Out-of-home technologies & behaviours
I’m lucky enough to sit on the British Screen Advisory Council and they recently asked the me question ‘what keeps you awake at night ?’ with respect to Posterscope and the out-of-home communications business. Here’s what I said:
What keeps me awake
isn’t to do with restrictions or threats it’s about how we as a business and as
an industry, capitalise on the opportunities that are arising from
technological developments and changes in people’s behaviour when they are out
of their homes with these two points being increasingly interlinked.
What will products
such as the i-pad mean for OOH media owner and agencies? With more people connected (to other people,
information and brands) in more places, what we need is better understanding of
how posters, screens, interactive installations, experiential marketing and the
like, influence app and web usage on such devices and how they in turn
influence other behaviour OOH.
A huge amount of
social networking is taking place via mobiles, In fact, according to Comscore those
who access social networks via mobiles do so for much longer than their PC
based counterparts.
Our research projects and
campaigns are starting to teach us about the power of OOH media in triggering immediate
discussion or advocacy through the mobile web but there is much more to
learn. Facebook makes self expression
really easy but connecting this to screens in places like bars or city centres
adds location based relevance, coupled with crowdsourced data or localised real
world fame.
Facebook are about to
launch a location based service allowing people to ‘check in’ via a mobile app
when they arrive at certain locations, much like Foursquare and this certainly
presents an opportunity for OOH media.
For example, a study by Loca Moda demonstrated that displaying Foursquare data feeds on OOH screens doubled the numbers of people ‘checking
in’ to those locations. But at the same time
apps have the potential to increase the proliferation of location based ads so
does that diminish or enhance the uniqueness of posters. How does the OOH industry ensure that this is
an opportunity and not a threat ?
This sort of thing is
happening everywhere. In 2008 Google
applied for a patent to overlay virtual posters onto billboards in it’s Streetview
photographs and the principle of online style adserving to digital OOH screens
has been talked about for years.
OK, so other people
are encroaching on an area historically ‘owned’ by companies like us. But at the same time we’ve been doing the
same with initiatives involving mobile apps, social media elements or the
placement of billboards in computer games.
I’d argue that accepting overlap, striving for collaboration and the
creation of new business models is the way to go.
What we are seeing
with all of this is convergence and aside from the technologies themselves
there are other factors that act as convergence catalysts with one great example
being the Olympics.
2012 has already
driven changes in media infrastructure and will continue to do so. One of the main reasons that there are
digital advertising screens all over the London Underground is because they
will help boost the image of London as a modern city for Olympic visitors.
During the event there
will be an increase in consumer demand for the latest associated content and
with peoples increased expectation of instant gratification mobile devices and
OOH screens can play a very significant role in delivering this.
One concern with a lot
of these technological developments is that they can generate huge amounts of
data about people’s behaviour OOH. GPS
tracking, loyalty cards, travel tickets and even trackable supermarket shopping
carts are just a few examples. So what
constitutes responsible use of this data?
The answers to this question require some careful consideration and are
not always obvious.
But whatever we do as
a company and as an industry if we try to maximise the extent to which our
communications plans add value to people’s OOH lives we will stand the greatest
chance of success.
Once we’ve cracked all
of this, I guess I’ll sleep better !
network:





London as a modern city for Olympic visitors.
During the event there will be an increase in consumer demand for the latest associated content .
Posted by: cheap laptops canada | 29 May 2010 at 05:17 PM