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Saturday, June 2, 2007

Changes for New Media and Interactive

For digital signage reps to become successful with-in the industry several groups need to be contacted with-in an agency or direct client. As always a good first start is the president; but reality is that out-of-home buyers or "new media" Directors are conntacted first at agencies. Certainly a good starting point, just keep in mind that OOH budgets are still tiny. What I have personaly witnessed are reps knocking on the doors of interactive groups and conntecting with titles like media connector, director of multimedia strategy and so on; although many doors have to be knocked on I know of two reps that have entered into large deals by going through these backdoors. Once more digital signage networks become interactive with SMS, Bluetooth and the like we are going to see a diverse mix of descion makers approving these deals and more and more interactive folks working with these digital networks. There are going to be some as there are now that are able to tap into TV budgets and work with TV buyers but run a risk of being measured like TV. Maybe none of this makes sense and this is why the industry is a lot of fun; some standards will be released in the near future as a few companies continue to gain footing in the true digital sigange arena; and I continue to see national advertisers that are not educated on the content side of these networks which is a key factor that they can control. This article just was released about some changes and hires at Arnold in relation to interactive and new media.

Arnold Makes Key Hires
By David Gianatasio

BOSTON Havas' Arnold has added a quartet of senior staffers in its New York office in an effort to improve its digital offering and provide clients with sharper strategic insights across all brand channels.The agency hired Troy Kelly as svp, director of interactive marketing and Nate Swenberg as vp, director of multi-channel strategy.
Full Story

Friday, June 1, 2007

Outdoor Advertising

Ring-a-ding:Timely upfront messageTelephone kiosk signage greeted media buyers By Diego Vasquez May 31, 2007

As media people well know, there were hordes of media buyers in New York over the last couple weeks for the networks' upfront presentations for the coming season, leading into the upfront market where ad time will be sold for those shows.
So it seemed a good time to remind buyers that there were yet other ways to reach consumers, ways beyond television, such as outdoor advertising.The logical venue for such a message? The telephone kiosks buyers were likely to pass on their way to the presentations.“This message can’t be fast forwarded,” read a sign on a kiosk at 49th Street and 5th Avenue, not far from where NBC held its upfront presentation.

Virgin Mobile Changes Branding Tactics via Billboards

Virgin Mobile Changes Branding Tactics via Billboards
May 29, 2007By Kamau High
Adweek NEW YORK --

Virgin Mobile's first work from Havas' McKinney, now rolling out in New York, proclaims, simply, yet boldly, "You rule."The effort praises famed neighborhoods including Bed-Stuy, Chinatown and Hell's Kitchen with copy such as, "Presenting an idea as awesome as you: plans without annual contracts." There are also more generic iterations ("Car-service drivers, you rule") designed for posting in any area."We've attempted to change the conversation about wireless," said client CMO Howard Handler. "We like to say that our customers are in control."By the time the last sign goes up, within the next two weeks, there will be a total of 350 ads on bus shelters, phone kiosks, billboards and walls in New York.The campaign's print component is slated to run in Cosmopolitan, Vibe and the New York Post.In addition, the "You rule" concept will be featured on product packaging and the company's Web site, virginmobileusa.com.Other U.S. cities, as yet undisclosed, will get the "You rule" sign treatment later this year."This is a campaign that transcends localization. In the other cities, we'll maintain the notion of speaking directly to people," said Handler. "We're trying to celebrate the power of the individual and their ability to control their phones."McKinney, based in Durham, N.C., won the $15 million creative account earlier this year after a review. New York's Mother, the incumbent, declined to participate."This work was inspired by the truth that most cell phone providers want customers to make a commitment to them, and Virgin Mobile is all about making a commitment to its customers," said Jeff Jones, McKinney president.Virgin Mobile spent $16 million on advertising in 2006, per TNS.

Nielsen-Goes Live!

This should be interesting.


