By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette
When we caught up with Screenreach Interactive founder and CEO , he was in the midst of packing for a trip to New York, where he was booked as a panellist for the .
Digital signage, a so-called form of “out-of-home advertising,†delivers video content, advertisements and messages to specific locations at specific times on static or touch screens, often in combination with movement detection and image capture technology. , the market is growing at a compound annual rate of 40 per cent, with 22 million digital signs expected to be deployed world-wide by 2015.
For Screenreach, it’s an industry ripe for the Screach app.
In fact, Screenreach recently teamed up with U.K. out-of-home advertising firm  to  shoppers can play using their smartphones as the controller. The game is a marketing initiative for insurance provider Swiftcover. Participants accumulate points as they race that can earn them a prize, can connect to the app through Facebook, and have their Facebook profile picture feature on the screen. In addition to a fun and interactive way to engage with consumers, the connection between Screach and Facebook also allows Swiftcover to garner more information about how consumers interact with its brand.
This project typifies the business model which Screenreach has developed over the past year and a half to break into specific market verticals, establish partnerships with key players within those verticals and work together to create a unique, value-added solution that allows a brand to engage in a much more dynamic fashion with its consumers.
“It’s a new market,†said Rawlings. “A new global market around interaction and we are spearheading it. The world is changing, things are becoming more social. Consumers want better experiences and they want to be engaged.â€
Screenreach’s bold leap into this brave new world has also attracted the attention of global food and drink giant PepsiCo. Earlier this month, , an annual program in which 10 European startups are selected to work on pilot programs with the company’s top brands.
But reaching this stage has demanded that Screenreach narrow its focus and avoid the temptation of spreading itself too thin chasing too many opportunities.
Those essential first case studies
, we talked about Rawling’s experience with U.K. startup accelerator The Difference Engine in 2010. When Rawlings entered the program, the underlying technology for Screach had been nailed down. The challenge, however, was figuring out which market verticals to target and why.
“Because Screach is a platform proposition, it exists across a whole variety of different markets,†Rawlings said. “Through The Difference Engine, it became evident that platform could do a lot of different things and mean a lot of different things to different people.â€
What Screenreach’s strongest prospective markets had in common was that need to create a unique and interactive experience that would allow a brand to better engage with consumers. A national museum provided the first opportunity to put Screach to the test.
The museum wanted to attract new visitors, keep them on the premises longer and drive additional revenue from the on-site cafe and gift shop. Screenreach made each exhibit interactive with a QR code. When visitors scanned a code with their smartphone, it launched an interactive guide and rewarded them for using the technology with vouchers for the cafe and gift shop.
“It was a great first case study for us and got us thinking about the different ways that Screach could work best for the client depending on the environment it was in,†Rawlings said.
Rawlings and his team then took advantage of an in with the , where Screach was used to turn fans’ phones into voting tools to decide the “Man of the Match,†again, with rewards that would drive foot traffic to the stadium’s gift shop. A local radio station picked up on the club’s use of the app and this led to a project with . This in turn led to a deal with  in August, which operates 42 radio stations across the U.K., to use Screach to create interactive location-based services for online listeners.
Finding out what the market needs
Rawlings attributed Screach’s appeal to these initial customers to three points which resonated with their needs:
1. The ability of the app to deliver rewards to consumers which provide an immediate incentive to take a specific action.
2. The utility of the app as a platform for brands to engage in a two-way conversation with consumers to learn more about them.
3. The flexibility of Screach to accomplish the previous two points with unique and customizable games, quizzes, polls, chats and other forms of engagement.
Word of mouth, existing relationships and levering case studies of successful deployments have all been critical to driving Screenreach’s customer acquisition strategy to date and identifying what have become its target verticals – digital signage, radio, print, live events and broadcast television.
Its customer list now also includes , , , the  and . With RMG, the  across the U.S. to provide polls, quizzes, games and other interactive activities.
