Follow this link: Curiosity rover: Martian solar day 2 – Fullscreen 360º VR Panorama.
Mars rover – Fullscreen 360º VR Panorama …pretty cool.
15 Wednesday Aug 2012
Posted in Observations
15 Wednesday Aug 2012
Posted in Observations
Follow this link: Curiosity rover: Martian solar day 2 – Fullscreen 360º VR Panorama.
06 Friday Jul 2012
Posted in Observations
This morning I thought I’d sign up for a web usability seminar from an online usability platform provider.
You’d think registering would be a piece of cake but despite populating fields, checking and re-checking the data being submitted, removing spaces and any other special characters, I had no joy submitting this basic form. Oh the irony!
The company details have been removed to protect the company (a little) and I have amended my details for the screen-grab.
15 Friday Jun 2012
Posted in Observations
Brands really are still questioning whether they need to be proactive in social, as well as what quantifiable returns they can hope to attain? These were some of my observations as I conversed with brand managers and suppliers at the recent Retail Bulletin Customer Loyalty Conference, in London.
For brands keen to implement a new loyalty programme or optimise an existing programme, a fundamental requirement has to be to have a handle on how a customer engages with the brand across the multitude of touch-points in order to ascertain how any program might influence this behaviour. For this very reason brands need to be monitoring the space to benchmark and evaluate their programs.
Social is increasingly becoming one of the most important areas that brands can leverage to become a true touch-point. Without a doubt, brands that decide they don’t want to proactively participate and engage with consumers face the threat of missing vast opportunities to grow and deepen their relationship with existing customers, increase share of wallet and grow their customer base through advocates.
There has been extensive research conducted to suggest that customers that interface with a brand across multiple channels tend to have longer customer lifespans and a higher lifetime customer value versus those that are not cross channel. Even more convincingly, research from Bain & Co. discovered that customers engaging with a brand across social channels spent on average between 20 to 40 percent more with that brand versus those customers that were not active in this manner.
By observing spend by early adopters in the social space in relation to their brand marketing budgets, the pioneers are investing huge proportions of budget into social activity to support the value that social has been able to drive for their business.
09 Saturday Jul 2011
Posted in Observations
Digital marketing is changing…again, and the marketing guys are going to have to work harder to stay abreast of how to help their clients best implement their digital strategy. We’ll need new UX skills and integrated channel understanding to deliver the ‘connected brand experience’ being driven by device proliferation.
To demonstrate the point, a few months ago I joined LoveFilm, the online movie/games rental service. You create a list of titles you’d like to borrow and they ship them out to you as the titles become available.
I wasn’t expecting too much from the service, given my previous experiences of Blockbuster and Sky, though that was a number of years ago. Heck was I wrong.
My ability to create, manage and track my rentals via the desktop web, smartphone application and even my PS3, with the additional ability to stream select movies via desktop or PS3 surpassed my expectations of the service.
On top of this, timely and relevant email correspondence to keep me engaged, means that I have grown to really respect the marketing foundation for this business. The majority of preferred touch-points through which I wish to interact with LoveFilm are covered with considerable thought given to each.
Okay it’s missing a few tricks, e.g. a mobile web experience for non-app users and a native tablet environment, as well as leveraging relevant push notifications via other touch-points beyond email would assist the comms effort, but nevertheless a great overall marketing platform exists. LoveFilm is trying to keep the customer at the heart of it’s service and is succeeding.
So what is the relevance for pharma?
Pharma has gone multi-channel and ‘integrated’. Not new by any means, but In pharma my observations have been that integrated, multi-channel really is the ability to send communications via a select number of channels with little appreciation of how those channels work seamlessly together.
Often no central CRM component exists to tie together the behaviour of it’s audience across channels to drive future outbound communications, and channel selection for marketing efforts is typically based on what has historically always been done.
In order to reshape the mould, we need to change our perception of a healthcare professional. We should assume that today’s HCP carries a smartphone, has a Facebook, Flickr and Twitter account, uses Skype, owns a tablet, watches YouTube, reads RSS content, downloads vodcasts, watches catch-up TV and will buy a smart TV (wi-fi enabled) and NFC enabled phone in 6 months time. By thinking about our customer in this way, and by challenging this new persona with data, we can start to rethink our marketing challenge.
We should consistently be planning our communications strategy to offer a connected brand experience that has the customer at the heart of the marketing communication. My customer should be able to choose how they connect with my brand via their preferred channel.
How can we give our customers a great experience across these wonderful current and upcoming touch-point opportunities, recognising and informing one another should I choose to interact with one channel, then switch to another. As a business, what does my operational platform need to look like to stay ahead of the rapid evolution taking place in the digital space? These are the questions and challenges that I hope I’ll be asked to assist clients with in the coming months …
07 Thursday Jul 2011
Posted in Mobile, Observations
Okay, sadly I did get a little excited when Pizza Express announced their new iPhone application that allows customers to pay for their meal via Paypal. I wouldn’t say that I’m brand-loyal to Pizza Express but I visit it regularly enough to say that it’s a regular haunt amongst a few places I tend to go. Knowing a visit would happen at some point, I took an online trip to the iTunes store and downloaded….
Great to see a traditionally more ‘me-too’ brand deciding to offer something new, rather than just follow the competition. Good on you!
I can imagine the whirring brains at the agency/client HQ….good food + good service + faster and more convenient payment method = great customer experience.
A week later, I decided to go for lunch at the local Pizza Express in the City and sure enough when it came to paying the bill, the iPhone was unleashed. Having typed in the 9 digit receipt code, I quickly transacted via my existing Paypal account. The screen read, ‘Thank you for your payment…..You may now leave the restaurant.’ Loving it!
As I rose to leave the restaurant, one of the staff stopped me in my tracks. Explaining that I had paid via the app, the staff member told me that I’d have to wait a short while until the payment acknowledgement hit their till system. Sure enough, a couple of minutes later, I was given the nod.
Would have been quicker to have just paid by cash or card. Lesson learned. Novelty apps do not equal an improved customer experience!
01 Friday Jul 2011
Posted in Mobile, Observations, Operating Systems
Tags
It’s July 1, 2011 – worldwide market share for the mobile operating system ecosystem looks like the following:
Symbian: 31.7%
Apple iOS: 23.4%
Blackberry (RIM) OS: 15.2%
Android: 13.8%
Given the proliferation of very competent handsets emerging on the smartphone market supporting Android 2.3, I’m predicting that in 5 years time, we’ll only be looking at Android and Apple as the two major platforms that will co-exist together. Android will remain to have the larger share of the two – this will be driven by the number of non-Apple device manufacturers and market access driven by the mobile network operators and their retail distributions.
Any other takers?