July 10, 2008 5:20 PM
- Text
Publicis Moves Mobile Agency Phonevalley into U.S.
(MoneyWatch)
Via ClickZ, Publicis Groupe announced that Phonevalley, its mobile marketing agency, will expand into the United States. Phonevalley is already active within the European market, and recently expanded to Asia. Phonevalley, which Publicis acquired last September, counts Universal, Samsung, and Sony BMG among its clients. Publicis intends to use Phonevalley's mobile expertise in concert with Publicis' existing American agencies in order to enhance mobile marketing efforts.
It's perhaps unsurprising that Phonevalley will be coming stateside, considering the news two weeks ago that Phonevalley would be the first mobile agency to tap into Yahoo's Blueprint. Blueprint is designed to make it easy for agencies to bring mobile ads to a market with thousands of combinations of handsets, platforms, and carriers, because Blueprint itself is handset, platform, and carrier agnostic.
The move will bring Phonevalley into competition for the estimated 40 million active mobile Internet users in the US, according to a Nielsen Mobile report (pdf) released this week. Those consumers represent an enormous opportunity: an eMarketeer report predicted that the US mobile ad spend will total $1.7 billion in 2008, up from $878 million in 2007.
Paris-based Publicis has been turning towards digital and mobile, seeming to realize future of the industry isn't going to be buying up gatefold ads in print magazines, but instead following consumers online and onto their mobile phones. Two weeks ago, Publicis announced they would be shifting resources towards a new digital ad venture entiteled VivaKi, which would work across the four major online ad platforms: Google's DoubleClick, AOL's Platform-A, Microsoft's adCenter, and Yahoo's RightMedia Exchange.
This shift in resources has been developing for months. Back in March, Agency Spy reported that Publicis West had laid off eight to ten people. Sad news, but the interesting bit was that the layoffs weren't due to client loss, but instead that the "the shop [is] shifting itself towards more digital and brand experience initiatives."
Via ClickZ, Publicis Groupe announced that Phonevalley, its mobile marketing agency, will expand into the United States. Phonevalley is already active within the European market, and recently expanded to Asia. Phonevalley, which Publicis acquired last September, counts Universal, Samsung, and Sony BMG among its clients. Publicis intends to use Phonevalley's mobile expertise in concert with Publicis' existing American agencies in order to enhance mobile marketing efforts.It's perhaps unsurprising that Phonevalley will be coming stateside, considering the news two weeks ago that Phonevalley would be the first mobile agency to tap into Yahoo's Blueprint. Blueprint is designed to make it easy for agencies to bring mobile ads to a market with thousands of combinations of handsets, platforms, and carriers, because Blueprint itself is handset, platform, and carrier agnostic.
The move will bring Phonevalley into competition for the estimated 40 million active mobile Internet users in the US, according to a Nielsen Mobile report (pdf) released this week. Those consumers represent an enormous opportunity: an eMarketeer report predicted that the US mobile ad spend will total $1.7 billion in 2008, up from $878 million in 2007.
Paris-based Publicis has been turning towards digital and mobile, seeming to realize future of the industry isn't going to be buying up gatefold ads in print magazines, but instead following consumers online and onto their mobile phones. Two weeks ago, Publicis announced they would be shifting resources towards a new digital ad venture entiteled VivaKi, which would work across the four major online ad platforms: Google's DoubleClick, AOL's Platform-A, Microsoft's adCenter, and Yahoo's RightMedia Exchange.
This shift in resources has been developing for months. Back in March, Agency Spy reported that Publicis West had laid off eight to ten people. Sad news, but the interesting bit was that the layoffs weren't due to client loss, but instead that the "the shop [is] shifting itself towards more digital and brand experience initiatives."
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- Insurers respond cautiously to contraceptive plan
- Judge: Legally, breastfeeding not related to pregnancy
- Budget deficit drops to $27 billion in January
- Why the Powerball Jackpot is part of my investment strategy
- Is the new VW Beetle diesel worth the money?
- Consumer sentiment highlights risks to recovery
- Valentine blues? 10 best cities to be single
- December trade deficit widens to $48.8 billion
- Alcatel-Lucent returns to profit in 2011
- 6 things never to say in a performance review
- $26B mortgage deal: Who gets the money?
- Friendly's CEO steps down
- Quarterly loss hits $3.3B at Postal Service
- Greeks rail against cuts as EU demands more
- 6 things you should never share on Facebook
- Make moves now to increase financial aid
- Valentine's Day: 9 places to save
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Fashion's newness coming from old-school Hollywood
- Fashion's newness coming from old-school Hollywood
- Tommy Hilfiger menswear: Military and sports looks
- Rag & Bone show: From Brit roots to Asia
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Beyonce and Jay-Z post first photos of Blue Ivy Carter
- Timothy Dolan: Birth control tweak a "first step"
on CBS News