The team has taken to the blogosphere and Twitter to establish relationships in target verticals and position Screenreach as a thought leader for consumer interaction.
“We try to be part of the conversations that are surrounding relevant industries,†Rawlings said. “We use our blog to demonstrate exactly what Screach is capable of and what it can provide to clients but we try to do this in a way that is current and acknowledging what is currently going on in the industry around us … we use  a lot for listening too, to learn more about current industry needs.â€
It is also actively seeking as many speaking opportunities as it can at conferences that hit its target verticals, such as this week’s Digital Signage Investor Conference.
“If you are on a panel or on stage, the value is there before you’ve even gone to the conference,†Rawlings said. “If all you’re doing is exhibiting, it’s much tougher to ensure a return on the investment.â€
Speaking or exhibiting at a conference is about more than just communicating your own story and product benefits, he added. It is also about participating in the debates around timely topics and issues which are impacting a target market.
Lessons learned
A big lesson that Rawlings and the team have learned is the need to properly qualify a customer early on. In some instances, significant time was spent on a prospective customer with nothing to show for it. This problem often resulted from Screenreach’s early efforts to woo trial customers to use Screach without requiring them to provide anything of value in return.
“Because they hadn’t paid anything for it, they were fairly apathetic about how much they are going to use it,†Rawlings said. “In any vertical, you have to make sure the customer has bought in from day one and the only way is with some kind of exchange of value, either money or services in kind.â€
Screenreach has also found itself with prospects that range from independent local businesses to major global brands. The other challenge, as the business has grown, has been to understand which customers are the best customers at any given time.
“We work it on a case by case basis and assess the level of opportunity,†Rawlings said. “Obviously we always strive to do as much as we can.â€
We will explore that aspect of Screenreach’s growth story in more detail in a future post.
This is the second article in a continuing monthly series that will chronicle the growth path of , a startup based in Newcastle upon Tyne in England’s North East. Screenreach’s flagship product, Screach, is an interactive digital media platform that allows users to create real-time, two-way interactive experiences between a smart device (through the Screach app) and any content, on any screen or just within the mobile device itself. We invite your feedback.
Digital sinage: Telling the right story to drive customer acquisition
Digital signage: Telling the right story to drive customer acquisition
By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette
When we caught up with Screenreach Interactive founder and CEO , he was in the midst of packing for a trip to New York, where he was booked as a panellist for the .
Digital signage, a so-called form of “out-of-home advertising,†delivers video content, advertisements and messages to specific locations at specific times on static or touch screens, often in combination with movement detection and image capture technology. , the market is growing at a compound annual rate of 40 per cent, with 22 million digital signs expected to be deployed world-wide by 2015.
For Screenreach, it’s an industry ripe for the Screach app.
In fact, Screenreach recently teamed up with U.K. out-of-home advertising firm  to  shoppers can play using their smartphones as the controller. The game is a marketing initiative for insurance provider Swiftcover. Participants accumulate points as they race that can earn them a prize, can connect to the app through Facebook, and have their Facebook profile picture feature on the screen. In addition to a fun and interactive way to engage with consumers, the connection between Screach and Facebook also allows Swiftcover to garner more information about how consumers interact with its brand.
This project typifies the business model which Screenreach has developed over the past year and a half to break into specific market verticals, establish partnerships with key players within those verticals and work together to create a unique, value-added solution that allows a brand to engage in a much more dynamic fashion with its consumers.
“It’s a new market,†said Rawlings. “A new global market around interaction and we are spearheading it. The world is changing, things are becoming more social. Consumers want better experiences and they want to be engaged.â€
Screenreach’s bold leap into this brave new world has also attracted the attention of global food and drink giant PepsiCo. Earlier this month, , an annual program in which 10 European startups are selected to work on pilot programs with the company’s top brands.
But reaching this stage has demanded that Screenreach narrow its focus and avoid the temptation of spreading itself too thin chasing too many opportunities.