Agencies and Networks Ponder Nielsen Ad Ratings

By LOUISE STORY
Published: June 1, 2007
THE NIELSEN COMPANY, long the arbiter of television viewership, released standardized ratings of commercials yesterday, giving advertisers more information about how often viewers stay tuned during commercial breaks.
The ratings will trickle into computer systems at television networks and advertising agencies today while ad executives are negotiating billions of dollars of television sales for next year, and it is unclear how the new ratings will affect those deals. The commercial viewership data is not new — Nielsen has included it in one of its main data systems since the end of January — but now the data will be released every week in a standard, easy-to-read format.
“This is going to give everyone the ability, all parties involved, to start speaking the same language,” said Sam Armando, senior vice president and video research director at Starcom USA, an agency in the Publicis Groupe that purchases ads.
Consumer brand companies have traditionally decided how much to pay for television time based on Nielsen’s estimates of how many people watch certain programs. But as more people watch programs on digital video recorders through TiVo and other services, advertisers have become concerned that people might be zipping past their messages. The new ratings estimate the number of people, on average, watching ads over the course of a program.

Advertisers have been most concerned about whether people who own DVRs watch their ads, because those viewers can fast-forward through ads with the click of a remote.
But to the relief of networks, Nielsen data has shown that on average, people with DVRs still see about two-thirds of ads in their television viewing. That’s because about half of television viewing in households with DVRs is played back after the original broadcast of the program, and about 40 percent of the commercials in that time-shifted viewing are not fast-forwarded.
“The notion a year ago was that any commercial that was viewed on a time-shifted DVR had no value,” said Alan Wurtzel, president for research at NBC Universal. “All of that was wrong.”
Yesterday, Nielsen released similar data about viewing patterns. The data was based on viewership from the first week of May and showed that most DVR playback takes place within a day of the program’s broadcast. Broadcast television programs tend to be played back through DVRs more frequently than cable programs, and news and sports events are most often watched live.

In DVR households, viewers of broadcast television programs like “The Office” on NBC and “The Family Guy” on Fox are most likely to watch commercials. Thus, television networks with lots of time-delayed viewing on DVRs stand to gain the most from commercial ratings, if they can keep their fans from fast-forwarding through ads.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

An Introduction to Digital Signage

As I shift to include more news on digital signage from the advertising perspective, I thought it would be nice to share some insight and basics from Impart Media who has over 20 years of experience in the dynamic media industry and recently partnered with Seesaw Networks to Accelerate Market Penetration for Digital Signage. Under my blogroll and links are several resources that have much more knowledge available on Digital Signage-I find blogs to be one of the best sources for unreleased information and for networking with-in the industry. Enjoy!

