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3 Tips For Making Digital Signage More Effective
Jun 30th
A chief concern among businesses which are considering the use of digital signage is that such a network will be ineffective. Indeed, much of what we’re witnessing in the industry suggests that many businesses don’t understand the potency of the technology nor how to harness it. This is likely due to digital signage being a new and innovative technology. Though many advertisers are experiencing success, standards of usage haven’t been firmly established.
For example, newspaper or television advertising follows proven models of successful. The strategies that are deployed in those media are based upon what has proven effective in the past. Digital signage is new and therefore lacks a benchmark approach. That being said, traditional advertising yields helpful clues regarding what works.
Why The Customer Matters
As advertising has evolved, so too has the consumer’s receptivity to marketing. No longer is the typical consumer content to be bombarded with a litany of marketing messages. Today, they focus on what is relevant to them and quickly discard – or ignore – the rest. Whether you’re deploying a digital signage network in a movie theater, casino, shopping mall, or a small chain of kiosks, the messages you broadcast across the system must address the concerns of the customer in a compelling manner. The experience must be engaging for the customer. Below, you’ll find 3 tips for making your digital signage efforts more effective by focusing on the customer.
Tip #1: Encourage Participation
It’s easy said than done. But, it is possible to create a broadcast that encourages your audience to interact with your message. This can be as simple as leading them through a tree of choices. Or, you can design a complex series of messages that builds your audience’s expectations about your products while allowing them to creatively select their own path through your inventory. There are many ways to encourage participation. You need to identify your customer’s concerns and then engage them.
Tip #2: Use The Data
The digital signage networks that are available today can yield valuable data regarding customer choices. This is one of the reasons why encouraging their participation is critical. When customers interact with your displays and proactively make selections, they do so based upon their interests and the effectiveness of your message and presentation. By reviewing customers’ choices, you can identify parts of your message that are ineffective. That provides the opportunity to modify or eliminate them.
Tip #3: Make The Experience Personal
Whether the experience that a customer has while interacting with a digital screen will be positive or negative is largely dependent upon how personal that experience is. For example, assume that a customer is looking through an inventory of shoes. Each selection will further identify that customer’s concerns. This can provide a framework around which you can tailor your message to address specific concerns based upon gender, age, vocation and other factors. Each selection builds upon the element of personalization. And the more personal your digital signage broadcast is, the more engaged the customer will feel.
Making Digital Signage Effective
Most fundamental principles of marketing address an audience’s interests, concerns and passions. Digital signage is no different. To leverage its effectiveness, you need to engage your customers with messages that are compelling to them. By reviewing the data that your network yields, you can create an experience for your customer that feels personal and encourages them to interact.
Four Winds Interactive is a leading provider of digital signage networks and software.
Digital Signage – How To Do It Well
Jun 30th
A few recent experiences with digital signage offer some insight into best practices for the content the signs contain.
Let’s start with the commuter train I recently took into the city. Small screens were distributed throughout the train car. They appeared above the seats on either side of the car, with perhaps four or five screens per side. The main focus was a news feed from a national TV network, so I assumed the goal was to keep people occupied while they rode. The screens were visible, but as digital signage goes, this particular network did not fare well:
? The images (e.g. those used in the weather report) were not very clear, perhaps because of the screens or the quality of the images themselves.
? There were video news clips, but no audio, which may make sense in this setting, but it seemed counter-productive to show people talking when viewers couldn’t hear them.
? The ticker that ran across the bottom did not coincide with the video clips and it presented a strange assortment of news. A brief statement about stock market closings was followed by a headline about a celebrity and then a quick sentence about federal politics, followed by some sports and then more business news.
From this viewer’s perspective, the disconnect between information segments was jarring and slightly annoying. Reading the signs became an exercise in frustration, trying to decide whether the information was relevant to me or not. Like the vast majority of the riders I saw, I chose to disregard the signs and focus instead on my newspaper.