Those essential first case studies
, we talked about Rawling’s experience with U.K. startup accelerator The Difference Engine in 2010. When Rawlings entered the program, the underlying technology for Screach had been nailed down. The challenge, however, was figuring out which market verticals to target and why.
“Because Screach is a platform proposition, it exists across a whole variety of different markets,†Rawlings said. “Through The Difference Engine, it became evident that platform could do a lot of different things and mean a lot of different things to different people.â€
What Screenreach’s strongest prospective markets had in common was that need to create a unique and interactive experience that would allow a brand to better engage with consumers. A national museum provided the first opportunity to put Screach to the test.
The museum wanted to attract new visitors, keep them on the premises longer and drive additional revenue from the on-site cafe and gift shop. Screenreach made each exhibit interactive with a QR code. When visitors scanned a code with their smartphone, it launched an interactive guide and rewarded them for using the technology with vouchers for the cafe and gift shop.
“It was a great first case study for us and got us thinking about the different ways that Screach could work best for the client depending on the environment it was in,†Rawlings said.
Rawlings and his team then took advantage of an in with the , where Screach was used to turn fans’ phones into voting tools to decide the “Man of the Match,†again, with rewards that would drive foot traffic to the stadium’s gift shop. A local radio station picked up on the club’s use of the app and this led to a project with . This in turn led to a deal with  in August, which operates 42 radio stations across the U.K., to use Screach to create interactive location-based services for online listeners.
Finding out what the market needs
Rawlings attributed Screach’s appeal to these initial customers to three points which resonated with their needs:
1. The ability of the app to deliver rewards to consumers which provide an immediate incentive to take a specific action.
2. The utility of the app as a platform for brands to engage in a two-way conversation with consumers to learn more about them.
3. The flexibility of Screach to accomplish the previous two points with unique and customizable games, quizzes, polls, chats and other forms of engagement.
Word of mouth, existing relationships and levering case studies of successful deployments have all been critical to driving Screenreach’s customer acquisition strategy to date and identifying what have become its target verticals – digital signage, radio, print, live events and broadcast television.
Its customer list now also includes , , , the  and . With RMG, the  across the U.S. to provide polls, quizzes, games and other interactive activities.
The team has taken to the blogosphere and Twitter to establish relationships in target verticals and position Screenreach as a thought leader for consumer interaction.
“We try to be part of the conversations that are surrounding relevant industries,†Rawlings said. “We use our blog to demonstrate exactly what Screach is capable of and what it can provide to clients but we try to do this in a way that is current and acknowledging what is currently going on in the industry around us … we use  a lot for listening too, to learn more about current industry needs.â€
It is also actively seeking as many speaking opportunities as it can at conferences that hit its target verticals, such as this week’s Digital Signage Investor Conference.
“If you are on a panel or on stage, the value is there before you’ve even gone to the conference,†Rawlings said. “If all you’re doing is exhibiting, it’s much tougher to ensure a return on the investment.â€
Speaking or exhibiting at a conference is about more than just communicating your own story and product benefits, he added. It is also about participating in the debates around timely topics and issues which are impacting a target market.
Lessons learned
A big lesson that Rawlings and the team have learned is the need to properly qualify a customer early on. In some instances, significant time was spent on a prospective customer with nothing to show for it. This problem often resulted from Screenreach’s early efforts to woo trial customers to use Screach without requiring them to provide anything of value in return.
“Because they hadn’t paid anything for it, they were fairly apathetic about how much they are going to use it,†Rawlings said. “In any vertical, you have to make sure the customer has bought in from day one and the only way is with some kind of exchange of value, either money or services in kind.â€
Screenreach has also found itself with prospects that range from independent local businesses to major global brands. The other challenge, as the business has grown, has been to understand which customers are the best customers at any given time.
