By Editor on March 15, 2010 · Leave a Comment
In order to boost up the ranking of its Battle Bears iPhone game, the SkyVu Pictures ran a mobile ad campaign via the AdMob ad network.
According to Benjamin Vu, founder of SkyVu Bellevue, CA, the company’s major update to Battle Bears was released during a very competitive holiday season. The company launched a weekend burst campaign for the iPhone game, with the help of AdMob, which catapulted both the company’s paid and free versions back into the top 50.
Basically SkyVu Pictures is an animation studio specializing in computer generated animation for commercials ads and entertainment projects. The campaign aimed at pushing Battle ears Free into the top 100 overall free applications.
The ad campaigns not just increased the daily volume of the application by 1000 percent but also increased the daily paid download volume of the application by a stunning 300 percent. Even the ranking of the free application improved from 150 to 59.
According to Johanna Werther, manager of product marketing at AdMob, San Mateo, CA, Battle Bears came to the company with the goal of pushing the app into their Top 100 Free Apps, driving downloads and boosting the ranking of its paid version. By displaying Battle Bears ads within AdMob’s network of mobile applications, users had the opportunity to easily download the application and the results for Battle Bears were Strong.
Battle Bears is a one-person shooter game in which the player has to control a renegade teddy bear hidden behind sandbags while he shoots at the enemy teddy bears.
By Editor on March 11, 2010 · Leave a Comment
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: A sworn declaration has been seeked by US regulators from Google Inc. competitors and advertisers. The declaration is the part of the regulators probe of the Internet Company’s bid to buy AdMob Inc., indicating the government may challenge the deal.
Google’s proposed purchase of AdMob is under the Federal Trade Commission investigation to find out whether the deal would reduce competition in the market for Internet advertising on mobile phones.
AdMob sells ads that appear on Web pages and applications on mobile phones and the agency is assessing whether the purchase would let Google parlay its dominance in Internet searches on computers to phones.
Declarations are collected by Agency officials when they think there is some significant chance. The court will be asked by the agency to block a merger, or seek to modify a deal.
Google on the other hand has decided to continue the talk with the FTC and provide information. The deal between Google and AdMob will give rise to the largest mobile- advertising company in the USA reigning over 21% of the market in 2009.
According to Thomas Ensign, counsel in the antitrust, competition and trade practice of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP in Washington, it is difficult to envision a scenario where this development, if true, is positive for Google-AdMob but it doesn’t necessarily mean the agency is going to challenge the deal.
Agency’s staff might be persuaded by the negotiation between Google and the FTC that the deal won’t harm competition but at the end of the investigation it’s up to the agency’s commissioners to decide whether to challenge the deal in court.
By Editor on January 8, 2010 · Leave a Comment
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: In a $275 million deal, mobile advertising delivery company Quattro Wireless has been acquired by Apple. According to the VP Andy Miller, offerings and services from Quattro Wireless will not change as of now and the company will continue to operate the Quattro Wireless network across all devices and platforms.
The deal came after Google’s acquisition of AdMob which has a virtual stranglehold on the traditional online advertising market, in November for $750m in stock. However, the deal is now under scrutiny by the Federal Trade Commission for possible antitrust violations.
Quattro will be used by Apple as a selling point to attract developers who make applications for the iPhone and iPod touch. Apple can better enable their app providers with Quattro to generate revenue through advertising.
By admin on November 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment
Google has been on the prowl acquiring some strategic companies in what could be termed as the next frontier. After acquring Admob, Techcrunch has reported that it is to
acquire VOIP Start-up Gizmo5 for about USD 30 Million.
The deal comes after Skype successfully negotiated a deal with its former owners Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, to maintain full possession of the
technology it requires to operate.
Gizmo5, operated by Michael Robertson (of mp3.com fame), was reportedly in discussions with Skype about a potential
acquisition should the company lose its legal battle with its former founders. But since that dela has gone through now, Skype no longer requires Gizmo5 as a potential back-up plan.