An Introduction to Digital Signage
Purpose
Impart Media Group, Inc. (www.impartmedia.com) has developed a powerful platform called IQ that
enables the building and managing digital signage (and information kiosk) systems. However, digital
signage is a fairly new concept, and requires an understanding of several key concepts to help ensure
success. The purpose of this white paper is to introduce the concept of digital signage, explain who can
benefit from a signage installation, and outline the steps needed to get started with a digital signage
project.
What is Digital Signage?
Digital signage is a name given to any number of methods used to display multimedia content in public
spaces. Alternatively known as dynamic signage, electronic signage or narrowcasting, networks of digital
signs have been deployed across numerous retail chains, banks, airports, and corporate headquarters to
deliver informative and entertaining content to captive audiences and passers by. In its most basic
implementation, a digital sign consists of a playback device (such as a computer, VCR, flash or DVD
player) connected to a display.
Depending on the application, the display might be a small LCD screen, a large plasma display panel, a
rear projection display, or even a video wall composed of a number of connected screens. With a
number of affordable options available, anybody with a message to send to their out-of-home audience
can benefit from a digital signage installation.
s
The concept of out-of-home messages is not new. Billboards, window treatments and point-of-purchase
displays are widely used for out-of-home advertising, while bulletin boards (both traditional and
electronic), flyers, faxes, memos, and email have been used to send corporate communications and
educate employees for decades. However, true dynamic signs first came into popular use with the
advent of in-store closed circuit television networks in the 1980s. With the widespread availability of
affordable VCRs, retail stores and corporate headquarters were able to play back pre-recorded content
to their patrons and employees, providing timely information and entertaining content.
Soon, closed circuit networks would be augmented (and in some cases, supplanted) with affordable
TV/VCR combination units for smaller displays, and projection screens and video walls for eye catching,
large format presentations. With satellite distribution, it even became (relatively) affordable to syndicate
the same content to thousands of sites at once.
In recent years, several factors have combined to make digital signage a more powerful, eye-catching,
and affordable display medium than ever before and contributing to its widespread adoption. Key factors
include the nearly ubiquitous availability of high-speed Internet access, new large format displays like
plasma screens and LCD panels, and new compression formats that can compress large amounts of
content into small file sizes.
A modern digital sign adds several additional components to the traditional setup described above. The
controller, typically a powerful computer or media playback appliance (IQ Box), uses a digital connection
to deliver a crisp output signal to a digital display, like a plasma screen or LCD panel. The playback
device uses a digital storage medium (such as a hard drive or solid-state flash disk) to store digital
content locally, ensuring smooth playback. In many cases, the device can be remotely managed over the
Internet to allow for content updates, schedule changes, and compliance or uptime audit reporting.
An Introduction to Digital Signage page 2 of 4 rev: September 1, 2006
In its simplest implementation, a digital signage installation includes:
1. Internet Protocol (IP), Broadband Data Connectivity (via ethernet LAN, WLAN/Wi-Fi, Satellite
Datacast, xDSL, Cable Modem, WiMAX, 3G Cellular,).
2. A Media Playback Device or PC with removable media (DVD or Compact Flash card)
and/or local, hard disk drive read/write storage.
3. A Display (e.g. a television, plasma display, LCD panel, LED, DLP projector,…).
Even the smallest digital signage networks can benefit from remote management. Aside from offsetting
the costs of producing, replicating and distributing VHS tapes or DVDs, Internet connected signage
devices provide network administrators with the ability to closely monitor playback, ensuring that the
desired content is being displayed, and system uptime. Delivering content over the Internet ensures that
the content arrives and is displayed according to the proper schedule, eliminates errors in shipping and
handling, and removes reliance upon on-site personnel to change tapes or DVDs (since these individuals
are typically not very motivated to perform such tasks).
Additionally, compliance-reporting gives network owners a complete record of what every screen has
displayed. Finally, user-friendly management tools (e.g. IQ Producer) mean that people throughout the
organization – from advertising and creative services to operations and general management - are
empowered to change content and generate reporting metrics. Other remote management functions give
network operators the ability to status monitor and perform near real-time adjustments to every display’s
playback schedule, enabling real-time marketing experiments, emergency announcements, and even live
content feeds.
What Kind of Digital Signage Should You Use?
Choosing the right digital signage technology depends on the intended application. For example, a digital
signage application for internal corporate communications would probably benefit from large, eye
catching plasma displays placed in common areas such as cafeterias and break rooms. Depending on
the size of the deployment, the network owner might opt for either local or remote management. On the
other end of the spectrum, a manufacturer looking to improve their point-of-purchase advertising displays
might choose to employ small, lightweight LCD panels in conjunction with traditional product displays in
an aisle or endcap fixture, managing the content centrally via a web-based interface. Of course, budget
constraints must also be taken into consideration.
Digital signage applications that require large displays have a number of options to choose from,
including rear projection TVs, LCDs, plasmas, DLPs, LEDs, wall projectors, and traditional CRTs.
Smaller signs are typically either small LCD or CRT displays.
Touchscreens are available for virtually any sized display, and can add an interactive component
(e.g. IQ Interactive) to an otherwise non-interactive display medium. Finally, though many digital sign
networks start modestly, it is important to plan for the future. A network of a few screens may be easy to
manage by shipping and swapping DVDs or Compact Flash cards. However, if that network grows to 25,
50 or 100 screens, this type of content management becomes much more cumbersome.
Additionally, features that may not seem relevant during the early stages of a deployment might prove to
be essential later on. For example, the ability to add or delete a piece of content on short notice might not
seem important to a small sign network owner until the necessity arises, often at the insistence of a large
advertiser. Similarly, other business opportunities may rely on advanced features like real-time
scheduling or live content insertions.
An Introduction to Digital Signage page 3 of 4 rev: September 1, 2006
What’s more, the availability of turnkey, hosted digital signage software can actually make it cheaper to
deploy the initial systems with full remote management capability - providing a solution that is affordable
for today and scalable for tomorrow.
Remote management tools like the IQ Producer and IQ Link allow signage administrators to control
media players located in remote networks via the Internet, even when the players are behind firewalls
and other perimeter security devices.
Achieving Success with the Right Partnership
When embarking on a digital signage project, you may wish to consult with Impart for services in various
areas. For instance, financing companies can help spread the up-front expense of the display hardware
and infrastructure over a multi-year period, so your company only pays an affordable monthly fee.
Similarly, skilled partners (e.g. Impartners) are available to assist in ad sales, IQ Ads, system design &
deployment, installation, content authoring, IQ Streams, and onsite service support.

