Mobile optimisation now mandatory

From 21st April mobile optimisation became mandatory, but we’ve all been doing this anyway right? Well, it appears now, and rightly so, we don’t have a choice as the almighty Google are now favouring mobile optimised and friendly websites over those that aren’t.

What does this mean for your marketing, search and social presence?

You need to go mobile.

Mobile isn’t new – brands, sites, retail industry have all been moving this way for years – and today more people around the world have cell phones than ever had land-lines. (QZ.com, 2014)

Browser habits now include shifting, stacking and meshing – in essence cross, multi and simultaneous device surfing. So sites and your content need to cater to this new user psyche.

 

Going mobile – top tips!

Consistent content

  • Content needs to be consistent – from social to site, and site to mobile – the user experience is still paramount. Just because users are using different devices doesn’t mean they should see a completely different environment. Brand familiarity should be top of your agenda when it comes to branding, message and function.

Digestible and simple – make it easy to follow

  • From your tweet, to your social branding to your site – keep at the forefront of your mind that mobile users are on the go – they want content quickly. Making your content or messaging clunky will lose attention. So the age old mantra of simplicity really is key.

Consider your platform

  • In a recent client campaign we knew that 80% of our traffic from twitter was coming from a mobile device (similar stats with Facebook) – so we knew we had to design mobile optimised imagery and messaging. Therefore, we designed assets that users didn’t have to click on or scroll further for more information as knew they were being absorbed on a mobile screen. Whereas on LinkedIn – the majority of our traffic on social campaigns was still coming from desktop so we were able to use this channel to focus more on detailed discussions and long-form content.

Big CTAs

  • Not just thinking from a mobile perspective but social too – if you are using CTAs to drive to further content – you need to give your users easy instructions. Again, simple steps that are easy to follow works best. If driving downloads, clear buttons in visual assets work well.

Hope those short tips get you started on your way – give us a tweet if you would like anymore advice.

Latest Posts

Lurkers are your biggest audience and they’re deciding in silence. They watch in feeds, sanity-check you in comments, communities and reviews, then repeat whatever proof is easiest to quote internally. That’s why social feels harder, it’s no longer a click machine, it’s an answer surface. Ofcom shows AI summaries are now common in search results, and YouTube remains the UK’s biggest social utility by reach and time spent. If your story is inconsistent, your evidence is scattered, or your customer proof is buried, lurkers can’t do the job of trusting you for you.
Read More
Pinterest has rolled out a brand-new Media Planner inside its advertising tools, and it’s designed to make planning and managing Pin campaigns a whole lot simpler. In short? It gives you a clearer view of what you’re running, who you’re targeting, and what results you can expect…
Read More
Yep – it’s a 101 for finding out if your B2B social campaigns and content are delivering. Think you know it all? Think again. The sands of marketing are shifting…again. Aligning metrics and business objectives. Most B2B marketers can tell you the engagement rate. And they certainly know the level…
Read More