart’s web strategy of providing customers anytime-anywhere access to Wal-Mart is driven by an effort to better integrate in-store and online retailing and to create continuity between channels. Wal- Mart envisions a seamless experience across environments, whether in-store, on a mobile device, or at home on a desktop. The company is highly focused on associating intended use with the appropriate platform and technology in the appropriate context to enhance the shopping experience. This strategy’s effectiveness is then tested and validated through analytics. MULTI-DEVICE STRATEGY Wal-Mart has set online sales targets at $9 billion by fiscal year 2014 and is taking aggressive action in bolstering its web presence so that it can achieve that goal. The company is taking a multi-device strategy How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 21
  • 22. in seeking to enhance and unite online, mobile, and in-store shopping. Much of the emerging web strategy is being driven by Wal-Mart Global eCommerce, the Silicon Valley-based team that has been tasked with developing core technology to propel Wal-Mart into the next generation of ecommerce. Several innovations – including internal search, social media incorporation, ecommerce enhancements, and mobile developments – have been introduced over the past year. For example, the company is using Facebook and other social media to drive in-store sales through campaigns such as customers voting on which merchandise they would like to see "rollbacks" (temporary discounts) on. Wal-Mart is well-versed in monitoring the results of these strategies, in web performance in general, and in understanding the impact that performance has on business. When running performance tests in January 2012, Wal-Mart discovered that page-load times for the slowest 5 percent of users was reaching 24 seconds, a time that was too slow and causing lost sales. The company was able to shave off 8 seconds on average load time for the slowest 5 percent, which resulted in increased conversion rates. Figure 9. Wal-Mart correlation of page-load times to conversion rates Source: Wal-Mart MOBILE STRATEGY Wal-Mart’s mobile strategy unites the online and in-store experience and is poised to be disruptive to retail. The way people experience a store has not changed in 20 years, but now, more than half of How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 22
  • 23. shoppers walk into the store carrying a smartphone and present the potential to disrupt the status quo. Wal-Mart is embracing mobile’s disruptive nature by leveraging it to enhance the in-store experience. Wal-Mart envisions one Wal-Mart that seamlessly blends the power of various channels, including online, mobile, and in-store. Wal-Mart has recently enhanced its mobile app to promote this merging of mobile and physical retail. The new in-store mode feature of the Wal-Mart app enables customers to create shopping lists, view local ads, and access local store pricing and the aisle location of products. Wal-Mart is the only major retailer offering in-store mode on a massive scale, with the app functioning across 4,000 stores in the U.S. Features of the in-store mode include:  Price checker. Scan product barcodes to check prices and review product details.  Mobile shopping list. View local pricing and more for mobile shopping list items.  Aisle location. Find items faster by viewing aisle numbers for all mobile shopping list items.  QR code reader. Scan QR codes for special offers in Wal-Mart stores.  Interactive local ad. View local ads for store-specific information, including savings and events.  What’s new? See new merchandise and rollbacks available in local Wal-Mart stores. The in-store mode feature was created to incorporate the in-store element without creating an entirely separate app. The retailer wished to maintain a singular experience with an app that can flip over into in- store mode to access relevant shopping information and then, with one tap, flip back to ecommerce mode. Twelve percent of Wal-Mart’s daily sales on the mobile app occur when a customer is actually in a store and using the in-store mode. The mobile website, which is closer to a traditional online experience, continues to drive more sales than the app, but this integration of the app with the in-store experience, bringing context to mobile, is having a significant effect on how consumers shop. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 23
