There is a new norm for us that most people haven’t really noticed. We sit at our desks, in meetings, or even at home – in front of giant projectors or TVs, with our laptops and tablets in front of us, while answering emails or commenting on our smartphones. I challenge you to remember a time when you sat in meetings or in front of the TV without another device in your hand or on your lap.
There are some obvious reasons that mobile is the first screen. In the purely physical sense, it’s already in your hand, and it has the closest proximity to your face. There have to be some very compelling reasons for a person to overlook those and purposefully move beyond that internet connected device that is literally in your hand and staring you right in the face.
But there is another, more compelling, reason that this device is the first stop on any journey. In today’s Internet of Things (IoT), everything is connected to everything else in the world, that mobile device is what they all connect to, or through. It is the aggregator of information and insights from every connected device and service from the NEST home thermostat, to your HUE lightbulb, to your car in the parking lot, to the trackers and monitors we wear on our person throughout the day and night.
Mobile has become so pervasive that it has transitioned from the hot new screen of a couple years ago, to the primary engagement point in a truly multi-screen, multi-task world. Along with that, transition has come some way into significant industry disruption in established industries ranging from transportation to entertainment and beyond.
Don’t think so? Consider this. The largest taxi cab company in the world (UBER) is an app and doesn’t own a single cab. The largest TV network (Netflix), accounts for more than five percent of all mobile internet and more than 25 percent of all overall internet traffic, and doesn’t own a single station, or even have a channel. The world’s most valuable retailer (Alibaba) doesn’t own any stores and added more mobile users in Q3 of last year than the state of Texas has people. Their mobile growth was rated as OK.