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Tag Archives: digital signage
Book Review: Digital Signage
As digital signage continues to grow as a core industry, more books are being written. This one is from 2008. Here’s my review: Subscribe to the comments for this post? Digg this! Share this on Facebook Share this on LinkedIn Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Tweet This! Continue reading
Posted in Internet Kiosks, Public Kiosks
Tagged book review, books, business, business strategy, content, digital media, digital out of home, digital signage, Kiosk, review
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The Influence on Digital Signage
Yesterday, one of my favorite Tweeters, Aaron Danks , asked this on Twitter : I want to try and answer. It’s going to take more than 140 characters. Here we go: It’s the other way around. What new, unpredictable, market/industry will enter digital signage? Mobile and Social Media. As an industry, digital signage is driven by technology: a screen, or a computer, or software. It’s what you’re going to do with it that will make the difference. In reality, a TV is nothing more than a computer screen (or vice versa). And our culture is rapidly reaching a saturation point with screens. Nowadays you find yourself surprised when you’re in a venue without a screen. If the venue doesn’t have a screen, chances are you do, with your mobile device. There are two things everyone has now: A screen and a camera. Everyone will want to make content for a screen. Content is now being driven by social media. The ability to share information across an almost universal platform like Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, or YouTube enables real-time messaging, information, and engagement. Networks will facilitate this easy interactivity. You don’t follow Starbucks.com. You follow Twitter.com/starbucks , or Facebook.com/starbucks . That’s how Starbucks promotes themselves and engages with consumers. Mobile presents a complement, a companion to digital signage in the potential for engagement. When Starbucks asks you to follow them. How are you following? Through your mobile device. When you see a screen offering to post your SMS, where is the SMS coming from? Your mobile device. The term ‘Social Media’ is as inappropriate in discussing convergence of channels, platforms, and messages as the term ‘digital signage’ is to describe the multitude of available screens and locations on which we see the very messages we are putting out there. But, in a general sense, the influence of social media’s best practices will be the driver of digital signage messaging. Coupled with the interactive nature of mobile devices, digital signage will be a complementary channel of engagement for both the network and the audience. There. That’s my answer. Agree? Disagree? Chime in. I’d love to hear what you think. Subscribe to the comments for this post? Digg this! Share this on Facebook Share this on LinkedIn Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Tweet This! Continue reading
Posted in Custom Kiosks
Tagged consumer engagement, digital out of home, digital signage, facebook, flickr, interactivity, Kiosk, marketing, mobile, my take, social media, twitter
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The Learning Experience of Teaching
That's me. First row, on the left. Over the last four months, I have had the extreme pleasure to teach at Texas State Technical College as part of their digital signage degree program. For years I believed that teaching would be so cool to do, and now I know why. I learn as much from my students as (I hope) they learn from me, and when you tap into the generosity of others, it can make the experience even better. When I was asked to teach at TSTC’s digital signage program, I did not hesitate to be a part of this. “…and that is how we get R-O-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!” I want to call out two companies that helped me create a great learning experience for the inaugural class in TSTC’s digital signage program. NEC Part of the program at TSTC was to have the students install and manage a real digital signage network. I reached out to Pierre Richer at NEC. Without hesitation he donated a 46” monitor for the bookstore. NEC has a reputation for outstanding displays as well as industry partnership. This is no exception. Thank you, Pierre. If you want to learn more about NEC, click here . FLYPAPER We have a screen. We have the software. Now we need to make some content. The folks at Flypaper jumped on board and donated licenses to the students to create content for the screen. Not only licenses, but Chris Varley spent two hours on a training webinar with the students to help them understand how Flypaper works, and how they can use it. Immediate reaction from the students was (and I’m quoting here), “Awesome. This is so cool.” I agree, both with the students’ assessment of the company and the software. Thank you to the whole gang at Flypaper. You can learn more about them here . And for the record, I think this platform is a game changer. Here is their recent press release . I understand that several new students are starting the program and I get to teach again this summer. I can’t wait. Especially if they let me be THIS kind of professor. Subscribe to the comments for this post? Digg this! Share this on Facebook Share this on LinkedIn Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Tweet This! Continue reading
Posted in Internet Kiosks, Internet Kiosks, Public Kiosks and Custom Kiosks, Public Kiosks
Tagged content, digital signage, Kiosk, my take
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Why We Expect Digital Signage To Be Perfect
Dmitry Sokolov is an outspoken evangelist of digital signage, and is not afraid to say what’s on his mind. He backs up his thoughts with a lot of experience. So his tweets are always interesting and appreciated. Last Friday, he asked this question on Twitter : I retweeted it, but more for the rhetorical effect. Now, I want to answer it. We expect it to automatically be better than anything else out there. HDTVs are so much cooler than posters or backlit signs, right? And when you add in 3D animation, and bouncy text, and superdy duperdy cool sound effects, there’s no doubt it will be awesome, right? And we are supposed to be experts. We tell clients and buyers how to install a screen, put software on a computer, and create gorgeous, award-winning content. Sometimes we act like Steven Spielberg is on our staff. I asked if he could partner with me to help a client. He said he couldn't. He was busy. Pfft. We never tell people how good or bad our installations or content is. If we did that, we would lose a sale. I’m all for humility, but not at the expense of losing a potential client. Buyers have a very short grace period to justify the capital expenditure of high definition screens. If I’m going to pay this much money to have you put a screen where I could hang a piece of paper, I want my ROI. NOW. We tell people what these screens could do, but the screens don’t live up to the hype. And when the numbers (or bills) come back to the network owners, they start to ask questions. This is why the sales cycle takes so long: We can’t prove it works, and buyers don’t have huge amounts of liquid cash to play with. They need to know it works. Now. Maybe we criticize because it’s easy to see how we could do better than the other guys. Maybe the reason we criticize digital signage is because we over-promise on expectations, and we under-deliver on results. It’s a technology and practice that continues to evolve. We, the executors of digital signage, continue to evolve with it; we learn every day. But here’s the good news: We’ll get better at it. The market will saturate with screens and technology to the point where the disciplines are about consumer engagement and great content. And because that’s where the rubber hits the road, that’s where the expectations of performance will be realized. In the end, I’m not afraid to constructively discuss why digital signage can be better. I just hope I can bring solutions to the table as well. Everyone's a critic. Share/Bookmark Continue reading
Posted in Internet Kiosks, Public Kiosks and Custom Kiosks
Tagged afraid, back, continue, criticize, digital signage, effect, expectations, good, my take, question, sale, signage, technology
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