“We work it on a case by case basis and assess the level of opportunity,†Rawlings said. “Obviously we always strive to do as much as we can.â€
We will explore that aspect of Screenreach’s growth story in more detail in a future post.
This is the second article in a continuing monthly series that will chronicle the growth path of , a startup based in Newcastle upon Tyne in England’s North East. Screenreach’s flagship product, Screach, is an interactive digital media platform that allows users to create real-time, two-way interactive experiences between a smart device (through the Screach app) and any content, on any screen or just within the mobile device itself. We invite your feedback.
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Sony ericsson aspen Facebook, not Twitter, is the social network for revolutions
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November 16, 2011
November 15, 2011
Hardening LinkedIn for privacy protection:
Â
by Claudiu Popa
With the introduction of LinkedIn’s this year, the company also took the opportunity to make some changes to its .
Since the expansive document’s 29 pages would put even the most troubled insomniac into a deep slumber, the company conveniently provided a which hints at the different ways it seeks to monetize its service and in some ways emulate Facebook’s much maligned model.
Instead of stringing together 7415 words however, the latter prefers to describe its privacy-related practices through a series of nested pages that branch off an initial six sections. You get the idea. Six of one, half a dozen of the other. But enough of that. I plan to send you on your way with something you can actually use.
Regardless of whether you’re a captain of industry or the proud owner of a lemonade stand, between jobs or still in school, LinkedIn offers a decent way to manage your professional network. So it’s worth having a look at the settings that might impact your privacy as you use the system to find opportunities, participate in group discussions or creep persons of interest.
As with all social networking systems, default privacy settings are intentionally lax to encourage interaction and maximize opportunities to connect. That makes sense, but only once you know what the system does with your information and how it watches your activity – because they all do. So before you spend time configuring your settings and profile to describe your preference in classical music, do yourself favor and disable the 12 settings below. Then, when you get around to tweaking the system’s options, you may choose to activate them individually. This will reduce the likelihood of leaking information without realizing it.
Profile
- Select who can see your activity feed
- Select what others see when you’ve viewed their profile
- Select who can see your connections
- Change your profile photo & visibility
- Edit your profile > Personal Information section (Birthday and Marital Status ?)
- Edit your public profile (how do you appear in public search results)
Email Preferences
- Turn on/off LinkedIn announcements
- Turn on/off invitations to participate in research
Groups, Companies & Applications > Privacy controls
- Turn on/off data sharing with 3rd party applications
- Manage settings for LinkedIn plugins on third party sites
Account
- Manage Social Advertising
- Turn on/off enhanced advertising
You may also consider turning off Activity broadcasts (under Profile), however this doesn’t impact your privacy as much as it attempts to publicize your already visible activity on the system.
There you have it. A quick and dirty approach to privacy using LinkedIn. You can now enjoy connecting with anyone you like, and feel like you have a little more control over your privacy.
Bookmark php Welcome to Rebecca Black’s Friday
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November 14, 2011
New fraud scheme targets lawyers
Generally, t
he purpose of the scheme is to persuade a lawyer to take them on as a client in a settlement case, and then steal their money.
blogtest
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November 12, 2011
SMBs can’t afford to have IT as bad as Service Canada’s EI system
SMBs can’t afford to have IT as bad as Service Canada’s EI system
By Shane Schick
Mistakes tend to cost time, money or both. When a small mistake means unemployed Canadians face a month’s wait for income they need to live, however, the burden of error falls squarely on the government.
Shane Schick, editor-in-chief, IT World Canada
On Thursday the Globe and Mail that if anyone applying for employment insurance (EI) through Service Canada puts a date for their last day of work that doesn’t exactly match the record of employment they got at their last job, “the computer will churn for 28 days in search of a direct match.â€
The applicant, meanwhile, is left wondering where their next meal is going to come from, or worse. This is an online system that was launched five years ago and was supposed to improve service delivery. In response, the federal department of Human Resources says more automation at Service Canada will solve the problem. It’s hard to imagine it getting much worse.
