Google preparing to delve deep into Cell phone ad market
14th Nov 2006, 11:24 GMT
Google CEO Eric Schmidt has recently stated that cell phone price subsidies should increase with the growing amount of advertisement delivered over cellular networks. He went on to say the cell phones should be available free of cost. Google has already experimenting to enter cell phone advertising and its already working on experimental ads that includes short video clips, images and text ads in Japan. According to the reports, the ongoing advertising experiment in Japan is performing well and the company is preparing itself to enter deep into the cell phone advertising market. However, Google’s cell phone advertising plans is depending upon how the users interact with their cell phones. Moreover, studies undertaken to evaluate cell phone advertising market indicate that this sector of advertisement will eventually match its core advertising sector, web-based advertising. Read
Google preparing to delve deep into Cell phone ad market related news:
- Google's ad supported free cell phones — AdJab
- Google CEO wants ads to pay your phone bill — SCI FI Tech
- Google: Mobile Ads, Free Phones — GigaOM
- Google CEO Foresees Ad-Supported Cell Phones — FOXNews.com
- Sync your Google Calendar with your cell phone — Lifehacker
- Ad supported free cell phone service — .:UNEASYsilence:.
- Find and clear up fraudulent cell phone charges — Lifehacker
- Google CEO sees free cell phone calls — MSNBC.com: Technology & Science
- Cell phone cameras getting boost from HP — CNET News.com - Digital Life
- Actors, Athletes to Be in Stem-Cell Ad — The Christian Post RSS Feed
Latest news from Adpunch:
- Bodog girls to promote BodogFight by staging fight on trucks
- Clemenger BBDO likely to clinch NAB's ad account
- A Cheesy Halloween themed ad for Pizza Hut
- ASA slams Children Fund ad
- Lynx Jet ad: banned for being sexually explicit
- Big Burgers, Big Bites
- A rare ad campaign against pedophiles
- Via TV Ad: An extremely ordinary show
- Viva TV Ad: An extremely ordinary show
- A compelling ad campaign by the Salvation Army