Tag Archives: iPhone

Case Study: Snowbird iPhone App

There is an app for that.

Today, let’s take the conversation mobile and look at the Snowbird iPhone App.  Again, a special request from one of our readers who happens to work with the development shop (Welikesmall) behind the application.

Yes, we know everyone is currently building or thinking about building an iPhone app.  However we were drawn to this example because of what was not included in the app, rather than what was.

How about some background from the PR pitch:

We did some serious thinking about how real skiers would use an iPhone app to tap into what is going on at the mountain, says Thomas Cooke, Executive Producer at Welikesmall. Since we are all real skiers and riders at Welikesmall and familiar with the Snowbird brand, this was a dream project for us, to make an app we’d all want to use every day during the ski season.

At this point, we already had a good feeling about what we would see in the app.  Notice what was said…how real skiers would use an iPhone app…we’d all want to use every day…and that phrases such as ‘we built this for ad revenue,’ ‘we built this for branding’ or ‘we built this to be cool’ were left out.

If you want to build a successful app, or for that matter any product, you need to start your thinking with the consumer, not the bottom line.  Welikesmall did that and it shows in the app.

On top of that, the app is free.  Again, thinking about the consumer.

Overall, the app is quite aesthetically pleasing, easy to navigation and simple in it’s labeling structure.  The basic navigation gives you easy access to the sections and content you are looking for…Snow, Go, Show and Extras.

So, what is in the app?  Useful information that is needed while on the mountain or in the village.  Snow fall totals, weather forecast, trail status, twitter feeds from the mountain staff, webcams and a very nice photo uploader.  And that is just a start, there are a few more highlights here and there, but you get the idea, we don’t need to review the design of every component.

Although, we do love the ‘days skied’ function, but I don’t think we will make it to 71.

More importantly, let’s discuss what is not in the app.  Gimmicks and games are left out…no need for some snowboarding ‘avoid the rocks’ game in the app, you are already on a mountain.  Unnecessary content such as endless marketing copy about how great the snow is.  Upfront and obvious advertising that is intrusive to the user experience.  In short, everything that makes so many apps so unsuccessful.

In the end, the Snowbird app is a great branding and marketing extension for the resort, because it delivers a great user experience without trying to deliver a hard marketing message.  They have focused on the core needs of the consumer and built an app around those needs, instead of forcing content where it does not fit.

Truly a great iPhone app template for the rest of our ski resort counterparts.

5 out of 5 birds from the Travel 2.0 team.

(moto, did we miss anything?  Feel free to give us the behind-the-scenes on the development in the comments.)

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Filed under Case Study, iPhone, iPhone Apps, Mobile, Snowbird

Travel Trends – Just The Facts, Examiner.com

Just the facts – A great post from our often quoted friends at the Center for Media Research, facts you can use during your reports, speeches and water-cooler arguments during 2010.  Ah, we love stats.

Mobile Phones

  • U.S. mobile phone users 13+: 223M
  • Number of mobile Web users: 60.7M (up 33% from 2008)
  • Percentage of mobile devices that are smartphones: 18% (up from 13% in 2008)
  • Percentage of mobile device owners that streamed audio: 8%
  • Percentage of mobile device owners that viewed video via their mobile phone: 7%
  • Percentage of mobile devices sold in Q3 2009 that were smartphones: 25% (estimated 40%-50 in 2010)

Source: The Nielsen Company, November 2009

Looking Ahead To Mid-2011

  • Estimated smartphone user base: 150M
  • Estimated mobile subscribers: 300M+
  • Estimated users of mobile web: 120M
  • Estimated users watching mobile video: 90M

Source: The Nielsen Company, November 2009

Growth of cellphone only homes in the U.S.

  • 2009… 21%
  • 2008… 18%
  • 2007… 15%

Top 5 Smartphones (% Ownership)

  • Blackberry 8300 Curve: 17%
  • Apple iPhone 3G: 15%
  • Apple iPhone 3G S: 12%
  • Blackberry 9530 Storm: 6%
  • Blackberry 8100 Pearl: 5%

Source: The Nielsen Company, November 2009

Top 5 Mobile Web Sites

  • Google Search
  • Yahoo! Mail
  • Gmail
  • Weather Channel
  • Facebook

Top Social Networks on Mobile Phones

  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Twitter

Top 5 Mobile Video Channels

  • YouTube
  • Fox Interactive Media
  • Weather Channel
  • Comedy Central
  • CBS

Internet

  • 195M Active U.S. Internet users
  • 160.3M People who accessed the Internet via a broadband connection: (93.3%… up 16% from 2008)
  • 138.4M Unique viewers of video (up 11.4% from 2008)
  • 11.2B Total online video streams viewed monthly (up 17% from 2008)
  • 200.1 minutes Average time spent viewing online video per viewer monthly (up 12.5% from 2008)

Social Networking

  • Facebook reaches 56% of the active U.S. Internet universe with an average usage of 6 hrs a month per user
  • Facebook is the #3 site visited by users 65 and older
  • Twitter grew 500% year-over-year
  • Time spent on social networking sites in the U.S. increased 277%
  • The average U.S. worker spends 5 hrs a month visiting social networks at the office
  • 32% of all mobile web users visited a social network

http://www.mediapost.com/

Why Does Google Search Love Examiner.com? – While catching up on our holiday reading and writing, we came across an interesting post from Time.com on Examiner.com.  If you are not familiar with Examiner, the story does an adequate job of describing the quasi-organized blogger mash-up.  While the story about the Examiner is interesting enough, we wanted to highlight three points from the article.

  1. Content is still King, at least to Google.  I cannot remember a more simplistic, yet true statement about how good SEO is focused around good…not original…content:

    “…by stocking the lake with so many fish every day, Examiner.com increases the chances that Google trawlers will haul one of theirs up.”

  2. Pro-Am content is a good middle ground.  We have talked at length about the swing from professional content (Frommer’s) to amateur content (TripAdvisor)…is Examiner.com a look at the content future?  Too soon to tell, but we like this direction and not either extreme.
  3. Don’t overlook the little guys.  If you have never heard of Examiner.com prior to this article, you might want to broaden your SEO strategy.  Sure, TripAdvisor is still the biggest fish in this sea of nameless reviews and links, but sites such as Examiner.com can offer an equally powerful SEO boost with a lot less editorial pitching.

http://www.time.com/

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Filed under Mobile, Social Networking, Statistics