Packaging promotes mobile interaction
The opportunities for discovery within traditional media extend, of course, beyond airport signage and broadcast television. For example, a fast-food chain can place short codes on product packaging, as shown on this Big Mac box.

As mentioned, these discovery mechanisms can drive consumers to a mobile micro-site or application containing a call-to-action.
A short code precludes mobile consumers from having to tap in a long, detailed URL that contains the measurement and segmentation parameters essential for any interactive campaign.
Both short codes and EZ bar codes printed on ads and product packaging may prove to become more important than a company's website URL printed beside it.
When a company places a short code in traditional media, it encourages mobile users to act immediately. If a company places just its top-level URL in an ad, what are the chances people will remember or have the time to look it up online when they get home to their PCs? And if they do have the time, will they even recall the ad and URL?
For consumer brands and their ad agencies, effective mobile marketing campaigns will not only prompt a direct response from the mobile consumer, these campaigns will:
- Measure response from once-static traditional media;
- Enable companies to engage with consumers through a persistent mobile presence;
- Unlock the most powerful form of discovery and distribution that a brand possesses -- its primary media.