Category: Mobile Marketing

Augmented reality to play key role in automaker marketing

The goal of the use of the technology is to encourage people to return to the showrooms.

As a growing number of consumers look to the internet, instead of physical showrooms, to help to make their purchasing decisions when it comes to their next cars, SUVs and pickup trucks, auto manufacturers are using new technologies, such as augmented reality, to rebuild the appeal of visiting the dealerships.

This is becoming especially important when marketing to Millenials, the next auto consumer generation.

Autotrader.com recently conducted a survey which discovered that Millenials are notably more likely to rely on word of mouth research than the Baby Boomer generation would. Furthermore, Millenials are also much more likely than Baby Boomers to go out of their way to try to avoid having to talk to the staff at a dealership when they do actually visit a showroom. This makes technology such as augmented reality vitally important to helping the dealerships to share the same amount of information, without necessarily requiring a person to person discussion.

Augmented reality can offer an interactive, informative experience, without a sales person’s assistance.

Augmented Reality to play key roleAccording to the Research and Marketing Analytics senior director, Isabelle Helms, “Millennials view the dealership as a key piece of their research process — they’re looking for experts to help answer their questions and to touch and test out the physical car before making a purchase.” She also went on to add that “That said, millennials want time and space to make the right decision, and will value the salespeople who provide the information they seek in a no-pressure way.”

Because of this, the visits to showrooms have been dropping over the last few years, which has limited the ability of automakers to show off all of the ways in which their vehicles stand out and can benefit the consumer. As this could lead to a potentially dangerous climate for automakers (particularly in the current retail environment), manufacturers have started embracing technologies such as augmented reality to attract buyers to the showrooms and to enchant them in the same way as a salesperson would, but without necessarily having to talk to that individual.

Both Toyota and Cadillac have been extensively exploring the potential advantages of augmented reality. They can provide a consumer with a three dimensional view of a vehicle – similar to what they would experience in a showroom – with considerably more detail than a standard two-dimensional image. The experience will also provide the viewer with additional information about a particular vehicle model.

This could make augmented reality an exceptionally powerful tool, particularly among Millenials and others who are seeking the showroom experience, without the salesperson.

Mobile commerce plays a growing role in back to school shopping

Shoppers heading out for supplies at the beginning of the school year have been increasingly using smartphones.

According to a new Back to School Shopping: 2013 Trends mobile commerce report that was released by Placed, Inc., almost half of all parents who own smartphones used their devices to help them to find discounts such as coupons while they were shopping for school supplies for their children, this year.

The report also indicated that many of the parents were actually making their purchases on their smartphones.

Its estimates showed that over 20 percent of parents who owned smartphones actually purchased school supplies through mobile commerce. These statistics are providing a great deal of insight into the current trends, as well as those that may be expected over the holiday season, this year.

The mobile commerce survey was based on the feedback of more than 12,000 smartphone owners.

Mobile Commerce reportEach of the participants had at least one child. Beyond discovering that mobile commerce shopping activity has increased, it also underscored the growing value of the showrooming trend, which had previously been seen as a threat to brick and mortar stores.

It revealed that nearly two in every five smartphone using parents used their smartphones for mobile commerce purchases, but also used “showrooming” behaviors to view their products in physical stores before performing online research to make sure that they found the precise item they want, and at the best price.

Brick and mortar shops have previously felt threatened by showrooming, feeling worried that they would lose their business to the competition while shoppers were standing under their roofs. However, that doesn’t seem to be the way that mobile commerce works. Among the surveyed parents, 35 percent had accessed retailer apps or websites from their smartphones while in those specific stores. This suggests that showrooming can help to lead to solidified brand loyalty.

That said, the survey also showed that some retail shops were more effective than others at appealing to the mobile commerce loving parents. One of the more successful players, for example, was Macy’s, which has a highly mobile friendly experience, and where parents with smartphones were 20 percent more likely to visit a physical store than the average customer regardless of device use.