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Welcome to E-Commerce Semantics 101. Your philosophical question for the day: When is a site truly mobile-friendly? Mobile commerce today is in that familiar classic battle of Chicken.com versus Egg.com: Retailers know the mobile users are out there, but they also know that few are trying to use the devices for making purchases. Consumers are open to making such purchases, but they can’t because so few retailers support it. Major retailers won’t invest in a truly robust mobile deployment until they see most of their rivals doing so. Yes, this is why American business is in the global position it’s in today—that grand American Can-Do-But-Only-If-You-Do-It-First attitude. Read more. |
June 6th, 2008 at 2:42 pm
This is a refreshing commentary on the Mobile channel.
From an adoption standpoint it’s deja vu all over again, that is, remember 1995 when electronic commerce was just a good idea? Would people really use their COMPUTERS to buy stuff over the internet?
While some similarities exist, Mobile commerce is quite different from the web. If a merchant wants to deliver a good mobile experience, they really have to think it through and invest for mobile. It’s NOT just an extension of the web, it’s a different use case.
So here we go again. Will people really use their handheld devices to buy stuff over the wireless network? OF COURSE THEY WILL!!!! But only when they get the right user experience that addresses the challenges they have. Not a user experience designed in 1995 for a different set of challenges.