Google will now set itself up as a VOIP provider to rival Skype, which holds the vast majority of the market and accounts for 8% of all international
voice traffic.
While Google already offers a feature for users to speak over the
internet via
Google Talk/Voice, it does not have the ability to make incoming or outbound calls to “real” telephones – a service Gizmo5 has already established. Interestingly, Gizmo5 has already been integrated with Google Voice, a service that replaces a user’s telephone numbers with a single number for all devices.
Google has been on the prowl acquiring some strategic companies in what could be termed as the next frontier. After acquring Admob, Techcrunch has reported that it is to acquire VOIP Start-up Gizmo5 for about USD 30 Million.
The deal comes after Skype successfully negotiated a deal with its former owners Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, to maintain full possession of the technology it requires to operate.
Gizmo5, operated by Michael Robertson (of mp3.com fame), was reportedly in discussions with Skype about a potential acquisition should the company lose its legal battle with its former founders. But since that dela has gone through now, Skype no longer requires Gizmo5 as a potential back-up plan.
Google will now set itself up as a VOIP provider to rival Skype, which holds the vast majority of the market and accounts for 8% of all international voice traffic.
While Google already offers a feature for users to speak over the internet via Google Talk/Voice, it does not have the ability to make incoming or outbound calls to “real” telephones – a service Gizmo5 has already established. Interestingly, Gizmo5 has already been integrated with Google Voice, a service that replaces a user’s telephone numbers with a single number for all devices.
Filed under Mobile ·
Tagged with VoIP, Admob, Friis, Google, International, International Calling, Janus, Michael Robertson, Niklas Zennstrom, Skype, Techcrunch, Voice Traffic, WirelessFederation
By Editor on November 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment
Google has just announced that it has acquired AdMob, the
mobile advertising company, for $750 million.
Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners, DFJ and Northgate Capital will see a huge upside from this investment.
AdMob founder Omar Hamoui sent the following letter to customers:
Today we announced that AdMob has signed a definitive agreement to be acquired by Google for $750 million. We are extremely excited about this new partnership and what it means for our advertiser, developer and publisher partners.
AdMob’s people, products and tools will continue to work to deliver successful campaigns for you and to effectively monetize your mobile traffic no interruptions. Our product and engineering teams will keep building great products for our customers. Our sales team will keep working with our thousands of advertisers to deliver successful campaigns. Our business development team will keep working to maximize ad revenue for the more than 15,000 mobile Web sites and
applications that make up AdMob’s publisher network.
After our deal closes, AdMob will work with Google to accelerate the pace of innovation in mobile and do an even better job for you. We believe this deal will benefit our advertisers, developers and publishers by:
*Increasing our investment in building innovative and engaging ad units across platforms and to further improve targeting and tracking.
*Building even more powerful relevance and optimization capabilities, and more powerful
technology and tools to monetize mobile traffic.
*Improving the already high level of service and support we deliver to our advertisers, developers and publishers.
Google has written its own blog post announcing the Admob deal:
iPhone and Android users browse the Internet more often than anyone else [Morgan Stanley], contributing to Google’s 5x mobile search growth over the past two years
And a quarter of these same iPhone and Android users spend nearly 90 minutes per day using applications on their devices [AdMob]
Google has also set up a website to explain the benefits of the AdMob acquisition, detailing the rapidly growing (and still in its infancy) mobile advertising space. Google has also shown what it has currently vis-a-vis where admob is popular today:
Google has just announced that it has acquired AdMob, the mobile advertising company, for $750 million.
Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners, DFJ and Northgate Capital will see a huge upside from this investment.
AdMob founder Omar Hamoui sent the following letter to customers:
Today we announced that AdMob has signed a definitive agreement to be acquired by Google for $750 million. We are extremely excited about this new partnership and what it means for our advertiser, developer and publisher partners.