Engage Your Consumer

Engage your consumer! Bluetooth, SMS, touch screens, interactive billboards, RFID tags....there are many different options to engage with a consumer for a brand using a digital signage network. Most OOH digital networks are perfect for Bluetooth marketing or SMS marketing and add value-keep in mind that the actual traffic or hits will be lower than expected with mobile or Bluetooth and digital signage. The Europe maket can be ahead of the states at times-the London Tube a good example-a million dollar real estate venue for digital signage placment, with some of the latest innovations in the industry. Nokia is prepared and is engaging consumers while they wait for the Tube-I am ready to see another Ford or LandRover Bluetooth campaign, but in the states this time!

Nokia engages London Tube riders with interactive sign/game

James Bickers, editor at http://www.digitalsignagetoday.com/article.php?id=17832&na=1

Commuters waiting for their train are nothing if not a captive audience, and marketers are beginning to understand this. A great example of reaching this audience was recently spotted outside the Tottenham Court Rd. station of the London Underground, where Nokia has deployed an interactive "matching game" on a giant touchscreen.

In addition to giving idle travelers something to occupy their minds and hands, the game doubles as an advertisement for the Nokia N95 cellular phone.

Watch the game in action www.digitalsignagetoday.com

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

CTIA Conferance; Apple iPhone

In the Economist's wrap-up coverage of CTIA conference of Florida, the publication came out swinging against the much hyped Apple iPhone:

But though not available until June, the $500 iPhone is as mouth-watering today as yesterday’s cold pizza. The phone that stole the show at CTIA Wireless 2007 was the “Ocean” from Helio, a youth-oriented newcomer to the cellular business.

In addition to giving high praise for the Ocean's interface and design, as well as noting the disparity in price ($295 for the Helio vs. $500 for the iPhone) the article continued,

But it is the Helio Ocean’s EV-DO (Evolution-Data Optimised) wireless technology that renders Apple’s iPhone an also-ran. Mobile experts have been mystified by Apple’s decision to use Cingular’s EDGE (Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution) network when far better wireless communications methods abound...Cingular’s version of it provides data speeds of between 75 kilobits per second (kbps) and 135 kbps—not that much better than a dial-up internet connection, and often much worse...

By contrast, the EV-DO networks used by Helio (as well as Verizon and Sprint in America and KDDI in Japan) offer 450 kbps to 800 kbps, rates similar to those of DSL broadband connections. EDGE’s slower data speeds mean that iPhone users must rely on Wi-Fi to do anything more than make phone calls or send the odd e-mail...

Full Story

Sunday, May 27, 2007

The Digital Signage Forum Reports Back From Chicago!

This is a nice write up from The Digital Signage Forum and thier recent trip to Chicago for the 2007 Digital Signage Expo. A very impressive event......

A Report From Our Friends At:





Digital Signage Expo takes a slice of Chicago Style on May 16th and 17th 2007

05-19-2007
By Lisa Jachimowicz













It could have been the sparkling turquoise water, the gorgeous boats or the awesome sunshine, but no matter what, it couldn’t have been a more exquisite backdrop for the Digital Signage Expo this year. The exhibitors consisted of new digital signage businesses entering the market, established companies, great sales people, tech people and industry leaders who all had one thing in common and that was passion and a distinct product or service targeted to end-users in need of comprehensive answers from our great industry.






Life’s Good isn’t just the LG commercial slogan; it was very good at the very classy booth design that had good foot traffic and some great looking screens pushing some hardcore digital signage content. LG commercial came in showcasing its new IP (Internet Protocol) Solution technology, which enables the digital signage industry to deliver video content to multiple locations with centralized video content and display control capability. LG’s has a new M4210 series of flat-panel HDTV LCD’s – M4210C-BA and M4210N-BA – that utilizes the company’s IP Solution for integrated networking designed specifically for LG displays. The really cool thing about the people over at LG is a new and refreshing open attitude that projects will ship and everything is possible regarding working every deal no matter how large or small. LG has a fresh perspective to customer service and is reaching out to every reseller, integrator and end-user to offer assistance and to further enhance their commitment to the digital signage industry they have become a new premier sponsor of the digital signage forum. For more information visit LG at there website http://www.lgcommercial.com/

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