2006 was the year of connecting. Some call it social networking. Time named it You.
2007 is the year of conversing. Some call it consumer-generation. Others like the term co-creation. Wired named it crowdsourcing.
2008 will be the year of circulating. Some call it mobile marketing. Others refer to it as location-based (LB) services, media and/or marketing. It currently lacks a fancy name.
Circulation - literally meaning free movement or passage through a system - has been on the minds of marketers and media for quite some time. Today, we call our efforts ”mobile content”, and some of us have shown investing in the mobile infrastructure can pay off. However, because the current infrastructure has so many limitations, greate examples of mobile content still elude us.
But 2008 will see mobile devices come into their own. The technology being unveiled today will start to impact how everyday people choose which company (and brand) to patron tomorrow.
Everyone’s favorite example of this is the iPhone. It has a mishmash of applications that make it more of a mobile computer than phone. People can seek out coffee shops using Google maps and GPS synchronization. The opportunities for Starbucks to get in the middle of this are endless. And they will…in 2008.
But the iPhone is just a piece of a larger puzzle still being put together. Other parts include geo-positioning devices in cars, RFID tags embedded in products and places (and people), the further expansion of WiFi, mobile media access, mobile barcode recognition, and all the related applications and services that come with it.
Combined, they allow us to take our social networks and desires to co-create to the streets. We will commune, we will converse, and we will do it without constraint.
Examples of Location-Based Services/Media
Mobile Touring by Ubilabs
MobileTouring is an authoring tool for tours. Anybody (you, your company, a city’s convention/visitor’s bureau, etc.) can set points of interest online and enrich them with a photo and short text information. In turn, anyone that has the system uploaded on their mobile phone can create customized tour specific to their needs. No more dirty headsets at museums. No need for three+ travel books fore each city you visit.
Bar Code Scanners by NeoMedia
Scanner: Phone with Code:
Neomedia has deployed mobile phone scanners at concerts around Europe. Fans and concert goers purchase electronic tickets over the Internet and instantly receive a text message containing a two dimensional code (Data Matrix or 2D) on their mobile phone. The code can easily be scanned at the concert’s point of entry by mobile scanners for immediate event access. In doing so, NeoMedia demonstrates the use of optically processed mobile codes for real-world financial transactions.
Explorer v3 by Node
The Node Explorer is a small handheld computer with stereo headphones which is connected to a central server. The Explorer’s integrated GPS location sensor is able to pinpoint the exact location of its user, triggering images (still and video) and broadcast sound and video, in a targeted format (e.g., content can be customized by language, age group, particular interests, special needs, etc.)
Examples of Location-Based Marketing
Got any? I’m sure all of us will next year.
barcode GPS LBS location based marketing location based services mobile marketing NeoMedia Node Ubilabs





3 responses so far ↓
1 Justin Montgomery // Sep 4, 2007 at 6:29 pm
I see Mobile-Ticketing especially making a big splash in the US in the near future, as well as mobile recognition technology as a whole. With many people in remote areas without broadband access, their mobile phones are the only mode of accessing content online. This will make for a much broader audience of people to advertise to via their mobile device. It should be interesting to see what develops. I work for a company called MoVa Media Co. that is already working on ideas utilizing mobile ticketing, mobile coupon, and mobile voucher technologies.
2 dlethe01 // Sep 5, 2007 at 10:12 am
I think we should give the merit to Gavitec, a company of Neomedia. Gavitec and Mobiqa are the world leaders in Mobile Ticketing (with 2D technology). Mobiqa has partnered with major companies like Tickets.com, Ticketmaster.com, Ts.com,…However, I think Gavitec has a better technology.
Neomedia management believes that Qode/Neoreader (Universal barcode reader) will be able to read all 1d (i.e.
UPC/EAN/JAN, 2/5 interleave, Code 39, Code 128 ) and 2d (i.e. PDF417, Data Matrix, QR, Aztec, Maxicode) codes by the end of the year.
http://www.gavitec.com/The_off-the-shelf_code_reader.496.0.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barcode
William Hoffman, the new CEO of Neomedia, said:
“The company’s technology now reads five types of codes but will read seven to 10 by the end of the year”
http://www.news-press.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070814/BUSINESS/70814059/1075
“Being able to scan 1D barcodes is useless unless you have access to a back-end database containing info about the barcodes you are scanning”
//gsmblog.net/article.do?keyword=1D-barcodes-user-question
Neomedia acquired Qode company in 2001.
“Qode’s robust Universal Commerce Solution(TM), including over 70 Million UPC-based products promoted through more than 2,000 retailers.”
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2001_Jan_18/ai_69270799
http://neom.com/press_releases/2001/20010302.jsp
3 Dino // Sep 5, 2007 at 2:01 pm
great stuff.
have you checked out socialight.com?
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