Adoption of the mobile Internet: An empirical study of multimedia message service (MMS)

Omega ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 715-726 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chin-Lung Hsu ◽  
Hsi-Peng Lu ◽  
Huei-Hsia Hsu
2009 ◽  
pp. 1558-1575
Author(s):  
Veronica Liljander ◽  
Pia Polsa ◽  
Kim Forsberg

Not until very recently has mobile phone technology become sophisticated enough to allow more complex customized programs, which enable companies to offer new services to customers as part of customer relationship management (CRM) programs. In order to enhance customer relationships and to be adopted by customers, new mobile services need to be perceived as valuable additions to existing services. The purpose of this study was to investigate the appeal of new mobile CRM services to airline customers. An empirical study was conducted among loyalty program customers (frequent flyers) of an airline that was considering using MIDlet applications in order to add new mobile services to enhance customer relationships. The results show that customers do not yet seem to be ready to fully embrace new mobile applications. Although the services appeared to slightly improve customers’ image of the airline, the services did not seem to enhance their loyalty towards it. However, customers who already used sophisticated mobile services, such as the Mobile Internet, had a significantly more positive attitude towards the proposed services. Thus the success of mobile CRM seems closely linked with customers’ readiness to use existing mobile services. Before engaging in costly new investments, companies need to take this factor into serious consideration.


2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Umberto Bertelè ◽  
Andrea Rangone ◽  
Filippo Renga

Author(s):  
Veronica Liljander ◽  
Pia Polsa ◽  
Kim Forsberg

Not until very recently has mobile phone technology become sophisticated enough to allow more complex customized programs, which enable companies to offer new services to customers as part of customer relationship management (CRM) programs. In order to enhance customer relationships and to be adopted by customers, new mobile services need to be perceived as valuable additions to existing services. The purpose of this study was to investigate the appeal of new mobile CRM services to airline customers. An empirical study was conducted among loyalty program customers (frequent flyers) of an airline that was considering using MIDlet applications in order to add new mobile services to enhance customer relationships. The results show that customers do not yet seem to be ready to fully embrace new mobile applications. Although the services appeared to slightly improve customers’ image of the airline, the services did not seem to enhance their loyalty towards it. However, customers who already used sophisticated mobile services, such as the Mobile Internet, had a significantly more positive attitude towards the proposed services. Thus the success of mobile CRM seems closely linked with customers’ readiness to use existing mobile services. Before engaging in costly new investments, companies need to take this factor into serious consideration.


2016 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-14
Author(s):  
Nadine Köhler ◽  
Sandra Meister

Mobile Marketing bietet aufgrund der steigenden Penetration des Smartphones und der Entwicklung des Mobilen Internets interessante Ansätze für den stationären Lebensmitteleinzelhandel. Im Rahmen einer empirischen Untersuchung unter 216 deutschen Smartphone-Usern wurde die Bekanntheit und Akzeptanz moderner Mobile Marketing Instrumente und deren Bedeutung im Kaufprozess untersucht. Hierbei zeigt sich eine hohe Bekanntheit, aber noch großes Potenzial in der Nutzung insbesondere beim täglichen Einkauf. Hauptbarrieren stellen fehlende Bekanntheit und fehlender Nutzen der Dienste dar. Die Rolle der Instrumente variiert während des Kaufprozesses. Insgesamt werden die Instrumente positiv bewertet und Konsumenten stehen zusätzlichen Services positiv gegenüber. Wichtig ist hierbei jedoch ein erlebbarer Zusatznutzen und Transparenz aus Konsumentensicht. Mobile Marketing offers interesting opportunities for retail marketing due to high penetration of smartphones and the rapid evolution of mobile internet. The results of an empirical study prove that most consumers know about the instruments, but there is still unleveraged potential for use especially during daily shopping. Main barriers are a lack of awareness and missing value. The instruments prove different relevancy during purchase decision process. Keywords: nutzungsbarrieren, marketing mix, kaufentscheidungsprozesse


Author(s):  
Mohd Aidil Riduan Awang Kader ◽  
Suhana Mohezar Ali ◽  
Roslina Ali ◽  
Nor Khairunnisa Mat Yunus ◽  
Shamsul Nizam Mohamed Badri

2008 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 47-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shalini N Tripathi ◽  
Masood H Siddiqui

In the current scenario, mobile internet applications enable consumers to access a variety of services: Web information search, SMS (short message service), MMS (multimedia message service), banking, payment, gaming, e-mailing, chat, weather forecast, GPS (global positioning service), and so forth. Collectively, we denominate this wide array of services as “mcommerce.” These digital media are considered to potentially improve the possibilities to reach consumers by allowing personalization of the content and context of the message. Combining customer's user profile and the context situation, advertising companies can provide the target customers exactly the advertisement information they desire, not just “spam” them with irrelevant advertisements. Drawing from Nysveen, Pedersen, and Thorbjornsen's (2005) grid of mobile internet services classification, this study attempts to critically analyse “person interactive” (goal-oriented) information and “person interactive” (experiential) messaging, targeting both utilitarian and hedonic benefits from the consumers' perspective. It analyses the effectiveness of mobile advertising in its current format (as prevalent in India). ‘Effectiveness’ for the purpose of this study has been concretized in terms of impact of mobile advertising on the purchase decision of the consumer. However, results of binary logistic regression indicate that mobile advertising in its current format does not have a significant impact on the purchase decision of a consumer, and that there might be other significant factors like a firm's marketing efforts (marketing mix), a consumers' socio-cultural environment (family, informal sources, non-commercial sources, social class, culture and sub-culture), and an individual's psychological field (motivation, perception, learning, personality, and attitudes) that affect his purchase decision. Mobile advertising in its current format is very generic in its approach, as substantiated by factor analysis performed on the data — marketing communication through mobiles primarily lacked in contextualization and perceived usefulness (for the target customers), and were disruptive in nature. Although mobiles are a powerful mode of marketing communication, the important issues at stake here are— what to say, how to say it, to whom, and how often. Communications get more and more difficult, as a large number of companies clamour for getting the consumers' increasingly divided attention through various means. Hence the challenge lies in customizing the marketing communication to suit individual needs (Customerization), i.e., reaching the right target market with the right message at the right time. Also, variations in consumer responsiveness towards mobile advertising have been examined using Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP). Finally, some features enhancing the utilitarian and hedonic benefits drawn (or expected) from mobile advertising are prioritized. This enhancement of benefits can be implemented by incorporating Intelligent Software Agents, which make customerization of marketing messages a reality—delivering all the desired benefits (utilitarian⁄hedonic) to the consumers. Software Agents are programmes which fulfill a task independently on behalf of the user and can be adapted to the individual preferences and parameters of its instructor; software agents operate without intervention of the user at a specific problem definition.


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