Digital Signage Can Extend Your Sales Success
Two
Wichita-area businesses are using interactive digital signage to create what
are essentially virtual sales assistants.
“Just what do you think you’re doing, Dave?” Those words,
made famous by the artificially intelligent computer HAL 9000 in Stanley
Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey” resound in my ears every time I think about the
topic of this week’s article: virtual assistants.
For those of you too young to recall, HAL was the artificially
intelligent computer aboard Discovery
in the film that attended to the myriad of details requiring oversight as the
ship’s crew made its way to Jupiter. Its seemingly omnipresent red camera lens
monitored all ship activity.
With HAL’s words still fresh in my memory, even after all
of these years, it is with a bit of personal trepidation that I will discuss
how digital signage can be used to add a virtual assistant to any sales or
marketing process. But don’t worry, with this sort of application there’s no
danger of getting sucked out into the cold recesses of space.
As in “2001,” the concept behind a virtual assistant is simple:
make a complex process simple and manageable through the use of an efficient,
“intelligent” computer. Putting that concept into practice here on earth is
helping two Wichita, KS, area businesses extend their sales and marketing
efforts and better serve their customers while freeing up personnel for other critical
tasks.
At Walnut Valley Garden Center in Andover, KS, outside
Wichita, an elaborate, interactive digital signage setup helps customers
determine how much product they’ll need for a given landscaping or garden project
by combining maps from Google Earth, a digital signage controller from Keywest
Technology and an Orion touch-screen LCD panel with a data base of landscaping
products that the store carries and their recommended coverage area.
Customers simply type in their names and addresses when
using the system, and a map of their individual property is summoned from
Google Earth. By touching the screen to define the boundaries of their project,
customers trigger a computer to determine the types of products to use and how
much they’ll need. For instance, by designating an area on the map, they can
learn what type of fertilizer they need for their lawn and how much to buy.
For those who are new to gardening, the system cycles
through digital signage presentations encouraging them to touch the screen to
select one of 12 different types of gardens. After settling on a design, the
system allows customers to interact and tells them exactly what’s needed
–including plants, mulch and rocks- to build a similar garden in their yards.
At Randy Dean Construction in
Out-of-home
media specialist DSX Media in
While the specifics of both applications differ, they share the concept of using interactive digital signage –a hybrid of digital kiosk technology and conventional linear digital signage pages- to boost both businesses’ sales by in essence projecting the presence of a virtual sales assistant to answer many of the questions consumers typically ask. Doing so elevates digital signage to a new plateau, somewhere far beyond the role of an electronic equivalent of a printed sign, where it becomes an integral part of an orchestrated sales process.
Like all
analogies, the one between the virtual assistants in
Which brings me back to where I started this article: “Just what do you think you’re doing, Dave?” Unlike “2001’s” astronaut Dave Bowman, who disconnected the technology, my answer is to turn you on to the possibilities of using interactive digital signage to create virtual assistants like the ones at Randy Dean Construction and Walnut Valley Garden Center to boost your sales success.
About the author
David Little is a digital signage authority with 20 years of
experience helping professionals use technology to more effectively communicate
their unique marketing messages. He is the director of marketing for Keywest
Technology in
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