Contrast that experience to the subway platform. The signs were visible and offered relevant information in well-defined segments, i.e. business news followed by general headlines followed by entertainment. There was a good amount of local news. The weather and time were presented clearly. This digital signage was ideal for subway riders – it presented small blurbs of useful information that could easily be read during the short wait for the next train.
I found another successful digital signage installation in a food court. The signs were highly visible, even from a great distance. The “blooper” type videos of animals and professional sports were amusing and provided a great distraction for the people there. Children were especially interested. The loops of video did not repeat in the time I was there, clear evidence that the digital signage was designed to hold people’s attention for the duration of a typical food court meal. I noticed the advertising but it was subtle enough that I did not feel overwhelmed by it. This digital signage network had struck the right balance between entertaining and marketing and it worked beautifully.
Lessons to Be Learned
What do these examples show us? In digital signage, as everywhere, content is crucial. Even the latest technology and high-resolution screens will not ensure success. If the content does not resonate with the viewer, or worse, if it annoys the viewer, the digital signage network could diminish the image of the company behind it.
For more information on digital signage, contact a narrowcasting expert at http://www.ek3.com/digital-merchandising-products/digital-signage.htm
New Oem Media Player Solution Kits for Digital Signage Applications
Jun 30th
New OEM Media Player Solution Kits for Digital Signage Applications
Sun Group announces a new line of interactive digital media players for the OEM and VAR channels. 7″, 8″, 10.4″, 15″, 17″ and 19″ are board level products designed specifically to allow Sun Group’s existing sales channels to take advantage of the growing digital signage markets. These products provide a comprehensive range of features and accessories to enable OEM system developers and integrators to create flexible, economical digital signage solutions.
Features of the media players include content scheduling, via a real time clock and calendar, Plays favorite playlist control, database capabilities, RS-232 ports, USB ports, NTSC/PAL S-Video and Analog RGB video output. The Media players will support MPEG 1, MPEG 2, MPEG 4, and JPEG video formats stored on a solid-state Compact Flash® (CF) memory card.
The SUN-SG series entry-level media player provides a “client” USB connection that permits Auto Data Transfer from USB flash driver to Compact flash. After plug in the USB flash driver to the unit, it will delete all content of CF card data first, then, the new files will be copied from USB flash driver to CF memory card (Compact Flash Card) automatically
SG series allows individual media players to have multiple content playlists. The players support a scheduled playback function where playlists may be enabled by the built-in calendar/clock function, permitting daily
Small businesses are recognizing the importance of communication with customers to improve product awareness and increase turnover
Sun Group has responded to market demand for affordable high quality Digital Advertising Display SUN-SG8 8Inch, 10.4Inch, 15Inch, 17Inch and 19Inch. The company has recently announced their new line of Digital Advertising Display and Digital Multimedia Players at new low prices that will get every one up and running. This digital advertising display will look good in any retail outlets, office or home, offering unprecedented customization with its interchangeable frames. It supports CFI, II/MD/SM/MS/MS pro/SD/MMC card formats, ensuring a wide blanket of compatibility. built-in real-time clock and calendar. Ideal for Digital Signs, POP Displays and Retail Advertising. Automatic power on/off time. also support USB host, which can read from USB memory stick and from external Hard disc directly
http://www.sgmonitor.com
Sun Group has responded to market demand for affordable high quality Digital Advertising Display SUN-SG8 8Inch, 10.4Inch, 15Inch, 17Inch and 19Inch. The company has recently announced their new line of Digital Advertising Display and Digital Multimedia Players at new low prices that will get every one up and running. This digital advertising display will look good in any retail outlets, office or home, offering unprecedented customization with its interchangeable frames. It supports CFI, II/MD/SM/MS/MS pro/SD/MMC card formats, ensuring a wide blanket of compatibility. built-in real-time clock and calendar. Ideal for Digital Signs, POP Displays and Retail Advertising. Automatic power on/off time. also support USB host, which can read from USB memory stick and from external Hard disc directly
Read Letsgodigital Review
http://www.letsgodigital.org/html/review/photo_frame/sun_sg8.html
Big Businesses Go Environmentally Savvy With Digital Signage
Jun 29th
The world is becoming more and more environmentally conscious, and as this consciousness has become a mainstream concern, customers are demanding that retailers take steps to ensure their businesses are environmentally savvy as well. With digital options, even big businesses are showing that they are supporting the environment.
