4 Critical Things Every Business Must Know About Mobile Marketing Almost every customer has is a cell phone. Make mobile a part of your marketing mix to find your customers wherever they are.

By Mitch Meyerson

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock | Entrepreneur

In his book Success Secrets of the Online Marketing Superstars, Mitch Myerson introduces you to 22 innovators who have redefined the developing landscape of online marketing. Learn how to master proven strategies, avoid costly mistakes and grow your business. In this edited excerpt, contributing author Kim Dushinski offers smart advice on how you can take advantage of mobile marketing to attract new business.

When was the last time you saw anyone without their cell phone within arm's reach? Through their cell phone, your customers have a portable online access point with them at all times.

It's important to know how many of your customers interact with your business via their mobile devices so you can prioritize your mobile marketing strategy within your overall marketing mix. One of easiest ways to check your mobile traffic is to log in to your Google Analytics account. Once you're inside the admin dashboard, go to Audience > Overview > Mobile > Overview. You'll see the percentage of visitors who are viewing your website from desktop computers, mobile (smartphones), and tablets.

You can also find out what kind of mobile devices your site visitors are using. Go to Audience > Overview > Mobile > Devices to see the list of devices and the percentage of your mobile visitors using each one. This data's important if you decide to build a mobile app for your business because you'll know which platform to work with first based on your audience.

An easy way to find out how many of your potential customers are seeking your type of business using their mobile devices is to log in to your Yelp business account. If your business has a physical location, it's likely you have a Yelp listing whether you built it or not. Go to your Activity dashboard. In the lower right-hand corner, you'll see a statistic showing how many of your Yelp profile visitors were on a mobile device.

1. Making your website mobile friendly

Despite the small size of their device (usually a smartphone), consumers expect to have the same online experience with you as they would via desktop. The easiest way to do this is to build your site in a responsive manner. This means the site's design will scale to fit the device, but the content will remain the same.

Having a dynamic website, one that provides mobile-specific content and a mobile-friendly display to mobile visitors while serving the desktop version to those with full-size monitors is the ideal. The key to this working is to know what your visitors most need from your business when they're mobile (hours, location, click-to-call phone number, special offers, etc.) and provide that to them when they are mobile. The tools to easily build a dynamic site aren't yet commonplace, so you may have to hire a web designer to help you out.

2. What to know about mobile search

One of the most common uses of smartphones and tablets is searching online. As with desktop search, the biggest player in mobile search is Google, so you want to make sure you take advantage of all the ways to work well with them.

First, if you're a local business with a physical location, give full attention to your local business listing on Google Places. When a mobile searcher is looking for a local business, Google serves up its Maps listings near the top of the search. Build your listing as robustly as possible by adding photos, videos, a full description, hours, and any other details you can. It's the best free way to be found by local searchers.

Second, you need to know that Google says responsive web design is their "recommended option" and sends mobile searchers to sites that use responsive web design, sites that use dynamic web design (different content and different design to mobile sites), and those that have a separate mobile site.

Third, mobile search result advertising is a great way to be found. If you're already doing AdWords advertising, you're already doing mobile advertising because it's incorporated into your ad spend. You can choose to minimize your mobile ads or use them exclusively. Knowing your mobile stats will help you prioritize. Having a mobile-friendly website will give your mobile search results advertising the ability to work.

3. Integrating text messaging into your online marketing

One of the most powerful tools of mobile marketing is text messaging. The best way to incorporate texting with online marketing is to use your online efforts as a way to get opt-ins for your SMS text message list. Then you can use text messaging as a way to reach your audience outside their full and overwhelming email inboxes.

After you've built a list of opt-in subscribers by creating a compelling reason for them to sign up, send text messages to your list with the kind of information you promised them when they enrolled. Here are a few text message content ideas

  • Short tips or strategies your audience can use
  • Mobile coupons
  • Reminders of webinars or other events
  • Announcements of product releases
  • Meetups at events

4. To mobile app or not to mobile app

It may be very tempting to jump into building a mobile app for your business, but given the financial and time investment involved, it's smart to consider first whether or not a mobile app is the right match for your business. The single most important factor in this decision is whether or not your app will provide a way for your customers to do something repeatedly. More specifically, it must be something they want or need to do repeatedly. That's because people will only download an app and keep it on their phone if they find they use it regularly. Otherwise it will be deleted.

If the mobile app you have in mind will simply tell customers about your business, give them your location and hours, a list of services and provide special offers to them, then you don't need an app. You just need a mobile-friendly website. If the mobile app you have in mind will give them access to their account with your business, entertain them in a way that also congruently markets your business or in some other way engages them repeatedly, then you can consider moving ahead with a mobile app.

Mitch Meyerson

Speaker, Consultant, and Author

Mitch Meyerson (Scottsdale, AZ) is the author of 11 books, including Mastering Online Marketing and Guerrilla Marketing on the Internet. He has been a featured expert on The Oprah Winfrey Show and has trained and certified more than 600 coaches in his acclaimed Guerrilla Marketing Coach and World Class Speaking Certification Programs.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Thought Leaders

How Gangster Al Capone Inspired the Launch of a Family-Run Company That Has Thrived for 95 Years

Marty Ozinga, the fourth-generation CEO of Ozinga, explains the legacy and future of the powerhouse construction materials company.

Marketing

4 Ways AI Is Revolutionizing Targeted Advertising — And How to Balance It's Ethical Implications

AI-powered targeted advertising revolutionizes marketing with hyper-personalized promotions. However, ethical and transparency questions hover over this progress.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business Solutions

Host Your Website with iBrave — $90 for Life Through March 24

iBrave is an advanced cloud web hosting platform.

Health & Wellness

Stress Buster: Leverage the Benefits of Non-Clinical Art Therapy with This $40 App

Therapeutic, art-based exercises utilize hundreds of original works of art to add a blend of positive benefits to the experience.