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This Phone Call Brought to You by Google

November 13th, 2006 Posted in Main Page

In an interview with Reuters, Google CEO Eric Schmidt ruminated about a time when mobile phones would be free or subsidized if consumers agreed to watch targeted advertising. "Your mobile phone should be free," he said.. "It just makes sense that subsidies should increase" as the amount of advertising on mobile phones expands. In a world where there's advertising on trash cans, public transit vehicles, elevators, athletes' jerseys (at least outside North America), sidewalks and shopping carts, why not on mobile phones…and why not Google, which seems intent on advertising wherever it can (radio, magazines, newspapers, the Web) these days. Schmidt's proposal is not unlike some ISPs (e.g. Calgary-based CyberSurf) attempted a few years ago by offering free access if you agreed to have their ads appear in your browser. In terms of what segment of the wireless market this would be targeted at, you have to assume its customers with lower monthly bills as opposed to a power user who thinks nothing spending $100 a month on service. If advertisers are willing to foot part of the bill and consumers are willing to accept targeted advertising, I doubt the carriers would care much as long as they generated the same amount or more revenue. Tags: , , ,

2 Responses to “This Phone Call Brought to You by Google”

  1. Anonymous Says:

    Hi Mark,
    I work for http://www.Mexuar.com we just launched 3 weeks ago at Astricon the worlds first Java Click to Call technology SDK,…. the reason fot telling you all that, check out what one of our licensees are doing with our technology at http://talk.alohatone.com/ basically providing free voice service in return for audio advertisments.
    In a web 2.0 world the tools to implement this kind of technology are now cheaper than ever.
    Cheers,
    Dean


  2. Anonymous Says:

    Hi Mark,
    Virgin in the US launched mobile advertising earlier on this year. Virgin subscribers can get 75 minutes of airtime credit if they agree to receive ads via text messages. It will be interesting to see when mobile advertising launches in CA.


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