Saving Paper with Digital Signage
Mass marketing for retail, especially in larger retail outlets, used to be done with posters, flyers, and other paper displays. With paper-saving techniques becoming popular, big businesses are feeling the pressure to find their own ways to reduce, reuse and recycle. Digital marketing options help reduce paper by replacing paper signs and advertising posters.
While old school paper advertising required large signs to catch the eye of the consumer, the vibrant and colorful messages on digital signage are riveting, easily bringing the customer’s focus to the marketing message at hand. Of additional benefit is the ability to change the messages by day, time, weather, or promotion with very little effort. In fact, digital signage can be programmed to anticipate these changes and appeal to customers depending on known trends.
Saving Power with Current Digital Signage Solutions
Digital signs can be as simple as small LED displays, which flash simple messages, to banks of flat screen television monitors, with complex graphics and rotating messages. LED models, regardless of size, run on very little power compared to incandescent fixtures, making them a low-impact environmental item and an ideal addition to any sized business that is trying to be environmentally conscious.
Flat screen monitors consume an infinitesimal amount of power compared to the CRT models, making them a palatable choice for environmentally savvy businesses. Flat screens also have a longer life span, which is a perk that also services the environment.
Consumer Requirements Drive Sales
Digital signage has proven that it increases sales by:
- Using compelling marketing to attract new customers and persuading repeat customers to spend more
- Encouraging customers to consider items that are not selling as well, thus influencing their purchasing decisions
- Presenting new products easily and professionally
- Enticing customers with appealing branding
As consumers demand that their retailers become more environmentally savvy, spending their retail cash in stores that promote that they are committed to a greener footprint, business decisions reflect these demands. Appealing to the consumer on issues that reflect their lifestyles and concerns is a prime mover in big business. Customers do have a say in business practices!
The Bottom Line: Going Green Saves Money
The bottom line for any business is the bottom line! As technology has evolved over the past decade, the cost of electronics, including computers and digital signage, has dropped dramatically, making digital signage a cost effective proposition. Combine the cost effectiveness of purchasing the electronics with the ability to customize messages, speak to clients through professional imagery, provide creative marketing solutions, and prove that the business is taking steps to be green, and it becomes clear why becoming environmentally savvy has become big business.
For more information on visit Digital Signage Software or Digital Media visit EK3
Digital Signage: The Value of Metrics
Jun 28th
If you watch the local news on television, you may notice that the stories get a little more graphic, the news a little more sensational and the anchors a little more solicitous in February, May, July and November. Why? Because that’s when ratings are measured in more than 200 television markets nationwide to determine who’s watching what, and how many of people are watching it.
If you work in a specific industry, you may subscribe to one or more trade magazines with articles of interest to your peers. If you recommend, specify or actually authorize the purchase of new products and services for your business, you probably receive these magazines for free. If you happen to forget to re-subscribe, you may have been on the receiving end of a phone call from someone –not trying to sell you a subscription, but attempting to get you to provide the verbal equivalent of filling out a subscription card. Why? Because you are a member of a sought-after demographic that those advertisings in that magazine seek to reach.
If you follow Internet marketing at all, you may have read stories over the past couple of years about click fraud -an artificial inflation of online reader responses to banners, buttons and other ads. Click fraud has caused a lot of grief for some of the biggest names on the Internet. Why? Because advertisers pay for each click on their ads based on the representation that there was actually someone with some bit of legitimate interest in their product or service that clicked.
