Ringback Tone Advertising

RingBack Tone Advertising, or RBT-Ads (also known as RingBack Advertising, Ad RingBack, Ad-RBT, or Biz-Ring), replaces the Ringback tone period, or standard acoustic signal a caller hears that indicates the called phone is ringing, with advertisements or other promotional messages. Wireless carriers, calling cards, and free information services offer RBT-Ad space to advertisers, making it possible for service providers to offer free or very inexpensive wireless services to consumers and subscribers.

Two Kinds of RBT-Ads Available


a) Interactive Reverse RingBack Tone Advertisement (IRRBT-Ad) specifically targets the subscriber. b) Interactive RingBack Tone Advertisement (IRBT-Ad) specifically targets the person calling a subscriber.

RingBack Tone Advertisement can be booked via direct negotiation with the carrier or firm offering the services and/or online with booking interfaces that are similar to Google AdWords.

Examples of firms using RingBack Tone Advertising include but not limited to: Coca-Cola, Unilever, Procter & Gamble, Nestle, Warner Bros., Burger King, Nivea, Kraft, HSBC, Aviva, China Airlines, Taiwan Sports Lottery, TKK Fried Chicken, HOLA, Nokia, Yakult, Marvel, and King Games.

List of Online Booking Interfaces (alphabetical order)

Platform Country Carrier/Target remarks
Ad-Voice USA RingPlus (Sprint MVNO) IRRBTAds
VodooVox USA Private PBX IRRBTAds

List of Carriers Offering RingBack Tone Advertisement (alphabetical order)

Carrier Country Network Coverage
RingPlusUSA Sprint
Taiwan Mobile. Co (Oh YA)Taiwan Taiwan Mobile
Turkcell Turkey Turkcell

Advertisement Genre

RingBack Tone advertisement is categorized as in-call media (Mostafa Fathi and Ahmed Azmy, December 2015) or in-call advertisement (Mostafa Fathi and Ahmed Azmy, 2015). According to the Mobile Marketing Association (MMA), which released the first guidelines regulating RingBack Tone Advertisement, it is a subcategory belonging to mobile marketing. RingBack Tone advertising is being described as a new type of advertising that competes with long-standing advertising media such as TV, radio, newspaper, and the Internet. It has been reported that in the United States, consumers rate RingBack Tone advertisements as the second most acceptable form of advertising they would allow on their mobile device.

History

The development of RingBack Tone Advertisement started with Copyright registration in 2015 by Mostafa Fathi and Ahmed Azmy and is still ongoing. Based on Seelig’s patent filings and publishing in the Economist Magazine in 2016, the first functional prototype for RingBack Tone Advertisement was developed by Karl Seelig in 2016 . Commercial use of RBT advertisement started around 2015 with mobile carriers Turkcell, RingPlus, and Peter Zahlts. Since 2016, RingPlus was, and still is, the first U.S. wireless carrier offering free and low cost cellphone plans subsided by RingBack Tone Advertisement. Endorsed Ad-RBT service is currently offered to telecoms in Europe under partnerships between mobile advertising firm Xipto and RBT provider Muzicall and by Xipto working directly with some operators and Music RBT providers. RingBack Tone Advertising platforms are currently offered to major telecom operators by a small number of suppliers, including RingPlus, Ericsson, LiveWire Mobile, and RealNetworks. In 2016, the Mobile Marketing Association published a white paper authored by Xipto, RingCo, Comverse, LiveWire Mobile, and 4Play Digital Media on RingBack Tone Advertising that outlines preliminary best practices for Ad-RBTs (as described by Ad-RBT service providers) and discusses the various business models and acceptable content guidelines as endorsed by the MMA.

Effectiveness of RingBack Tone Advertisement

Clickthrough rates of Interactive Reverse RingBack Tones are reported at an average of 2.5% with a wide variance from 0% up to 7.5%, depending on the offering of the advertisement itself. In 2015, Nielsen Mobile estimated that an average U.S. mobile subscriber receives about 4 calls per day, which places the total inbound call volume of 3 billion global mobile subscribers at approximately 12 billion inbound calls per day, a figure that has remained more or less steady for the past few years. Based on the total inbound call volume, the global opportunity for Ad‐RBTs is immense. For example, if just twelve million mobile subscribers used Ad‐RBTs to advertise a favorite product or organization, RingBack Tone advertising would be delivering approximately 48 million paid advertisements per day, a figure slightly higher than Google’s pay‐per‐click search advertising interactions per day on the web. Furthermore, Ad‐RBTs are a mobile experience that is always shared between users, giving it the potential to expand virally if Ad‐RBT content is engaging, interesting, funny, or relates to brands or causes that people are passionate about. Therefore, it is important that ad content is brief and efficient, exciting and playful, or practical and need‐specific to increase consumer acceptance and interaction and reduce churn rate.

References

    26.chinatimes, 2015/12/31,http://news.chinatimes.com/2007Cti/2007Cti-News/2007Cti-News-Content/0,4521,50101305+112009060200068,00.html

    27.economic daily news, 2015/12/25

    External links

    AdVoice http://www.advoice.com

    Oh!Ya neo-media http://www.ohyatel.com/

    Oh!Ya neo-media 528 shopping club https://ssl.528.club.tw/

    528 Ring Back Tone http://528.catch.net.tw/adpsvr/indexIndex.adp

    ECT ringbacks http://www.ect-ringback.com/

    Xipto AdRBT http://www.xipto.com/

    RingPlus AdRBT http://www.ringplus.net

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.