"TRENDBIRD (What's Next Big Thing ?)" is a Social Trend Research & Consulting Service that instantly
                 delivers to you industry Expert information on Future Trends from around the World,
                 so you can recognize Opportunities and make informed Decisions Ahead of the Curve.


  BOOKMARK            [EMERGING TRENDS]     Mobile   Consumer   Twitter   iPhone   Green   PDF



[Investing] SMS Network GupShup Closes $12M Round


사용자 삽입 이미지


In December, Indian SMS-based social network GupShup announced that they had amassed more than 25 million users. A few weeks ago, they inked a deal with Facebook to let the social network’s users go mobile. GupShup CEO Beerud Sheth (in photo) claims to account for 5 percent of all SMS traffic in India.

Now, Webaroo, the parent company behind GupShup, has announced a fourth round of funding led by Globespan Capital Partners, with additional financing from existing investors Charles River Ventures and Helion Venture Partners. This is on top of $22 million in prior funding.

Venky Ganesan, managing director of Globespan Capital Partners, will join GupShup’s board of directors. The funding will be used, the company said in an email, to add another 20 headcount and to expand into other markets such as the Philippines and India.

The company, founded in 2007, has offices in Mumbai and Santa Clara.


사용자 삽입 이미지





[venturebeat]


 

[Product] Insignia's GPS "Little Buddy Child Tracker"


사용자 삽입 이미지


With a name like "Little Buddy Child Tracker," you know this thing has to be awful, right? Insignia, Best Buy's house brand, has just listed an incredibly invasive and humiliating new GPS tracker on its site, and rather than promoting it as just that, the marketing brains have decided it best to aim this at paranoid mums and dads who've done such a poor job raising their offspring that they can't even trust 'em to trek out on their own.

All sensationalism aside, there's little Insignia can say or do to remedy the product labeling job, but if you're okay with shoving this extra-small stick into your youngster's lunch box, you can keep tabs on his / her exact location and have alerts sent to you via SMS if they leave a designated area. Just make sure they don't ever know that you were responsible for planting this thing on their person, else you can forget about junior footing those nursing home bills when the time comes.


사용자 삽입 이미지

사용자 삽입 이미지




[engadget]


 

[Business] Instant Local Gifts Via SMS - KangoGift


사용자 삽입 이미지


Back in 2006 we wrote about cadeaucode.nl, a Dutch site that lets mobile users send each other gifts by text message. Now from across the ocean comes KangoGift, a new site that enables similar capabilities.

Launched into beta last week, KangoGift has partnered with a variety of gift retailers starting in its home base of Harvard Square, Mass. Now anyone in the world can visit KangoGift.com to purchase a gift for a friend or loved one in that neck of the woods, providing that person's mobile number in the process.

As soon as they place their order, a text voucher for that gift is delivered instantaneously to the recipient, who can then redeem it as soon as they choose. Real-world goods currently on offer through KangoGift include gourmet sweets, foods and flowers, but a selection of free, virtual gifts are available as well.

KangoGift hopes to expand throughout the US in the near future. Retailers of gifts and treats: start lining up now! ;-) And for more on real-time commerce, real-time marketing and real-time everything else, check out trendwatching.com's latest briefing on NOWISM.


사용자 삽입 이미지



About KangoGift

KangoGift is a fun and quick way for people to send gifts as text message (SMS) vouchers to their friends' cell phones. Gift recipients then stop by a store, present their voucher, and redeem their gift. KangoGift helps its retail partners increase revenue, store traffic, and brand image.

KangoGift's beta site launched in October, 2009 in Cambridge, MA with a great selection of items from the most popular businesses in Harvard Square. At its core, KangoGift helps connect friends through the site's ability to send instant gifts that range from small things like a cup of coffee for an afternoon break or occasional gifts such as flowers or dinner. KangoGift also offers virtual gifts for those who don't know someone in Boston, but still want to share the fun of sending a KangoGift to a friend's phone.