What in the world does any of this have to do with digital signage? Simple, each example illustrates the importance ad agencies and advertisers place on reaching the number of people they pay to reach and often the demographic “type” of person they are targeting for their commercial messages. Audience ratings, circulation audits and bona fide ad responses are critical to monetizing media. Advertisers must be assured that their dollars are paying for something they actually wish to buy. Measuring audience metrics via independent third parties has served both the media and the ad communities by establishing an essential component to the ad buy, namely trust. It all comes down to the expression former President Ronald Reagan made famous when negotiating with former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev on nuclear arms reduction: “Trust but verify.”
For digital signage networks to be taken seriously by ad agencies and their clients, they must deliver a level of audience verification similar to those available with other old-line media, such as TV, radio, newspapers and magazines. Fortunately, advancements in digital signage technology are on the horizon that will allow this exact type of verification. Digital signage cameras mounted on or in the bezel of flat panel displays combined with the right software can count viewers, track where they are looking and catalog some demographic information, such as gender and approximate age, about digital signage viewers are on the doorstep of the industry.
As this technology rolls out into the mainstream, it could give digital signage advertising networks a significant boost among media buyers as there finally will be concrete, verifiable metrics upon which to make ad buys and allocate budgets. Whether or not, media buyers will take a digital signage network’s word that the audience numbers they are representing based on this technology are actually true is another matter. But that issue seems easily addressable by bringing an independent third party to verify these findings into the mix. I could even imagine a scenario where a digital signage network “ratings” service would foot the tab for the measurement technology to separate it from the signage network and add legitimacy -of course for a fee, probably paid by the signage network.
Certainly privacy advocates have raised concerns about this sort of technology. However, steps can be taken to mask the identity of individuals being tracked by the cameras and allay fears about Big Brother tactics.
It seems to me, this type of technology promises to deliver an important component that has been missing from the digital signage ad network arena. Look for the financial success of these networks to grow as this sort of audience measurement technology -or some other yet to be defined approach that gets answers for the same need of verifiable metrics- gains momentum.
David Little is a digital signage enthusiast with 20 years of experience helping professionals use technology to more effectively communicate their unique marketing messages. He is the director of marketing for Keywest Technology in Lenexa, KS, a software development company specializing in systems for digital signage creation, scheduling, management and playback. For further digital signage insight from Keywest Technology, download our Six Basic Digital Signage Applications white paper and case studies. Or, visit our website for many helpful tips and examples on how digital signage can benefit your business.
Digital Signage & LCD enclosures for all budgets
Jun 28th
When people “dip their toe in the water”, for digital signage there are many products that are available to them, from solutions that cost as little as $400 to complete outdoor digital signage solutions that cost $2500 – there is a solution for everyone!
The digital poster, this is an LCD display that is around 19″ wide x 23″ high and runs off of a memory card, all you need to do is create your media content and drag n drop onto the memory card. Lock the memory card in position (for security reasons) then hang the poster on the wall. Advantages are they are very affordable and easily reused. Limitations you can not “daisy chain” them to provide a digital signage network. Interactive Kiosks – these interact with visitors, so that you can actually test demographics, you could install a webcam that records when anyone approaches the kiosk, then logs every product or service they visit on the kiosk. Advantages – very user friendly. Limitations – Cost! Can cost up to $2,500, used indoors. Plastic protective covers for LCD TV’s, these are a budget option for the home, not suited for giving the best impression to customers. Limitations – look unprofessional! Outdoor digital signage – this is an LCD TV, media player and a digital signage enclosures. The enclosures houses the signage hardware and provides protective to NEMA 4X and IP65 standards. Advantages – can be daisy changed and left in un-manned areas, ideal for a digital signage network. Limitations -costs for 1 complete system around $1,900.
This is a digital poster, it has all the functionality of a full blown digital sign without the expense.
As you can see, there is an application for all the above and they all vary, it just depends upon your budget and how much money you want to commit to the project.
Interactive kiosks are perfect for market research, to see what type of person comes to the kiosk and what they visit, all this is recorded via the touch screen display on the kiosk.
Interactive kiosk.
