Three Easy Ways To Make Digital Signage Work For You

For every positive experience digital signage can generate, there is a potential pitfall. Only constant research and understanding can help navigate the challenges of effective digital signage.

There is really only one goal for digital signage: enabling initiative, getting the customer doing something with what he or she has just seen. Regardless of the engagement, a positive outcome is the only desired effect.
Here are three very general areas where digital signage can play a positive role in a customer’s experience within an environment, and the potential pitfall each encounters with poor planning and execution.

Planning. Execution. Alligators. We've all played the game.

Environmental Navigation
Navigation is usually the first impression a customer gets of a store. “Where can I find…?” Good navigation will make the shopper’s experience positive and can reduce time and stress. Digital signage can play a key role in making sure that two goals are met: Showing the customer exactly where to go and showing the easiest way to get there. But you don’t get a second chance at a first impression. Poor navigation techniques, or making the customer work too hard to locate the destination, will disengage a customer before he is even at the destination.

Do we now need GPS in a store?

Education
Learning about a product or service through digital interactivity allows the customer to learn at her pace, not the pace of the employee or the store. The ability for digital engagement (most likely in a kiosk) to be flexible for the customer’s depth of knowledge and desire for education will generate interest, respect and loyalty from the customer. In contrast, poor education or programming that makes too many assumptions about the customer’s knowledge and has ignored important messaging will sour the experience.

'nuff said.

Perception of Time
The ability to cut down on a customer’s perception of time is taken very seriously by environments where waiting (hospitals) or poor attitudes (returning an item that gave you a bad experience) are part of the customer’s experience in the space. Engaging content can change behavior and ultimately reduce a customer’s perception of time. However, poor execution on basic guidelines, such as the running time on a looping program being shorter than the average time a customer waits, can be a big disappointment. Customers don’t want to see the same thing twice. In addition, creating programming that does not effectively draw attention away from the customer’s purpose in the environment can backfire by making the customer even more aware of the time.

Have I shown you my big...long...program?

The detail that goes into each category is dependent upon the venue’s strategy with digital signage. Great care should be taken each time. Poor execution with one screen can wreck a customer’s experience in the entire environment. A bad digital signage experience can drive customers away just as fast as bad customer service.
To avoid that end, constant research and understanding will keep your digital experiences fresh and appealing for the customer and the venue.

  • http://www.digitalsignagecreativo.com Roi Iglesias

    Great thoughts Paul
    I´m agree with the environmental navigation and perception of time. Key points in digital signage deployments.
    “Customer engagement” is more clear with your ideas.

  • Paul

    Thanks, Roi.

    I think there is no end to the number of potential touchpoints someone can have with digital signage in any given environment, but if you don’t do it right at the basic intersections (wayfinding, for example), there’s no way someone will go further with you. Like everything else, you never get a second chance to make a first impression.

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  • http://www.adserve.com.au AdServe Digital Signage

    Just the perception that your shop or venue is moving with the times or more high tech than there competitors justifies the relatively small costs of digital signage

  • http://www.experiate.net Paul Flanigan

    Yes, but you (shop owner) will need to justify it eventually. Even if you’re growing with the times, the cost, though small, will still need to see a return.

  • http://www.adserve.com.au AdServe Digital Signage

    Yeah it does need to be justified, if we are looking small scale a cafe will spend on average $150,000 to renovate just to update there look. The cost of installing a single screen with self updated content may cost them only $3000, so its good value. A major department store may spend hundreds of thousands of dollars thou and not be able to prove that it has increased sales.

  • http://www.experiate.net Paul Flanigan

    Right. The justification my be different, and so will the ROI, but in the end it’s quality over quantity. If anything, the smaller places will get more bang for their buck because they need it.

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