Newsletter

Infiniti uses RFID to reach customers

Advertising agencies building ad campaigns for top brands like Infiniti, Levi's, and Sony are actively seeking tech companies that own intellectual property (IP) in a range of technologies, from RFID to augmented reality. Find out what they look for and why.

Page 1 of 3

Courtesy of RFID World

Pressure on digital advertising execs to remain forward thinkers has many actively seeking tech companies with intellectual property, from radio frequency identification, to augmented reality. The goal: co-develop applications that immerse consumers in the next great experience.

As AT&T, Infiniti, JC Penney's Levi's, Nike, Sony and others put a greater emphasis on digital ad campaigns, savvy agencies search for technologies that give consumers interactive experiences far beyond banner ads and microsites.

The move is part of a trend that relies on technology to turn advertising into entertainment and provoke consumers to interact with brands. "Conversational marketing lets brands involve consumers in the process of discovery," says Jeremiah Knight, director, digital strategy Tequila, a Madison Avenue advertising agency and TBWA Worldwide subsidiary whose clients range from Adidas to Visa. "The savvy ad agencies look for opportunities in digital and sensor technologies that make the consumer interact with the brand."

Tequila execs have researched information on QR codes, digital billboards, and iPhone apps now that Apple released the development kit. They try to keep up with the latest technology because it's becoming increasingly important to their clients that they stay bleeding edge.

Knight found that edge for Tequila's client, Infiniti, in an augmented reality application developed by Total Immersion. The agency created an ad campaign based on the technology, built a demonstration kiosk with camera and database inside to store images, and designed five cards that would help the car manufacturer tell its story.

Consumers walk up to the kiosk with one card in hard to activate the augmented reality technology. The camera inside the kiosk recognizes the image on the card. If it matches with a similar image stored inside the kiosk's database, the kiosk projects a three-dimensional (3D) animated image on the screen over the car image the consumer holds.

When the consumer moves, turns or flips the card in front of the kiosk the camera follows. Tequila and Infiniti took the campaign to several auto shows across the country, including New York and Detroit where consumers had an opportunity to experience the technology. One card held close to the kiosk, for example, animated a ghosted picture of the car's interior, providing details of the instrument cluster on the dash panel.



Page 2: next page  

Page 1 | 2 | 3







Related Content

TECH PAPER
1. Upgrading to an Intel Multicore Ecosystem Keeps a Car Simulator Running in the Fast Lane

TECH PAPER
2. New Tools Answer Old Issues in Wiring Harness Design

TECH PAPER
3. AUTOSAR and FlexRay: A Tale of Two Standards

TECH PAPER
4. The Atom-Powered Car

 


 Featured Jobs
Ascension Health seeking Solutions Development Analyst in St. Louis, MO

National Semiconductor seeking Principal IC Design Engineer in Santa Clara, CA

Taylor Guitars seeking Sr. Web Designer in El Cajon, CA

Covidien seeking Hardware Manager in Boulder, CO

Sierra Nevada seeking Software Engineer in Hagerstown, MD

More jobs on EETimesCareers
 Sponsor
 CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?
SEARCH JOBS:

 SPONSOR

 RECENT JOB POSTINGS
For more great jobs, career related news, features and services, please visit EETimes' Career Center.