LCD enclosures GLobal are one of Europe’s leading suppliers of outdoor digital signage solutions as well as Europe’s leading manufacturer of LCD enclosures.
Digital Signage gets Closer to the Point of Purchase
Jun 28th
With today’s technological advancement, businesses, advertisers, and marketers alike are all looking for new, attention grabbing, cost effective ways to advertise their products and catch the eye of potential customers. Digital Signs provide this unique attention grabbing form of advertising. These ads can be displayed on any digital screens including plasma televisions, electronic billboards, projection screens, or other new forms of digital presentation such as the Organic light emitting diode (OLED) screens that are cheaper than the liquid crystal display (LCD) screens. These screens can be controlled remotely with authorization with just a computer and an Internet connection. The content that can be displayed on these screen ranges from text to full motion video with or without audio enhancement. In this new form of Digital Signage Advertising it is very important that you advertisement will capture the idea of the product and interest the buyer, without giving them too much information at one time. Advertisers want their Digital Signage advertisements to be clear and crisp and any professional Digital Signage advertising company can help advertisers and business create custom digital signage advertisements, which will captivate members of the target market for the companies product or service.
This new form of technology is gathering much support and stirring up quite a bit of interest, as Richard Branson, CEO of the Virgin brand announced his companies plan to introduce touch screen advertising boards in many popular locations in the world such as New York’s Time Square as well as in other locations such as London, Paris, Beijing, Loss Angeles, New Delhi, and hundreds of other locations. The first of these touch screens is to be introduced in New York City. These screens utilize digital signage advertisements as users can touch a product advertisement with their finger and instantly get more information about the brand and product including where the product is available for purchase.
Currently, the dropping prices of LCD Televisions as well s Plasma Screen Televisions have led many top companies as well as small businesses to create digital signage advertisements in major, high population density regions such as Times Square in New York City, as well as less traveled locations such as retail outlets, doctor’s offices, fast food restaurants, gas stations, and others.
This new type of advertising is an attempt by companies to improve their Point of Purchase Advertising techniques so these types of advertisements are especially prevalent in stores where the product being advertised is being sold. When advertisers advertise using digital signage, many try to get some video content in their ads so that they catch the eye of the customers; however, they do not want to overcrowd their advertisement with information and visuals, as this will discourage customers from learning more about the product. Also, although the option of audio content on the ads is available, advertisers sometimes opt not to use audio content as the locations of these ads are usually in bustling loud locations and the advertisements are often inaudible. The bottom line is that digital signage advertising is growing rapidly and maybe one of the primary ways of advertising in the coming months.
Bob R writes about Dynamic Digital Signage. Learn more at http://www.empirevideo.com .
Digital Signage Payoff: What’s a Challenge for TV May be a Boon for Digital Signage Networks
Jun 27th
I had dinner the other evening with some friends from New England. The couple splits its time between a home in the southern part of New Hampshire during the winter and a scenic farm in northern Vermont during the summer. In the past, Iâ??ve had opportunities to visit both places and travel with them between their homes.
As dinner progressed, the conversation turned to the Old Man of the Mountain, a natural rock formation on the New Hampshire landscape that serves as a symbol adorning state highway signs and license plates. Iâ??d stopped on several occasions at Franconia Notch State Park to view the Old Man from a distance.
In May 2003, erosion, wind and weather finally took their toll on the Old Man, when in an instant the rocks gave way and the landmark slid down the mountain and into history. At dinner, I asked in passing about the event and my friends told me a few things I had never known about the landmark.
The Old Man of the Mountain had existed in a tenuous state for years, my friends said. In an effort to preserve the landmark, the state had wrapped chains and cables around portions of the face to keep it in place. Plastic was strategically placed in an effort to prevent rain from penetrating crevices, freezing, expanding and making the face more unstable. Volunteer quarryman even regularly inspected the landmark and did their best to maintain its integrity. However, despite everyoneâ??s best efforts, the Old Man of the Mountain collapsed in a heap May 3, 2003.