KangoGift was founded by Todd Horton and a team of extremely talented and experienced internet, marketing, and gift-giving executives. Todd's 10+ years working with internet companies in the US, Korea, China, and across Europe have provided him with unique insight into the emerging opportunity of virtual goods and mobile commerce. KangoGift is committed to ensuring that all customers and corporate partners have a great experience. We invite your feedback into ways we can make KangoGift even more fun to use!


[springwise]



 

[Consumer] Consumers Turning to e-mail & SMS for Coupons


The Sunday newspapers and other print sources are still the leading place Americans turn to for coupons, but text messages and e-mails are gaining in popularity. According to Scarborough Research, 8.6 million (or 8 percent) of U.S. households currently acquire coupons via text messages and/or email.

사용자 삽입 이미지

[image from moneymailer]


Sunday newspapers are still the most popular way households obtain coupons at 51 percent, followed by in-store coupons (35 percent), mail (31 percent), loyalty card programs (21 percent), in-store circulars (20 percent), weekday newspapers (17 percent), product packages (16 percent), magazines (15 percent) and Internet sites (7 percent).

Not surprisingly, consumers that obtain coupons via text or e-mail tend to be young, affluent, educated and female, with 14 percent more likely than the average adult to be between 18 and 24; and 51 percent more likely to be a college graduate or have an advanced degree.

A number of factors have contributed to the increasing use of text or e-mail coupons, such as the increase usage of cell phones and other personal communications devices, which allow consumers to access offers at the point of purchase. And because consumers must opt in to receive the coupons, they tend to be more targeted.

"Coupons received via text messaging are typically sent only to consumers who have opted in to receive them. This increases the relevancy of the offer and the potential for the consumer to act on that offer," said Gary Meo, senior vp of digital media and print services for Scarborough, a joint venture between Arbitron and Nielsen, the parent company of Mediaweek.

The top market for text and/or e-mail coupon users is Providence, R. I., where 12 percent of households obtain coupons via text or e-mail, followed by Washington, D.C.; Atlanta, Ga.; San Diego, Calif.; Austin, Texas; and Chicago, Ill., all at 11 percent.


사용자 삽입 이미지


[mediaweek]


 

[Consumer] How Consumers Use Their Mobile Phones


Voice and text still tops.


A multicountry study from Lightspeed Research sheds light on how consumers use their mobile phones in the US, UK, France and Germany.

Users in the US and UK were most likely to say they would be lost without their mobile device, at 49% and 30%, respectively. But US and UK users were also most likely to report “never” making voice calls.


사용자 삽입 이미지

In all four countries studied, making a mobile phone call at least once a day was the norm, however. Frequency was highest in France, where 57% of users called daily. The US was close behind at 52%.

Among UK users, texting was even more popular than talking. Users were more likely to use SMS messaging both weekly and daily than they were to make calls.


사용자 삽입 이미지

After voice and text, browsing the Internet was the most common daily activity, with 9% of UK users surfing on their handsets every day. More than one in five used the mobile Internet at least weekly.

Users were even more likely (38%) to take photos with their phone at least once per week.

When asked about new phone functions they would like to have, US users were most likely to wish for satellite navigation systems.


사용자 삽입 이미지

Friend and family locators were the second choice of users in the US—and in the UK and France. That technology took a backseat to privacy concerns in Germany.

“There is no question that the mobile phone is an important tool for daily life for many of the people we surveyed,” said Lightspeed CEO David Day, “and that many people use the additional phone applications such as photos, video, music and the internet.”

But reliance on mobile communications has a downside.

“There is real fear around data security and the increased risk of theft,” Mr. Day warned. “This is something the industry will need to address to encourage consumers to try new functionality such as mobile commerce.”

See M-Commerce Ringing Up (Some) Sales for more info on US mobile commerce adoption and attitudes.


[emarketer]