
Frog2Frog is a company focused on making mobile advertising actually work. We've built technologies that make mobile ads easy, interactive, and compatible with almost every handset on the market.
Yes, we can do ad supported mobile services like SMS and voice with fully interactive ads on every GSM handset back to about 1995! We also support almost all Java handsets on the market with a multimedia advertising platform. More importantly, Frog ads are easy and interactive for the advertiser to make and they're even easier for the end-user to interact with.
Apart from our ad serving technology, which is focused on driving interactivity in a way that is designed for mobile and not for the internet, we also build services that will give Mobile Advertising the widest possible reach, e.g. ad supported SMS and voice. With huge reach and frequency, these channels make other mobile ad channels look silly in comparison, particularly for operators.
We're simply number one when it comes to ad-sponsored SMS. Our customers appreciate our deep knowledge on how to present ads to the sender of an SMS.
With presence in Stockholm and Barcelona, we're plugged in to two of the most up-to-date cities in Europe. We've been working on ad supported service platforms for the mobile world since 2004 and we have definite views on what can work and what won't. We have people working in Spain, Germany, Sweden and Belgium so we know our way around the European mobile scene. Among the team are people who have worked in mobile almost everywhere from The Philippines in the East to the USA in the West, so we know the world scene reasonably well too!The company is managed by two telecom industry veterans,
Hans-Peter Kurz and Hugh
Sheehy. They have wide experience in almost all aspects
of the mobile business, from operators to network vendors to
small technology providers.
Our aim is to build an advertising medium for operators, one that
they can use to bring mobile advertising to meaningful size and
relevance for all advertisers, from big brands to smaller local
advertisers.

