An article was just released on the integration of SMS mobile marketing and digital signage. It explains some of the benefits of implementing a mobile marketing campaign with a digital signage network. It also outlines, in broad terms, how to procure a short code and implement standard SMS interactivity with digital signage.

In a larger network situation where scalability is possible, SMS short code procurement is almost a must for cutting costs and increasing efficiency. But, it’s all a numbers game. Is your network scalable enough to warrant paying $500 to $1000 a month for the short code fees, not to mention the cost per text? Is it worth it to you to go through the hassle of software development to ensure your SMS campaigns work flawlessly? If so, then procuring your own short code may be beneficial for you.

In some instances it may be a question of whether you want to go there. Am I an SMS company or a digital signage company? Or do I want to be a digital signage company who integrates their own SMS solutions? These questions are of vital importance when working on integrating mobile marketing with your digital signage.

To view the article in its entirety, please CLICK HERE.

 

Taxi Cab Digital Signage

When it comes to riding in taxi cabs, I'm a foreigner. I think I did it once when a friend of mine was desperate to go to the mall with his girlfriend. As for me, I'd rather walk. I guess that just shows my frugality (or cheapness, whichever you prefer). Taxis, however, are a very highly utilized form of transportation, especially for the more affluent. Take the following statistics for instance:

  • New York City has 240 million high income passengers per year.
  • Those passengers gross over $1.8 billion (with a "B") annually.

That's a whole lot of clams! Now, let's think for a moment about the possibilities for taxi advertising. We see ads on the top of taxis. But what about advertisements for the paying customer inside? This is where taxi digital signage will be so effective. Think for a minute of a small LCD placed strategically behind the headrest of the front seat of the taxi. Let's hook that puppy up to an internet powered digital signage network. Now we've got something powerful.

Here's the best part. These high profile execs riding in the cabs will also be able to mooch free wireless from the aircard powering the signage. The internet in this case is also supported by advertising. Boyah! So,

Taxi GPS
Wireless GPS devices also offer the cab drivers navigation and real-time traffic reports. Can you think of the benefits here? Of course, as the cost of gas continues to increase, this feature alone can save the cabbies boatloads over the annual aggregate. A Taxi GPS system also offers the taxi company tracking and time management tools for both drivers and vehicles.

Taxi signage may not be a new concept, but it can be implemented easily and effectively as a way for taxi, digital signage, and advertising companies to increase their revenues. You can advertise on such a network, or establish your own. 

 

A Match Made in Heaven: The Marriage of Viral, Interactive SMS Text with Dynamic Digital Signage

Projective Marketing has been working feverishly on a project I believe will revolutionize two distinct and separate industries: digital signage and SMS text marketing. The revolution will not come fast enough in my mind. The integration of SMS text and Bluetooth marketing along with digital signage may well become the most synergistic and symbiotic relationship in the future of participative advertising—literally a match made in heaven.

Digital Signage Traditional signage has not been dynamic. Digital Signage has not been affordable, until recently. With the decrease in prices of plasma, LCD, and projection displays the digital signage industry has literally exploded. In fact, Isuppli/Stanford Resources reported that the worldwide retail signage market which was $501 million in 2003 will have a growth of 29 percent CAGR to $2.35 billion in 2009.

As an industry in the growth stage, digital signage firms will be scrambling over the next couple of years to gain digital “real estate.” Keith Kelsen, CEO of digital signage firm, MediaTile put the state of the industry quite succinctly,

Real Estate is where the displays are placed. Whether in airports and public spaces, at the retail shelf, in a hotel lobby, outdoors, or in a veterinarian clinic, real estate is the key. Right now, there is a race to capture as much real estate as possible. Once the screens are installed, that venue is tied up and the likelihood of changing technology, hardware and the operator is minimal. To secure real estate you need a strategy, a business model and some capital. There are many different models to make this work; from no charge to the holder of the real estate, to share in the profits, to share in the time on screen. The rules are going to change according to the type of network you are putting in. The fastest way to get there is to do the pilots with real advertisers.

Shortly, the real estate will be tied-up, players will be squeezed out, and the growth will subside, but for now there is literally a knock-down-drag-out battle for market share.

The Digital Signage Problem Currently, the signage industry has some issues. I’ll name just a few:

  1. Fragmentation: the industry itself has little congruency. This is true of many industries which are growing. It’s a race where only the fit survive through the fray. Casualties may occur, some buyouts, but in the end fewer firms will stand than do today.
  2. Uniformity: software and hardware. This comes from the barrage of companies with the multitude of platforms. Again, this problem is present mostly due to the initial fragmented market.
  3. Reinvention: many companies do not utilize operating systems already established and are utilizing vast amounts of resources reinventing wheels that could be utilized through existing applications. Again, this is partly due to the fragmentation.
  4. ROI Calculation: This is perhaps the most difficult, but important aspect of any advertising campaign. Internet campaigns through organic search as well as PPC have the ability of giving very precise ROI numbers, an aspect of internet marketing which advertisers absolutely love. Not only do they love it, but now they demand it, which is why some companies have searched for unique ways to calculate digital signage ROI. This still remains difficult, however. Impressions don’t talk, cash does. And, until the signage industry is able to put more precise numbers on effectiveness, they will be handicapped by incumbent advertising mediums.

So, there are some issues. Wherever there’s a problem, there’s usually a solution. Wherever there’s a need for a solution there’s an opportunity. I’ll discuss the solution in depth further.

SMS Text Advertising Before we talk about solving some of the headaches of the digital signage industry, let’s talk a bit about text message marketing. First off, I would like to just comment on the opportunity of marketing via text messaging. I mean, they’re right in people pockets, purses, and cars. We are an always-connected society. I know I often wonder, “how did I get along without this thing?”

