Google

Apple Is Being Hit Where It Hurts, It’s Apps

While most of the column inches dedicated to the Google vs. Apple smartphone war have focused on iOS and Android market share, Business Insider looks at the significance that the applications themselves might have in this battle.

With every Android phone on the market providing Google with a customer already ingrained into their environment, the company has upped its game in making Google-users out of iPhone customers.

Despite Apple removing the default YouTube app from its latest iOS upgrade and also replacing Google Maps in favour of its own deeply flawed offering, Google apps such as Chrome, YouTube and Gmail have become some of the most downloaded apps on the Apple store in recent months.

Maybe the shoddy Apple attempt at a maps application has given customers reason to question whether Apple’s pre-packaged iPhone apps can be bettered by the competition.

App Store Image

Posted by Rob in Apple, Apps, Google

What Can Madison Avenue of Old Teach Today’s Digital Marketers?

It might be an hour long, but this video from Google’s Project Re:Brief is well worth the watch. Five prominent advertising execs from the 1960’s and 1970’s are assembled to offer their take on the way marketing is done in today’s connected world.

To have great display advertising, you first have to have great advertising and with campaigns like Avis’ ‘We’re number 2, so we try harder’ and Coke’s ‘I’d like to buy the world a Coke’, these guys were making viral ads that grabbed the public’s attention long before the internet came along.


Posted by Rob in Advertising, Google, Old Media

The Relationship Between Frequent-Use Products and Payments

I was delighted the other week when Spotify finally launched in Ireland and immediately signed up to see what all the fuss was about. I buy a lot of music and have never been a big fan of streaming, always preferring to buy a CD or download but after having used Spotify pretty much non-stop for a couple of weeks, I admit I’m warming to the idea of streaming. Although I found myself using Spotify a huge amount, when it came to buying the music I was listening to, I went back to iTunes to make the purchase. Even though I discovered (and sampled) the ‘product’ through Spotify, I went back to the old reliable to actually part with my cash.

This hit home how big an advantage it is for a company to have an established footing in the online world. iTunes already have a huge user base in Ireland and have turned themselves into a frequent use product and this gives them a significant edge in the music space. When it comes to making purchases online or on mobile, people are lazy and don’t want to continuously set up new accounts. This is true for many aspects of the online world.

I think the convenience of using a service online that you’re already familiar with is a particularly big barrier to any new service on the net and, as Dave McClure points out, the key to success in payment systems is with frequent-use products. With companies like Apple, Google, Facebook, etc. quickly becoming the go-to-guys of the web, they are in a powerful position when it comes to leveraging their users into customers whether that be online or offline via mobile.

Passbook

Posted by Rob in Apple, Facebook, Google, Mobile Payments

The Google Job Experiment

This enterprising jobseeker has taken an innovative approach in getting the attention of potential employers. Watch the video below.

Posted by Rob in Advertising, Google