As my friends discussed the Old Man and the efforts to preserve it, I couldnâ??t help but think about the similarities between the fallen-away landmark and TV, commercials and digital signage.
As a mass medium television is the undisputed champion, but I see signs of erosion, unstable features and steps at preservation that ultimately are likely to prove futile. TV is in a state of transition, and the medium as itâ??s been known for the past 60 years or so is undergoing radical changes.
Sure thereâ??s the transition from analog to digital that the government has mandated for February 2009, but thatâ??s not what Iâ??m talking about. Iâ??m referring to a transition being forced upon the medium thatâ??s about as welcome as the rain and snow were to the Old Man.
Since itâ??s inception as a commercial medium, television in this country has been linear. Programs have a set starting time and known finish â??for the most part. In between show segments are commercial breaks; and in between shows are more commercials. Networks and stations have relied on this structure to build program lineups, audiences and desired demographics that advertisers wish to reach.
However, with the roll out of digital video recorders over the past few years, viewers â??not network programmers- are in charge of when a show gets watched. Worst of all for the marketers and the networks, viewers can use the same recorder to â??zapâ? or zip by commercials. Each time a viewer does so, itâ??s like another drop of rainwater penetrating a crack in the Old Manâ??s face, wearing away the underlying soil and rock holding the structure in place.
Add to that the growing availability of video-on-demand from cable and satellite TV operators, TV network Web sites that make popular shows like â??Lostâ? and â??Greyâ??s Anatomyâ? available on-demand via streaming broadband connection, and the countless shows, movies and events available for download via file sharing, and itâ??s easy to see the cracks are growing and the edifice is nearing a shift.
To be sure, the networks rolling out the chains, wrapping up their franchise tight to hold the status quo. Shows like â??American Idolâ? garner huge ratings and encourage viewers to buck the VOD trend by asking them to call in and vote for their favorite performers live. But that strategy raises some interesting questions, like how broadly can it be applied, and doesnâ??t it just feed the desire of viewers for interactive control over the content they view?
Technology and interactivity are only two of the elements eroding the status quo. The other is demographics. Closely tied to technology and interactivity to be sure, the highly sought after younger demographic is fluent in technology. From text messaging to gaming, on-line chats to music downloads, younger audiences are immersed in the stuff. Unfortunately for television networks and their advertisers, this group also appears to be less interested in television than older viewers.
All of these shifts, as gradual as they may be, are good news for digital signage networks. On one level, digital signage gives marketers who may grow uncertain about the stability of the Old Man of Television a refuge for targeted advertising. On another, digital signage bears a close resemblance to television and can easily take advantage of the cache of the medium without falling prey to the elements eroding its stature. On yet another, digital signage displays can be configured to work in hybrid mode, offering the benefits of linear program playback, which can be interrupted with something as simple as a touch of the screen and sent into an interactive, digital kiosk mode. This in particular, positions digital signage to capitalize on the propensity of younger viewers to feel at home with interactive technology, and thus offer marketers direct access to a highly desired demographic.
Will television slide down the media mountain just as the Old Man did in New Hampshire? Perhaps, but I canâ??t say when with any more reliability than the surveyors 100 years ago who predicted the demise of the Old Man. What I can say is this: The forces buffeting the edifice of television are growing in strength. Whether or not that media landmark can withstand them in the long run, television and its traditional business model are likely to continue changing. As they do, the prospect of digital signage networks to offer marketers an attractive alternative will only grow.
David Little is a digital signage authority with 20 years of experience helping professionals use technology to expand their marketing messages with alternative media. Visit http://www.keywesttechnology.com and find how you can expand your marketing horizons. For further insight, download my free white paper Why Digital Signage Works. It gives a quick overview from an industry perspective on the fundamentals of digital signage. Included are some recently published findings by Neilsen Media Research on the measured impact of strategically placed digital signs. And while you are browsing our web site, sign up and take advantage of our free weekly Webinars that give you hands-on experience with our digital signage software.