Advertising via text messaging has been on the minds of countless advertisers, and many SMS companies have jumped at the opportunity over the last couple of years, including the giant Google. Dot mobi domain names are now even an option for the marketer looking to break into the on-the-go consumer. SMS advertising: powerful? Yes. Prominent? No, at least not yet. The market itself is in a growth stage. Procuring of short codes for text message companies is on the rise. In addition, it too is still growing. Text message marketing grossed over $80 billion in 2006 and well surpassed $100 billion in 2007. I dare anyone to argue with me about the great opportunity of text message marketing. Seriously, it’s powerful. Now let’s look at the two-edged sword…

The SMS Text Advertising Problem Text message marketing may be powerful, but because it’s so personal it can also be a great hindrance if used incorrectly or frivolously. For instance, advertising to persons via text without the prior expectation of the individual can be annoying. There’s also the possibility of spamming to mobile devices—a thought that personally makes me annoyed just thinking about it. I hate spam emails. In addition, opt-in texting services can easily become lackluster as persons glean information from other sources.

So, the question is how do we make people want ads?

How do we make people want to gain and receive SMS text messages?

In short, can we make SMS text advertising viral?

Can we make it interactively viral?

The Marriage Integration Let’s get down to the nitty gritty. Let’s make digital signage interactive. Let’s make digital signage viral. Let’s do it via SMS text messaging. This is what Projective Marketing did. They said, let’s give people the ability to play games, send texts directly to signage screens, and interact with signage via their mobile device. It’s perfect, every text sent by a consumer will prompt a response advertising text or TaggBack ad sent to the consumer’s mobile device. It’s a tit-for-tat strategy. No spamming, no SMS text opt-in required. People text because they want to, they are advertised to because they expect it. It’s that simple.

Much like Pay-Per-Click (PPC), the Projective Marketing Pay-Per-Text (PPT) campaigns give advertisers the ability to

  1. Choose specific demographics (including locale, age, and gender)
  2. Pick message keywords from messages Tagged to screens
  3. Pick an advertising budget on a daily, weekly, and/or monthly basis

It’s a match made in heaven. Not only do we solve the text message marketing dilemma but the digital signage ROI calculation conundrum (say that ten times fast) is also solved.

How? Well TaggBack ads are measurable, whether through traffic to a website with a coupon code attached or by foot traffic to a retail establishment. Let me give a specific example.

Bertha, a 17 year old female in Maple Valley, WA, is at the mall with her bosom friends. She sees a digital screen with the invitation, “text messages ONTO this screen: 89789 keyword ‘screen57’ then your message.”

  1. Bertha then types “screen57 Britney I love the shoes you just bought, they’re hot!”
  2. The message goes through the AcroTagg moderator and keyword selector tool and is subsequently displayed on the screen.
  3. A TaggBack text ad is sent to Bertha’s phone after searching her message and finding the word “shoe.” The message reads “$5 off any purchase over $50 at Footlocker: Women. Good today only.”
  4. Bertha walks into Footlocker and redeems her coupon.
  5. Retailers track the number of coupons, measure the amount of purchases made in connection with them and easily determine a precise ROI.

This scenario could be played out similarly with interactive games tied to the screen in a myriad of situations. It would seem the problems of both industries are solved. Karma and synergy has been attained. Text message marketers are not being annoying, and digital signage can calculate their ROI.

It would seem the problem is solved. Viral and interactive SMS Text marketing integrated with digital signage, a must. Projective Marketing :: Interactive SMS Solutions.

 

Flat Panel Display Speaker Line Up 2008 

Session: Commercial-Use Displays Through the Eyes of the FPD Industry

Chris Connery, Vice-President of PC and Large Format Commercial Displays, DisplaySearch
Andy Nelkin, President, Panasonic Professional Display
Speaker to be announced, Samsung
John Becconsall, Associate Vice President, Specialty Applications & Hospitality, Sharp


Session: Digital Signage at Work Today

Pierre Richer, President and COO, NEC
Doug Albregts, Vice-President of Marketing, Richardson Electronics
Dean Reverman, Director of Business Development, Hammond Communications Group


Session: Distribution: The Glue that Binds Vendors, Integrators and End-Customers

Jeff Jerome, Director of Product Management, Electrograph
Irene Chow, Senior Vendor Business Manager, Digital Signage, Ingram Micro
Speaker to be announced, Global Display Solutions (GDS)
Session: It’s More than Just the Display

Jeff Porter, Executive Vice President, Dynamic Signage, Scala
Jeff Collard, President, Omnivex
Steve Durkee, Vice-President of Sales and General Manager, Chief


Session: Crossing the Chasm from the Printed Page to the Digital Age

Eric Penot, Chief Information Officer, JCDecaux North America, JCDecaux
Suzanne Alecia, President, OVAB—The Out-of-Home Video Advertising Bureau

 

Click Fraud Increases Bode Well for Digital Signage

Well, some good breaks have come of late for digital signage, including some independent reports that pay-per-click fraud for internet advertising is on the rise and not going down. ClickForensics, an independent analysis company, has determined that although the major search engines have increased their policing of click fraud in various ways, it still continues to rise year after year.

The Click Fraud Index shows the rise. And, although some of the majors companies, including Google and Yahoo are taking the click fraud seriously and doing what they can to put a stop to it, it still isn't halting the increase.

What does this mean for digital signage? You be the judge. It may mean that going forward, signage will be come the wave to ride to make sure you're getting the most bang for your buck in digital advertising.

 
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