We tend to expect better from an enterprise as large as the Government of Canada, but similar snafus crop up in all kinds of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) which have been bolting together applications they’ve either purchased or created over long periods of time. Think of all the online order forms that seem to send information into thin air, internal sales leads that go missing or benefits changes that can’t seem to get made no matter how many times employees enter them. None of those consequences are as potentially dire as EI delays, but they can affect not only a company’s performance but its reputation with customers, staff morale or, depending on what goes wrong, a ton of expenses. Service Canada may be this week’s poster child for IT failure, but few SMBs can afford the kind of disgruntled users that are more or less stuck with the government.
It’s interesting that the headline for the online version of the Globe’s story was “Unforgiving computer system causes long waits for EI payments.†Consciously or not, the headline invokes a key principle in user interface (UI) design. refers to an approach to creating something that takes into account the most likely errors a user will make, and providing functionality that attempts to fix them before much damage is done. An example might be the auto-correct features in most word-processing programs that address common typos, or the “cancel†button that gives you an out before you submit something wrong online.
The concept of forgiveness is something the IT industry typically assigns to the vendors that make products and services, but the Service Canada EI debacle proves it needs to start with the customer. Anyone who has worked in the government managing EI claims for any length of time would know the five or 10 most common mistakes applicants make. Similarly, SMBs should be close enough to their users to identify the areas where things are most likely to go awry. As they become more mature users of IT, this may become the ultimate SMB decision-maker’s skill set. Yes, to err is human. But to be able to pinpoint where forgiveness needs to be built in is divine.
November 11, 2011
SMBs actually hate social media
Time for a social media reality check, kids. Â
The myth: All companies are happily, constantly tweeting, posting and linking up a storm on , to their hearts’ delight and their bottom lines’ benefit. Â
The truth: … not so much. Â
The reality, based on a few new studies and a roomful of collective gaspers (I’ll get to them later), is that many either still haven’t jumped wholeheartedly onto the social media train – or the ones that have are struggling with how to use, manage and afford it. Â
Exhibit A: a surprising 49 per cent – yes, that’s half – of SMBs who responded to our ITB/Dell State of the Canadian SMB survey last year said they weren’t even using social media at all in their businesses. When we asked them why in , the top reason (cited by 35 per cent) was lack of time and resources. Another 16 per cent say they figure it’s just not worth investing in.Â
Canadian copyright bill digitally locked and loaded
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November 10, 2011
Part I: BlueArc’s challenge to get past the low-hanging fruit
Part I: BlueArc’s challenge to get past the low-hanging fruit
By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette
Last month, BlueArc Corp., a 13-year-old maker of network storage systems based in California, was .
BlueArc’s business was networked attached storage (NAS), the kind of high-end storage system for managing unstructured data — files, spreadsheets, digital content and images — in high-performance computing applications. However, the company struggled for years to achieve profitability despite periods of strong revenue growth.
“BlueArc, while it had received funding somewhere north of $200 million, couldn’t dominate the NAS market on its own. It needed a partner. With the acquisition by Hitachi and its intellectual property girth, it has nailed that market down,â€Â .
Despite its challenges in achieving profitability, BlueArc had established itself in a number of key industry sectors — health and life sciences, media and entertainment, telecommunications, energy and e-discovery. Its key competitive advantage from a technology standpoint was a file system built on custom chips, which were able to maintain a performance advantage over competing Intel technology at a price point that kept customers coming, .
But it takes much more than the wow factor of the technology to achieve market penetration, especially in key verticals with unique needs and pain points. We caught up with Ken Rosen, a corporate strategy and marketing consultant with  who worked with the Blue Arc team in the mid-2000s, about how the company learned to see the world from the perspective of its potential customers.
Technical superiority vs. business value
Rosen was hired as a consultant in 2004 on the recommendation of , one of BlueArc’s investors. By that point, six years after it was founded, the company’s early rapid growth based on technical superiority had plateaued.
