Survey: Customers lose confidence in Samsung after Galaxy Note 7 recall 3
"KNOW THE CODE – HOW TO USE QR CODES IN BUSINESS" Know the Code – How to Use QR Codes in Business Those strange-looking shape-filled squares you’ve been seeing lately may not look like much, but they are very likely the next big thing in marketing and branding for U.S. businesses. With a simple snap of a smartphone, that unassuming graphic sends valuable information instantly to potential customers, which for some businesses can mean the difference between a sale or a walk-away. What is this magic marketing bullet you ask? Its common moniker is a “QR code,” and it is essentially a two-dimensional bar code much like the bar codes that have become so ubiquitous in the retail world. But it is oh so much more! Each QR code (QR stands for quick response) is composed of tiny shapes that can be read both horizontally and vertically.
The turbo-charged design means that when activated, this code can implement complex actions, such as opening a web page, downloading a video or sending a text message. It’s a way of providing instant information, integrating print and multimedia capabilities, capturing data on the spot and otherwise engaging your customer through the use of today’s mobile technology. “It’s growing very rapidly,” comments Mike Wehrs in an article on sobserver.com. Wehrs is the president of Scanbuy, a York QR code development and management company that produces one of the most popular codes: ScanLife.
Survey: Customers lose confidence in Samsung after Galaxy Note 7 recall 3 - The Latest On Painless mobile phones Plans
“It’s not something where you’d say people don’t know what’s going on, but it’s not 100 percent out there yet either.” But whether or not people don’t know about these codes yet, they definitely will in the near future. According to the article, Scanbuy data shows QR code generation and usage has increased by 700 percent since January 2009 with the number of scans in the United States increasing from around 1,000 a day to more than 35,000 a day. That’s an awful lot of people clicking their smartphones for more information. But it seems that’s what people want nowadays. Consumers crave information.
They’re devouring online reviews and product descriptions before even stepping foot in a store. And they want even more. Latitude, a Massachusetts consulting firm that rees how information and communications technologies can be used to improve consumer experiences, discovered in a 2010 study of food shoppers that 56 percent of shoppers wanted more product information, such as food origins and ingredients, from the stores they frequent, and 30 percent of the respondents wanted that information delivered to their mobile phone.
Selecting Quick Programs In smartphone - Survey: Customers lose confidence in Samsung after Galaxy Note 7 recall 3
“What this study tells us is that having access to information in real-time-at those critical decision-making moments-is often the missing link between intent and action,” says Neela Sakaria, Latitude vice president. Smartphones = Savvy Consumers Although QR codes are not (they were developed in Japan in 1994 and appear on everything from beer cans to buses around Asia), they are only now starting to hit Mainstream U.S.A. QR codes require a web-enabled smartphone to decode, something not all consumers use. But that is changing. According to a comScore MobiLens report from last July, one in four Americans now own a smartphone and that is on a continual upward trajectory.
The Nielsen Company has similar astounding statistics: as of Q3 2010, 28 percent of U.S. mobile users had smartphones, and of people who acquired a cell phone in the prior six months, 41 percent chose a smartphone. Nielsen predicts that by the end of 2011, there will be more smartphones in the U.S. market than standard feature phones.
No comments:
Post a Comment