AdMob’s people, products and tools will continue to work to deliver successful campaigns for you and to effectively monetize your mobile traffic no interruptions. Our product and engineering teams will keep building great products for our customers. Our sales team will keep working with our thousands of advertisers to deliver successful campaigns. Our business development team will keep working to maximize ad revenue for the more than 15,000 mobile Web sites and applications that make up AdMob’s publisher network.
After our deal closes, AdMob will work with Google to accelerate the pace of innovation in mobile and do an even better job for you. We believe this deal will benefit our advertisers, developers and publishers by:
- Increasing our investment in building innovative and engaging ad units across platforms and to further improve targeting and tracking.
- Building even more powerful relevance and optimization capabilities, and more powerful technology and tools to monetize mobile traffic.
- Increasing the effectiveness of display advertising on mobile devices by leveraging Google sales team, infrastructure and relationships.
- Improving the already high level of service and support we deliver to our advertisers, developers and publishers.
Google has written its own blog post announcing the Admob deal:
iPhone and Android users browse the Internet more often than anyone else [Morgan Stanley], contributing to Google’s 5x mobile search growth over the past two years..
And a quarter of these same iPhone and Android users spend nearly 90 minutes per day using applications on their devices [AdMob]
Google has also shown in its press section, what it has currently vis-a-vis where admob is popular today:

Google -Admob
As Google points out, the deal follows similar acquisitions by traditional online companies looking to move into mobile: AOL bought Third Screen Media more than two years ago, Yahoo picked up Actionality and Microsoft bought ScreenTonic.
Filed under Mobile ·
Tagged with Acquisition, Admob, Advertiser, Georgia, Innovation, Mobile Advertising, Mobile Search, Morgan Stanley, Oman, Sequoia Capital, USA
By Editor on November 14, 2006 · Leave a Comment
Discovery Channel’s I Shouldn’t Be Alive profiles people who have survived some pretty unusual (and life-threatening) ordeals, from shipwrecks to snowstorms. It’s also relying on an unconventional way to hype the show: cell-phone marketing.
On the eve of the second season’s debut, Discovery Channel began offering prizes, free ringtones, and weekly trivia questions via short text messages(SMS) to subscribers of some of the country’s biggest mobile-phone companies — Cingular Wireless, Sprint Nextel (S), and T-Mobile.
So far, more than 15,000 people have signed up to receive SMS trivia and reminders to watch the show, and they are among its most loyal fans, says Julie Willis, senior vice-president for marketing at Discovery. “We are getting a lot bolder about mobile marketing,” she says. “This is something everybody should be doing.”
“THE MARKET HAS ARRIVED.” Many companies are heeding the advice. For years, fans of American Idol have been able to vote for contestants using SMS over the network of AT&T Wireless, now part of Cingular Wireless. Last year 12% of major U.S. brands, including McDonald’s (MCD), Coca-Cola (COKE), and American Express (AXP), spent dollars on mobile-phone marketing and advertising, says mobile marketing agency ipsh, whose 200 clients include Discovery Channel. The number may triple this year.
A trickle of mobile-marketing dollars may soon become a flood, transforming the way wireless-service providers and their vendors do business.
U.S. spending on marketing and advertising over wireless networks may surge to $602.3 million in 2009, from $104.4 million last year, according to consultancy visiongain. And that’s one of the more conservative estimates. RBC Capital figures the market will reach $1.5 billion by 2010. ipsh generated as much revenue in the month of February as it did in half of 2005, ipsh CEO Nihal Mehta. “While [mobile marketing] used to be part of companies’ online budget, now it’s become a separate budget line,” he says. “The market has arrived.”
PAY PER VIEW. John Stratton, chief marketing officer at Verizon Wireless, the leading U.S. wireless service provider after Cingular, recently told advertising execs he believes mobile advertising will eventually grab 25% to 30% of the approximately $100 billion spent on branding in the U.S. each year. Considering that U.S. wireless operators generate about $100 billion in service revenue annually, the industry is eyeing one of its biggest revenue opportunities in decades.