“The founders had started the company with a technically creative idea, putting algorithms in hardware rather than software,†Rosen said. “As a startup in the late ’90s when they were seen as hot and up and coming, they got people on their side the way many small companies did, by explaining their technical superiority and selling to people who understood and craved it.â€
These early markets included research and hosting and a variety of horizontal applications, where customers could see for themselves how BlueArc’s technology would provide them with a business advantage. This provided BlueArc with its initial market traction among companies that had a clear pain point and were actively looking for a solution.
“This was the key difference between marketing and sales in this era and later eras in the growth path of the company,†Rosen said. “The customer needing to connect technology to business value versus BlueArc understanding the customers’ business well enough to highlight business value.â€
In other words, BlueArc’s initial sales and marketing model relied on prospects being able to figure out for themselves how and why the product would be a fit for them. As a result, the company had trouble resonating with the next tier of potential customers – those companies that were aware they had a pain, but were not actively looking for a solution or didn’t know a solution was available. (We call these the second and third buckets in our .)
From Rosen’s perspective, it wasn’t that the BlueArc team had dropped the ball; they simply realized it was time to evolve their marketing strategy in accordance with the current growth phase of the company. It was time to change the message to position the product in terms of the market’s need.
Finding the pain
After Rosen joined the planning effort, the team took a strategic look at BlueArc’s potential target markets and narrowed it down to 14. Then it was time to pound the pavement.
“I believe in primary research,†Rosen said. “If you talk to decision makers, ask good questions and don’t try and sell them something, they will tell you their pain points … they will even tell you how they want you to sell to them. We’ve found the source of ‘truth’ – where ‘truth’ is the best path to growth – is primary research 99 percent of the time.â€
For example, in the pharmaceutical industry, BlueArc learned that the scientists and researchers typically have the power to overrule the IT department when a different path will drive better, more productive science. Talking to the IT guys about the merits of high-performance storage was often a wasted effort because, too often, IT is evaluated on maintaining standards and reducing vendors rather than the science of new drug discovery. What BlueArc had to do was get the ear of the scientists and talk about how the technology would help with what mattered most to them – accelerating drug discovery and shortening time to market.
“We started in IT and on the science side to test both directions for priorities which were a match with the differentiation of BlueArc’s offering,†Rosen said. “That is, if BlueArc were a commodity provider of standard equipment, the right point person might have been in IT. But given its area of differentiation, the decision maker who cared was a different person with very different priorities.â€
Rosen beat the bushes in his own network, mined BlueArc’s sales pipeline and even purchased lists of executives from companies that typically fill rooms with executives for focus groups. Instead of focus groups, however, BlueArc simply asked for one-hour phone calls. The goal was to have frank conversations with decision makers within the industry who were willing to discuss issues critical to their success.
Don’t sell, just talk
“Executives often wanted to keep talking at the end of these calls,†Rosen said. “You know discussions are going well when the person interviewed thanks you for helping them look at the own needs and operations in new ways. It means you are reaching the heart of how they think about their own success.â€
Most important, at this stage, BlueArc was talking to its target market without trying to sell anything.
The company then used this intelligence to educate its sales team with direct, in-person training sessions.
BlueArc repeated the same process in its other target industries. In 2004 and 2005 it focused on animation, pharmaceutical and biotech drug discovery and Internet services, then expanded into the oil and gas exploration and design and simulation markets in 2006 and 2007.
How did BlueArc execute on what it had learned from this primary research and what was the outcome? Next week we will reveal the results and share Rosen’s takeaways.
This is the first article in a continuing series that will feature case studies and anecdotal stories from entrepreneurs, consultants and veteran marketers about their efforts to develop, implement and measure marketing programs to bring technology to market and grow market share. We invite your feedback.
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Sony ericsson cla 70 car charger retail packaging The Golden Gobblers Awards
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November 09, 2011
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