Digital Signage: Out-of-home Advertising Gains Public Recognition
Jun 27th
The concept of advertising with media outside of the home gained a good degree of notoriety Sunday in The Los Angeles Times with a major article by staff writer Alana Semuels.
The 1,000-word article, “Now showing very near you…”, makes a strong case for digital signage networks and advertising as well as other out-of-home media. In the article, Semuels identifies digital video recorders as a major culprit in diluting the frequency with which traditional television commercials are viewed. As a result, advertisers are hungry for an effective substitute, and out-of-home ads appear to be the solution.
Semuels elaborates on a major theme of several of my recent columns, namely every day more TV viewers are skipping past commercials with their DVRs, making in-store, out-of-home advertising all the more appealing. (Two of my earlier columns discussing the impact of DVRs on TV viewing, include: “Digital Signage Payoff: What Is A Challenge For TV May Be A Boon For Digital Signage Networks” and “Digital Signage Market Poised to Skyrocket.”)
According to the LA Times story, about 20 percent of U.S. households now have digital video recorders. The ease with which viewers in these homes can skip past the commercials has a growing number of advertisers interested in out-of-home ads on flat panel displays near the point of sale where they can influence shoppers making purchasing decisions. And, if they can’t influence a particular buying decision, at least they can elevate brand awareness.
Quoting San Francisco-based Premier Retail Networks, which has 200,000 screens in 6,500 stores nationwide, the article points out 42 percent of shoppers remember a brand they see on in-store screens, twice number for television commercials.
It’s no wonder then that a recent forecast from PQ Media Research indicates that spending on out-of-home advertising will grow 27.7 percent this year. The statistics, part of the company’s “PQ Media Alternative Out-of-Home Media Forecast 2007-2011” report show the category to be among the fastest growing segments in the media industry.
Last year, media spending on out-of-home advertising reached $1.69 billion, up 27 percent from the 2005. In fact, spending on out-of-home advertising has grown at double-digit rates every year from 2001-2006 with a compounded annual growth rate of 22.6 percent, according to the PQ Media report.
In discussing the reasons for the growth, Patrick Quinn, president and CEO of PQ Media said: “Unlike its mass media peers, alternative out-of-home advertising is impervious to channel or web surfing and is immune to audience fragmentation.”
PQ Media identified several factors driving the growth of out-of-home advertising, including:
• advertiser perception that out-of-home ads provide high engagement, targeting options, proximity to point-of-sale, measurable impact and cost effectiveness;
• data indicating exposure to and recall of these media are growing;
• research suggesting the vast majority of consumers view alternative out-of-home media as favorable and educational;
• new technology enabling companies to launch digital advertising platforms that generate higher revenues than the conventional formats they replace.
PQ Media divides out-of-home advertising into three categories: video advertising networks and screens; digital billboards and displays; and ambient advertising. The research firm has found video advertising networks is the largest category, accounting for 60 percent of all out-of-home ad spending. Spending on this category grew 28 percent in 2006 to $1.01 billion with double-digit growth in four markets: in-theater, in-office, in-store and in-transit, according to the company.
High-profile news articles, like the one from the LA Times, draw the public’s attention to this market. More importantly, this sort of coverage helps busy ad professionals focused on traditional media segments to notice the out-of-home advertising market. As these ad pros have their own “Ah-Hah” moments thanks to these sorts of articles, it won’t take too much effort to back up the perception that out-of-home advertising is a growing, important new segment. Research, such as that from PQ Media, makes it easy for out-of-home advertising to be taken seriously -and more importantly for ad buyers to consider it as a new part of their media mix. As they do, out-of-home advertising and digital signage are likely to enjoy even wider acceptance and use.
David Little is a digital signage authority with 20 years of experience helping professionals use technology to expand their marketing messages with alternative media. Visit http://www.keywesttechnology.com and find how you can expand your marketing horizons. For further insight, download my free white paper Why Digital Signage Works. It gives a quick overview from an industry perspective on the fundamentals of digital signage. Included are some recently published findings by Neilsen Media Research on the measured impact of strategically placed digital signs. And while you are browsing our web site, sign up and take advantage of our free weekly Webinars that give you hands-on experience with our digital signage software.
