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Bluetooth Proximity Marketing Solutions

October 31, 2008

We get asked quite regularly about Bluetooth-based Proximity Marketing Solutions. Rococo doesn't actually make or sell these, but some of our customers do, and so we typically refer people to them.

So - I though t might be useful to share our standard "form response" to enquires about Bluetooth Proximity Marketing Solutions. There's quite a range of them out there these days, and for the laugh and because we're slightly mad, we plan to try out a few of them over the next few months. So if there's one missing from my list - let me know and we'll take a look at it.

Meanwhile - here's some unstructured notes about these and some comments on some of the ones we know about. We also try and keep a list of links for these alive at http://delicious.com/sos100/proximity_marketing%20

Let's recap what these things are:

They are a combination of hardware and software which is designed to let a Marketer or Someone Who Wants To Promote Something send messages over Bluetooth to nearby mobile phones. Doesn't have to be a mobile phone of course, but that's the typical use-case. The idea is you're walking in a mall, and suddenly have a special offer beamed to your mobile phone from one of the stores nearby.

That's the basic idea. Send some little digital "micro-ad" to a phone, ideally where the ad is relevant to something close by (Bluetooth range is around 10 metres or 30 feet).

After the basic, you can fancy-up the solutions: instead of a little ad, the item sent to the user could be a little application that does something, or a video clip, or a photo. where it's an application, that application could also then enable the user to interact with the marketing system, to ask for specific product information, or to fill out a mini-survey and send it back. And so on.

The use cases are typically around the following areas - so far:

- Selling stuff: this includes Malls and Retail environments, to enable shops to send offers and promotions to people near them, but also includes public spaces, bus stops for example - again send messages and offers to people waiting at the bus stop.
- Promoting things: Cinemas and Hotels use them to promote (respectively) Videos and Ringtones for the movies on offer, or local restaurants and services convenient to the hotel
- Driving user interaction: Nike have used it in New York to power a design-your-own-shoe display; you download an application and then use it to design your own show, which is displayed on the big video board. Alternatively, at concerts, it's been used to enable attendees to post messages on video boards at the event.

And so on. There are various other scenarios you can imagine, but they're mostly variations on a theme. The better ones use the inherent fact that they know you are nearby and that you may be temped in to some marketing or purchasing action on the spot.

Anyway - without further ado - here's some of the off-the-shelf solutions we know of:

BlueMedia (Ireland)
- They offer typical retail-oriented solution; well tried and tested in a variety of markets; dedicated proximity marketing boxes attached to a central PC server; excellent reference sites with quality brand names:
- http://www.bluemedia.ie/

BluePodMedia:
- http://www.bluepodmedia.com/
- As used in football stadia in the UK http://www.engadget.com/2008/01/18/bluepod-media-brings-bluetooth-to-football-stadiums/
- They also did some cinema stuff: http://www.abce-ireland.ie/cgi-bin/gen5?runprog=abce/abce&type=page&p=news_111007.html&menuid=news|n1|news_111007|news_111007

Qwikker (used by CBS Outdoor among others)
- http://www.qwikker.com/
- http://www.cbsoutdoor.co.uk/web/Current-news/Newspage-UK/Viacom-Outdoor-launches-Bluetooth-Network-on-London-Underground.htm
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/tayside_and_central/7228905.stm

Proximitymedia
- http://proximitymedia.com/home.htm

HueTouch (basic Bluetooth campaigns...)
- http://www.huetooth.com/bluetooth-proximity-marketing-Huetouch-express.php

BlueMoz (Italy)
- A new one on me: http://www.bluemoz.it/english/index.php

Anyway - you get the idea. A bunch of stuff available, which may do a subset or all of what you want, off the shelf, and will come with manuals, support, etc.

Alternatively, people sometimes look at getting a custom-built solution. Often this is driven by the need to have an application be downloaded to the phone. One of the key issues here is that you'll be forced to deal with the full gamut of software development variable such as how to support all the models of phones that will try to use the application (e.g. a survey)?

An evolving area; we'll do some in-depth reviews of a few of them over the next few months.


One of Europe's Biggest Festivals comes Bluetooth-Powered

July 24, 2008

oxegen.png
Oxegen, one of the biggest festivals of the Summer in Europe, came with added Bluetooth this year, courtesy of an alliance between several players:

- Irish Proximity-Marketing company (BlueIsland Media)
- Setanta Screens (who do largse screens for sporting and other events)
- Telecom provider Airspeed
- PTV.ie - interactive TV supplier for bars etc.

The collective have branded themselves IrishBluetooth.com, and Oxegen seems to have been the first major trial of the solution. And a whopping success it's been:

- 24 Bluetooth Access Points covered 80 per cent of the 10 square mile Oxegen site
- 49,000 phones detected (out of 69,183 people at the event)
- 14,000 downloads

And what were people downloading? A Java app with detailed information about running order, site map, and health and safety information for the venue.

The feedback all around is that it's been a huge success, and the group plan to roll it our now to many high-trafficked sites over the next 12-18 months. Next stop: Marlay Park, where there are several gigs coming up, including Mr Bonet, (or ex-Mr Bonet) Lenny Kravitz.

Great stuff - and another good news story for Bluetooth in the proximity-space.