Mobile Content Goes a Step Up (Some Recommendations on how it can go Higher)

Posted by Harshil Karia on December 10th, 2007.

We recently wrote about Mobi Worx Pvt. Ltd, a mobile content specialist that plans to provide users with free Value Added Services by showing them ads before providing the services.

 

 

In that analysis I mentioned that its key to incorporate the elements of Indian Culture such as cinema and cricket in order to hook users and drive revenue.

 

 

One has also seen the mobile phone market grow phenomenally in India in terms of reach and penetration (291 million mobile subscribers). In terms of revenue generation per customer, it currently stands at Rs. 300 per customer per month on an average which is not very promising. Mobile operators are thus looking at ways to boost revenues. Initially they did that through ringtones, wallpapers, quotes, updates etc. (they are still doing that) – now the focus is shifting to video ringtones, animation material, complete audio etc. (which is due to the increased penetration of high end mobile phones – we will try and get the exact figures for that) And its not surprising that the Bollywood paradigm is being used to leverage the revenue making potential of the newer content.

 

 

Dus Kahaaniyaan, Sanjay Gupta’s latest film has launched mobile related content including videos of dialogues, video ringtones, music videos, and the usual mix of wallpapers, caller tunes, ringtones etc. Many films have used the mobile platform to market their movies – but Dus Kahaniyaan seems to be one of the few who has tried to extend the experience beyond the usual wallpaper, ringtone, contest paradigm.

 

 

The key again is to package mobile content effectively and optimize it for mobile screens keeping in mind the screen size, audio quality , user environment, user attention span etc. Over time extensive market research will be done on these factors and there will be firms which will carve out specific niches which will then become more than niches once mobile content becomes a key revenue driver for service operators and marketers alike. One such firm in India is People Infocom (Mauj), which is optimizing content for Dus Kahaniyaan.

 

 

One needs to keep in mind that:
- Like wallpapers and ringtones etc, videos and animation will also become stale in a few years. So the key is to keep providing freshness – like making the process more interactive; possibly allow users to enact scenes in the movies on their mobile phones. Maybe even try and change the plot of the movie through games – script their own dialogues etc. That makes the project more ‘hookworthy’
- Mobile phone operators will thus need to update their hardware to support such services and subsequently their revenues. (Vodafone was down in most of Mumbai on Saturday – if they cant support voice how will they support interactive graphic based ‘heavy’ services?)

 

 

Leveraging mobile phones to create a branding experience for films is a smart strategy – there are possibilities for film makers to extend the brand of the film beyond the film itself eg. Games, clothing lines, chains etc – basically make the film a pop cultural phenomenon.

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4 Responses

    vaneet Says:

    Though a lot of innovation has come in the development of mobile content, I think a lot needs to be done in growing the actual contact points with the consumer.
    Visibility and cost to consumer remain the biggest factor hitting the sector.

    Harshil Karia Says:

    True, agree with that whole heartedly. Visibility is one problem that probably needs the involvement of other forms of media. In terms of cost to the consumer, players like Mobi Worx, which i mentioned in another post on WATBlog - has been working on a model where users can view ads, and get free mobile VAS content in return. So thats how cost will be taken care of i guess - mobile will go the TV and newspaper way - where ads can pay for content.

    In terms of visibility too this kind of a strategy works because its pull rather than push. That will remain atleast till someone comes up with a mobile P2P, where like in TV, advertisers can be bypassed altogether.

    Thanks though! Your comment added a lot more depth to the article, something i may have missed out. Hope you are enjoying WATBlog :)

    Youpark Says:

    Mobile content is actually at its threshold, but fully loaded, and room for improvement and innovations does exist. Nice to know about mobile features of the movie BTW!

    sri vikas Says:

    harshil,

    i would like to make a small correction here. the company name is “mobile-worx” and we are giving out free mobile content to end-user via our mobile social networking platform called- mklix. you can access it through- www.mklix.com.

    what we are doing is simply bring mobile content developers and advertisers under one roof. for every downloads by the end-users there will be ads embedded inside the content and therefore share the revenues generated from the advertisers with the content providers. simple!

    finally, i would like to add that i have been reading WATBlog for a year and completely enjoy reading it cos its very in-depth and very informative.

    thanks…
    vikas
    Product Manager

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