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Emerging Technology in Advertising, Product Management
There were whispers this week that Netflix are in Australia and are in the early stages of planning their launch. We’re keeping our fingers crossed because the more competition there is in this market the higher the chance of actually getting content when it comes available.  

You see, Australians are frustrated – much of the content that is shown on Australian TV comes from America and many of these shows air in the USA first, sometimes months before the Australian air date. 30 years ago, that was never an issue because there was absolutely no chance you’d be able to see the latest episode of Cheers before it actually arrived on your shores. With the advent of the internet, everything changed and now it’s possible to get access to the latest episode of Grey’s Anatomy, or Homeland, straight through your pipe and to your laptop mere hours after it airs in the USA.  

What this leads to, especially because of the plethora of spoilers coming from Twitter as shows air every evening, is thousands of people trying to get access to this content illegally. Let’s be clear – illegal downloading is not a laughing matter, it leaves content creators not being paid for work that they have undertaken and that’s not cool. However, rather than simply throwing more legal restrictions around to solve the problem it would make much more sense to strike deals that make the content available to anyone who wants to pay for it – without geographic restrictions.  

Torchwood did this exceptionally well with Torchwood: Miracle Day – airing episodes across the world on a similar schedule to prevent viewers from missing out. We no longer live in a world where country borders prevent digital content from being shared, so don’t fight it like the music industry did, embrace it. I say welcome to Netflix and any others who want to enter the market.   We’d just like a time where we can watch Grey’s Anatomy or The Blacklist in-line with the air dates from the USA so that we don’t find out the spoilers before we see it.
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Emerging Technology in Advertising, Mobile Apps, Mobile Optimisation, Product Management
The buzzword of the past few months has been iBeacon. Everyone is talking about it and how to use it to increase user engagement and revenue, but just what is it? First of all, iBeacon is merely the Apple version (denoted by the ‘i’) of a particular type of technology that runs on Bluetooth Smart.

Beacon technology is not exclusive to Apple, they just brought it further mainstream when they launched it across their US retail stores in December 2013. It’s designed to provide interaction with your customers according to their specific location.

Back to basics, it works like this:
– Purchase, at least 3, beacons from a vendor and set them up with their own unique identifier
– Create a mobile app for iOS 7+ or Android 4.3+ and triggers certain actions when it is in range of your Beacons (using their unique identifiers)
– Setup your Geo-Fence. Beacons have a 70m range, meaning they can detect your customers up to 70m away.

What is most magic about Beacon technology is that your customer doesn’t need to have the app running on their device when they are in range of the Beacon. Think of a Beacon like a light-house which is constantly pinging out a signal in a 70m radius.

So how does all of this help your business? A practical implementation of this might work as follows: You are walking around Woolworths and have the Woolworths application downloaded on your phone. The 3 beacons setup around the store pickup your device when they are pinging for connections.

By co-ordinating the feedback and relative distance you are from each beacon the application on your phone can determine which aisle you are shopping in (fresh food for instance). Using this information, they can then present you with an offer for a product in that aisle which is cross-referenced against your previous purchase history. Giving you, the customer, an appropriate, time-sensitive, location based offer that you are more likely to interact with than a generic offer sent to your email account.  

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That’s just one example of how you can use Beacons to further your business, but don’t limit your thinking to just in-store retail – there are lots of scenarios where you can use Bluetooth Smart, Beacons and mobile technology to increase your business. If you’re curious about how it could be applied to your business, get in touch and we can help you out.

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Emerging Technology in Advertising, Mobile Optimisation, Product Management
It’s no secret that traditional publishing (think print newspaper and magazines) have struggled with the dawn of digital and content being freely available online 24/7. In the same way as the music industry have raced to stop piracy instead of embracing the new revenue models that digital can bring, the publishing industry has been trying to lock consumers into subscription models for news content that they can get online for free elsewhere.

It’s worth noting that our founder’s background (way back in the days of very old Panasonic phones), was journalism. She started off wanting to break into the publishing industry, and learned all she could about their main revenue model: paid for by user, supplemented by advertising.

Back then, news wasn’t freely – in all senses of the word – available online, which meant that consumers were happy to pay the price for the magazine or newspaper and be sold to by advertisers inside. Now that consumers have access to publishers all around the globe, you can be sure that whatever news you are reporting is available elsewhere. So it begs the question: what can you offer your customers that they can’t get elsewhere? Editorial Selection

Now there is so much proliferation of content, it makes the relevant and useful information much harder to find. Enter mobile apps like NYT Now. This was an app launched by the New York Times designed to present you with the most important information, summarized by their editors for only $2 per week. Exclusive Content

Again pioneered by the NYT – New York Times Opinion. They took what was exclusive to them (the opinion pieces written by their editorial staff) and packaged it up in an easy to access format for just $1.50 per week. Integrated Content Content that has a presence in your print edition, on your website and in your app. Not just the same content repackaged for the different device or medium, but actually optimised for the device or medium. For instance, using mobile to its full potential. If you own Vogue, and know that your magazine is most frequently read in a hairdressing salon, then why not put an ad in the print version of the magazine to encourage your user to get their phone out and interact with the advert in order to get free hair product? Or use the app and augmented reality to see what they would look like with a particular model’s hairstyle?   After you have sorted out your content and established what you have that no one else has, how can you keep the advertising dollars rolling in? Pay per Download – just a few cents
Rather than paying on a subscription basis for access to every piece of content on a particular publication, instead pay on a per article basis. There’s a crowd-funding project on Kickstarter just now called Nanotransactions, the idea behind which is to let users pay just a few cents to access the articles they really want to read. Again, this requires good quality journalism and content that the user isn’t going to find elsewhere. Full disclosure: the man behind Nanotransactions, Nick Ross, is a friend of mine. Enhance your Print Edition
As an addition to your print edition, offer your advertisers the opportunity to insert their TVC into the magazine or newspaper. They get to use content they have already created and use it to further improve their brand presence. Increase your Advertising Footprint
Use mobile or tablet to have customers interact with the adverts inside your magazine, and use this to take their details and pass the leads back onto the advertiser, giving them what you’ve never been able to give them before: qualified leads from print advertising.   There is lots of potential out there, but let’s hope that the publishing industry doesn’t go the same way as the music industry.
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Emerging Technology in Advertising, Product Management
This was sent to us a couple of weeks ago. It was a campaign for British Airways that was put together by Ogilvy in the UK. Though it was actually done nearly a year ago now, it’s an excellent example of creative and tech knowledge combining. T

he premise of the campaign was a billboard in London’s Piccadilly Circus which uses surveillance technology to detect when there is a BA aeroplane in the air and close by the billboard. It then interrupts whatever advert is currently playing and is taken over by a child pointing up towards the plane, before overlaying the flight information: – Flight Number – Flight Destination – Destination weather

Take a look on YouTube to see more
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