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Opinion: Why mobile coupons are not the answer

By Jeff Weidauer

A couple of interesting statistics were published recently about Facebook, the dominant force online. The first, to no one’s surprise, is that Facebook passed the 500 million user mark, putting it firmly ahead of Google as the most-visited site on the Web. The second statistic is somewhat astonishing. According to the 2010 American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) E-Business Report, Facebook scored 64 on a 100-point satisfaction scale, putting the site in the bottom 5 percent of all measured private sector companies. This ranking is so low that, according to ACSI, even the Internal Revenue Service scored higher.

The natural question is, why the exponential growth when so many people are unhappy with the service? The primary reason is most likely a value question: Facebook is free, so users are more likely to use it despite their complaints. Another reason is momentum. Once you’ve invested the time and effort to engage your friends and developed habits with Facebook, it’s tough to change. And that leads to a third reason — there isn’t a strong alternative. MySpace is arguably worse than Facebook, so absent a viable option, Facebook keeps its fans and keeps growing.

There is an apt analogy to the world of coupons. Coupon use has skyrocketed in the past 24 months or so, as the economy faltered. Shoppers looking for ways to save money returned to their old habits and started clipping coupons. In addition, websites have popped up that allow coupons to be printed for offline use, and other sites have appeared as aggregators where participants can trade coupons with one another. In fact, a new study from Performics relates how social media is affecting consumer behavior, and one notable point from the study is that people want more coupons delivered via social media.


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It was a short leap from there to putting a coupon on a mobile device. With nearly every adult (and many kids) carrying a mobile phone, the transition from paper coupons to mobile began very quickly, for good reason: distribution was, theoretically at least, quick and cheap.

Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO, was recently quoted in Fast Company magazine, himself quoting Henry Ford: “If I’d have asked people what they wanted, they would’ve said a faster horse.” Mr. Jobs’ point was that the iPod, as well as Apple’s other game-changing ideas, did not come out of focus groups or quantitative research; they came from understanding human behavior, and finding opportunity there.

What people really want, but don’t know how to ask for, are ways to save money that are relevant to them. They know about coupons, so they think in those terms. No one is thinking “affordable car.” They are thinking — you guessed it — “faster horse.”

Displaying a coupon barcode on a mobile phone is a ham-fisted way to address this need for value. Coupons have always been a poor way to drive sales, but again, absent a viable alternative, they have hung in there for much longer than their ability to drive incremental sales should have allowed. Putting a coupon barcode on a mobile device does nothing to make the coupon more effective, and only minimally more measurable or targeted.

Given the near-ubiquity of mobile devices, the opportunity to engage with customers in a meaningful manner, all while driving profitable sales via measurable marketing efforts, far exceeds the paltry returns of mobile coupons. Of course, this is a tougher road to travel, with IT investment required to develop infrastructure and back-end analytics.

Designing and building an affordable car for the masses was tougher than breeding a faster horse, but the results have quite literally changed the world. The question of whether a few years from now we will look back on today as a time of transition to more effective marketing tools, or sticking with the old world because it was easier, has yet to be answered.

The goal of loyalty cards has long been to more effectively market to consumers based on behavior. But while gathering and analyzing data was relatively simple, getting relevant offers to guests based on that data was considerably more challenging, as well as costly. Mobile devices will sooner or later become the preferred way to connect to consumers and will ultimately take on the role of loyalty device, replacing not just coupons, but cards and key tags as well.

Thanks to mobile devices, and the smart phone in particular, reaching customers in real-time is easier, cheaper, and more effective than ever. But putting a barcode on the screen to be scanned like a paper coupon makes about as much sense as putting a saddle across the driver’s seat of your new hybrid, and will have about the same effect on its usefulness.

Jeff Weidauer is Vice President of Marketing for Vestcom International Inc., a provider of technological retail solutions. (Photo by Marco Arment.)

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  • Vincent Furey
    about 21 months ago
    Jeff,
    This is what my instincts tell me.....you're someone who is probably middle age and intimidated by technology. This is the case with a lot of marketing directors who..unfortunately are the ones who are controlling the dollars. You're pretty much "skimming" components of mobile couponing "schemes" such as ones that use bar codes that are displayed on the phone's screen. I can already tell you forward and backwards why mobile coupons haven't totally taken off (yet). That reason is the closed eco-system of the past where application companies would have to "hug the carriers" and be on deck in order to get traffic. We've shifted away from that greatly. The search engines are what is going to make mobile couponing successful. Period. End of discussion. It's not that people are necessarily searching specifically for mobile coupons (they are doing that too) but it's more about someone searching for things to do around (go out to eat, golf, shop) etc on their phone browsers and then bump into a mobile optimized page with offers that relate to what they are searching for. As things get more mature and the government stops butting in (i.e. mobile recommendation engine technology becomes legal again) mobile coupons will be pumped into every mobile optimized site that has anything to do with every day life.......and use will skyrocket. In short...the search engines and recommendation engines will save the day.
  • Peter Schultz
    about 21 months ago
    I agree and disagree to your comments above. For most companies, Barcodes on mobile phones are not a valid solution. But using mobile devices to drive sales works and brings in a lot of revenue. We have run campaigns for our clients that have seen more than 1% response rates on TV advertising (according to Nielsen ratings) and 113% redemption rates (most food campaigns see 50-65% redemption).

    The problem that I see more and more is the lack of knowledge of 1) what the phone can/should do and 2) bad mobile sales pitches that give the restaurant false impressions on what to expect for ROI.

    I hear more and more restaurants thinking they need an application or to use Bluetooth or even barcodes, but to your point, don't have the infrastructure to support the campaigns.

    Mobile Coupons are a fantastic way to drive sales, but with all discounting comes sacrifice.
  • Vincent Furey
    about 21 months ago
    Peter,

    The focus should not be on bar codes. They are a small piece of the puzzle.
    You need to broaden your research and just see bar codes as a component to mobile couponing.

    I just want to note too that I'm not in any way saying that people's age determines their openness to mobile strategies. It's just that over the years
    I've had many conversations with "decision makers" at large publishing houses, agencies, brands, etc that would almost laugh you off the phone when you'd pitch mobile strategies. Now suddenly everyone wants a mobile strategy. Most of the people were late 40's early 50's executives that felt uncomfortable discussing something that was perhaps foreign to them (mobile web, etc).
  • Peter Schultz
    about 21 months ago
    Vincent,

    I agree that there is a big push for a "mobile strategy". I guess what I was trying to get across is that there is so much noise, it's hard for a company to build that strategy. I feel for them, I have been on many calls where the client is so confused, they don;t know which end is up. That is typically where they decide to do nothing.

    You're obviously smart and the mobile industry needs more people like you and less people that sell just to sell.

    Thanks!
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