  • 24. Meeting the challenge The task of web content delivery is undoubtedly becoming more challenging. The complexities of the modern access environment, with its multiple device types, networks, and usage scenarios, requires a heightened level of consideration among all those involved in delivering the web experience. Not only do companies need to make the leap of faith to invest in mobile web-content delivery, but they also are faced with the conundrum of how to allocate these scarce resources among the numerous pain points currently associated with delivering the web experience. New solutions are meeting these challenges, from more robust and better-designed networks to improved device and browser performance to site-design tools that will optimize the user experience. Among the emerging solutions are:  Analytics. With myriad web-access situations, the need to understand the user’s situation (device type, network type, and environment) has become increasingly important; being able to adapt to changing situations dynamically and efficiently will continue to be an important trend for the industry.  Browser evolution. While a rapidly changing browser landscape can introduce additional complexity, it also allows for rapid incorporation of new functionality to improve the web experience. One example came in the third quarter of 2012 with the launch of the new Nokia Xpress Browser, which is capable of compressing websites and reducing data traffic by up to 90 percent.  Front-end optimization. Front-end encompasses all browser processes involved in generating a webpage, including fetching embedded objects, parsing style sheets, and executing JavaScript. As applications have become more complex and mobile-device usage has skyrocketed, the majority of user wait-time for any given page is spent on the front-end. Front-end optimization aims to reduce the number of requests and the size of the objects required to generate a page while also accelerating visual rendering. This can significantly improve overall website performance across browsers, networks, and devices.  Intelligent traffic routing. Content delivery technologies are being incorporated into mobile networks and allowing mobile operators to manage and prioritize content delivery on their networks. For example, Ericsson will integrate Akamai’s CDN technology into its network equipment, thus allowing more intelligent traffic-routing and introducing edge-caching capabilities to mobile networks. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 24
  • 25. LTE. The transition to 4G/LTE networks will provide an increase in bandwidth for wireless data traffic, bringing the speeds for mobile data closer to those for landline service and thus narrowing the performance gap on mobile devices versus desktops (or Wi-Fi-connected tablets). While these emerging solutions are targeted at networks and devices, website owners must also implement techniques that improve the functioning of their individual sites. They cannot rely on carrier networks to deliver a clunky mobile site at desktop speeds. An un-optimized website is not going to perform as well as one optimized for mobile, no matter what the browser capabilities are. Web experience is becoming an increasingly important component of a company’s competitive strategy. A user’s perception of a website is not just based on the speed of a page load but also on how quickly that page loads compared to other sites the user visits. If a company is not optimizing its site for a specific context – whether that is the user’s device, location, or intent – it is at a disadvantage to its competitors and risks losing revenue. The web experience must be tailored to the specific browser, network, and device combination being utilized to deliver the optimum experience. The diversity of user experiences has created many moving targets that impact web performance. Emerging products will work to simplify these challenges and deliver a consistent experience. Going forward, web strategies will be a marriage of efforts from multiple parties, from carrier adoption of LTE enhanced with CDN and analytic capabilities to device and browser evolution to website design incorporating capabilities such as responsive web design or optimization. The complexity of today’s web environment thus requires similar complexity in solution. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 25
  • 26. About Amy Cravens Amy Cravens is a longtime technology market analyst with domain expertise across a number of areas, including telecommunications, networking, media, software, and hardware. From 2001 to 2003, she was a lead analyst for In-Stat, helping to pioneer the company’s hotspot and Wi-Fi analysis. Since 2006, she has been involved in a number of projects for companies and market research vendors as an independent analyst. About GigaOM Pro GigaOM Pro gives you insider access to expert industry insights on emerging markets. Focused on delivering highly relevant and timely research to the people who need it most, our analysis, reports, and original research come from the most respected voices in the industry. Whether you’re beginning to learn about a new market or are an industry insider, GigaOM Pro addresses the need for relevant, illuminating insights into the industry’s most dynamic markets. Visit us at: pro.gigaom.com © 2012 Giga Omni Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved This publication may be used only as expressly permitted by license from GigaOM and may not be accessed, used, copied, distributed, published, sold, publicly displayed, or otherwise exploited without the express prior written permission of GigaOM. For licensing information, please contact us. How new devices, networks, and consumer habits will change the web experience 26