And as the industry matures, growth will become harder to come by. Cell-phone companies are on the lookout for new ways to generate sales. According to a new KPMG global survey of 3,576 consumers, about 40% say they’re unwilling to spend more on wireless services than they do now. “Only a small portion of subscribers will be willing to pay much more,” says Marcia Kaplan, an analyst with visiongain.
Even as per-minute wireless call prices drop, the cost of mobile advertising is rising. Prices for an average mobile ad campaign have been going up by a factor of five annually, says ipsh’s Mehta, whose first campaign, back in 2001, cost only $1,000. Advertisers can pay per every SMS viewed, or every ad clicked.
WANT ADS WITH THAT? Mobile ads are highly effective (see BW Online, 3/20/06, “Wiser About the Web”). Last summer, when ipsh incorporated a special SMS code into 50 million McDonald’s Big Mac packages (burger fans could dial a special SMS code on their mobiles for a chance to win concert tickets), the fast-food chain attributed a 3% sales increase to the push, Mehta says.
As mobile advertising takes hold, business models will change. Most wireless-service-related sales still come from voice phone calls. But the fastest growth is in the area of nonvoice data, from SMS to video to Web access. Wireless data sales surged 85%, to $3.7 billion, in the first six months of 2005 from a year earlier, according to CTIA-The Wireless Assn.
By 2008, about 10% of all data revenue may come from marketing and advertising, Kaplan estimates. Xero Mobile, which plans to offer free wireless service and instead rely on ads, is expected to debut this year.
JEEP ON THE HORN. Another revenue opportunity lies in the software that makes mobile ads tick. On Mar. 20, VeriSign (VRSN) shelled out $250 million for m-Qube, a maker of software that enables mobile commerce as well as cell-phone marketing. “We’ve seen tremendous growth in that part of our business,” says Jeff Glass, CEO of m-Qube.
It’s not alone: Sales of Enpocket, whose data-mining software allows advertisers to more accurately target cell-phone users, have risen 100% in the past year, due to strong U.S. demand, says CEO Mike Baker. The company plans to increase its 75-employee-strong staff by 33% in 2006, he says.
Content providers are jumping on the mobile advertising bandwagon as well. MobiTV, which provides video clips to subscribers of Sprint, Cingular, and Alltel (AT), launched an advertising platform last November. The software inserts three minutes of ads into each hour of MobiTV programming. Click an ad for Jeep, and you can go to a whole video channel dedicated to fun movies related to that car.
GOOGLE JOINS IN. So far, advertisers like DaimlerChrysler’s (DCX) Jeep brand and American Express “have been very pleased,” says Phillip Alvelda, MobiTV chairman and CEO. “The advertising’s growth is very fast, it’s moving in the right direction.” MobiTV shares its ad revenue with its carrier partners.
And a slew of startups are trying to get in on the act, aiming to replicate the success of Google’s AdSense, but in the mobile space. AdMob, which debuted in January, lets advertisers bid for posting ads on specialized mobile sites, offering free games and ringtones. Google (GOOG) is ramping up Web-search capabilities that will soon be available on cell phones from the likes of Motorola (MOT) (see BW Online, 03/02/06, “Why Google Is Going Mobile”).
But operators need to guard against bombarding subscribers with ad-spam. SMS and airtime cost users money, so advertisers today must require consumers to opt in to receive their marketing messages, according to just-released guidelines from the Mobile Marketing Assn.
THANKS, BUT NO THANKS. The trick is finding the right incentives. A Jupiter Research survey of 2,200 consumers in May showed that 20% say they might be induced to receive promotions if it comes with free airtime, ringtones, games, or a free new cell phone. Discovery Channel has a different approach. It sends users trivia questions related to coming episodes of I Shouldn’t Be Alive.
But 80% of mobile users are adamant about not wanting any ads at all. And it’s that majority that will determine whether mobile marketing really lives.
Source- <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2006/tc20060324_684493.htm” target=”_blank”>businessweek Wireless Mobile Telecom