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Oct 4th 2007
From The Economist print edition

ADVERTISING on mobile phones is a tiny business. Last year
spending on mobile ads was $871m worldwide according to Informa
Telecoms & Media, a research firm, compared with $24 billion
spent on internet advertising and $450 billion spent on all
advertising. But marketing wizards are beginning to talk about
it with the sort of hyperbole they normally reserve for products
they are paid to sell. It is destined, some say, to supplant not
only internet advertising, the latest fad, but also television,
radio, print and billboards, the four traditional pillars of the
business.
At the moment, most mobile advertising takes the form of text
messages. But telecoms firms are also beginning to deliver ads
to handsets alongside video clips, web pages, and music and game
downloads, through mobiles that are nifty enough to permit such
things. Informa forecasts that annual expenditure will reach
$11.4 billion by 2011. Other analysts predict the market will be
as big as $20 billion by then. …
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