Mobile Spinach

(This is the first in a two part post. Part one contains a profile of a startup.  Part two contains numbers and analysis related to that startup.)

Mobile Spinach is a small and ambitious Bay Area startup focused on the mobile coupon space.  The company is still at a very early stage — seed funded and looking for funding.  Earlier this month I had the pleasure of talking with co-founder Anthony Vitti.  We had a great discussion about the difficulties of effective marketing for local businesses, and Anthony laid out his vision for Mobile Spinach and the opportunity he sees.

Mobile Spinach’s offering for consumers is a compelling one: “Get exclusive deals and mobile phone alerts from our Tastemakers who hit the streets to find you the best deals when, where, and how you want them.” Think local trend-blog meets social-shopping meets mobile-couponing: Thrillist meets ThisNext meets Cellfire.  Whereas existing coupon services like Cellfire and 8Coupons focus on product discounts (Save 25c on toilet paper!!), Mobile Spinach focuses on deals from local lifestyle businesses: Shopping, Night life, Events, Travel, Dining and Food, Arts and Music, Gyms and Spas.  One of their co-founders runs a contemporary San Francisco lifestyle brand called Artificial Flavor, so they’ve got experience with fashion trends.

With Mobile Spinach, you receive deals only from the Tastemakers you’ve chosen to follow.  These folks are the site’s power users — aggressive well-connected individuals who introduce their favorite local businesses to Mobile Spinach’s service and get special deals for their followers.

Mobile SMS couponing requires a light touch.  Consumers don’t want to be interrupted with advertising that’s not relevant to them.  Mobile Spinach understands this very well: “Less is more” says Anthony.  Relevancy and customization are crucial to Mobile Spinach’s vision of an empowered consumer who is able to “dial down” the service as needed.  Besides using Tastemakers as filters (so consumers only receive deals that match their taste), Anthony suggested that consumers will be able to make further customizations like electing to receive coupons ‘only on Tuesday nights’ and ‘only from nearby restaurants.’

For these local businesses, Mobile Spinach helps them engage local consumers and market themselves effectively.  According to Mobile Spinach, there are very few ways for small to medium business owners to get noticed — traditional media, SEO, and SEM all have high costs and questionable efficacy.  With Mobile Spinach, 500-1000 SMS messages are typically sent for a campaign and the company reports double-digit response rates.  The company also reports getting double digit CPM rates for their mobile advertisements.

For Mobile Spinach, tastemakers act as sort of a crowdsourced marketing effort as they spread the word about the service to their friends.  More importantly, they bring local businesses onboard to advertise with Mobile Spinach — and receive a 20-30% commission.  These tastemakers, combined with a traditional in house salesforce, are designed to make the service scalable.  Anthony envisions having 20 tastemakers in each of 30 cities across the country once the service expands to full size.

Mobile Spinach has a nice vision for a social-recommendation local couponing business.  Furthermore, Mobile Spinach shows sensitivity and insight into the typical issues plaguing SMS advertising.  But can they make the numbers work?

Well, let’s do some back of the envelope calculations…

(continue to part two)

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