Digital Signage: Apple’s Iphone Touts Growing Touch Trend
Jun 27th
Unless you live in a cave, you’ve probably noticed Apple has launched its much ballyhooed iPhone this week. AT&T, the phone’s exclusive distributor for the first six months it’s on the market, has already added thousands of employees nationwide to handle consumer demand at retail centers. It reports anticipating sidewalk campers waiting in line overnight for the new phone to go on sale.
Without a doubt, Apple’s iPhone is shaping up to be the next, must-have for those who want to be a part of the hottest, latest, hippest trend. What makes the iPhone so sought-after? The answer is probably a little bit different for each customer, but many of those responses likely center on its cool, quick, easy touch-screen interface that will let users dial their way into the next generation of telephony –among other things.
Touch-screen technology is growing dramatically, according to market research firm iSuppli. The researcher forecasts that revenue generated by leading touch-screen technologies will grow to $4.4 billion by 2012, up from $2.4 billion in 2006. While the iPhones will play a part in this growth, touch-screen proliferation should also see a bump from the momentum building for hybrid, interactive digital signage.
Think of hybrid systems as part digital signage, part digital kiosk. When in digital signage mode, they playback video, sound, graphics, text and animation in a linear fashion. In other words, Segment A is followed by Segment B, etc. What sets them apart is when a viewer interacts with these screens. Immediately, they switch to an interactive mode, allowing the viewer to drill down to sought-after information. More often than not, the interface facilitating that interaction is a touch screen.
Touch-screen interactivity tied to digital signage is beginning to attract the attention of marketers nationwide because it not only draws digital signage viewers into their advertising messages and lets them communicate on a personal, customized level, but also because it gives them something other media can’t: quantifiable response metrics.
Think about the last time you heard an ad on the radio. There’s a good chance the announcer said something like, “Be sure to tell ABC Company that Joe Announcer from WXYZ Radio sent you.” How about your last magazine? Was it filled with bound and blown-in response cards for special offers? What about newspaper coupons? They’re the same thing –an effort in part to quantify the reaction of the public to a commercial offer.
The wonderful thing about hybrid, interactive digital signage –most often driven by touch-screen interaction- is it can deliver up-to-the-minute metrics about what viewers are interested in, and if set-up properly, who those consumers are.
Think about the value of gathering information from a network of hybrid, interactive digital signage systems installed at hundreds of fashion locations across the country. All day long, signs play back the retailer’s linear marketing messages –building ambience, creating a mood and attracting interest. Periodically, customers approach the digital sign and touch it to access information about specific merchandise. The choices viewers make about what to touch can be saved and/or transmitted in real-time back to corporate headquarters.
Having that level of information about what’s on the minds of customers is invaluable. Beyond simply letting the marketing department tweak its digital signage presentations, information like that can help merchandise buyers identify what’s hot and what’s not. Comparing it to cash register receipts can take analysis of marketing messages to a whole new level.
Members of the public are demonstrating they want to interact with technology to improve their lives. Why else would anyone consider camping out overnight on a sidewalk for a phone?
Desire like that among the public in the very least indicates people like having a tactile experience with technology. Best of all for marketers, those experiences can be tied directly to greater, quantifiable interaction with the public. That can mean nothing but good things for marketers wishing to influence buying decisions with their digital signage messaging.
David Little is a digital signage authority with 20 years of experience helping professionals use technology to expand their marketing messages with alternative media. Visit http://www.keywesttechnology.com and find how you can expand your marketing horizons. For further insight, download my free white paper Why Digital Signage Works. It gives a quick overview from an industry perspective on the fundamentals of digital signage. Included are some recently published findings by Neilsen Media Research on the measured impact of strategically placed digital signs. And while you are browsing our web site, sign up and take advantage of our free weekly Webinars that give you hands-on experience with our digital signage software.