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IdeaBar: Still Seeking The Great Semacode Marketing Idea

Hm1_2 Gizmodo just posted a piece about how H&M is using semacodes imprinted onto Billboard ads in Europe for clothes to allow consumers to purchase an item of clothing directly from their phone.  I am a big fan of the promise of semacodes for marketing because they can offer a reliable way to let consumers interact with static outdoor ads and get more information or take an action right on the spot.  There are some obvious flaws in what H&M is trying to do … most notably that I don’t know of any woman who would see an article of clothing on a model in a billboard (especially after Dove’s Evolution showed how these ads are created) and immediately decide to input her size and color choice to buy it.  But the idea of semacodes has lots of smarter potential applications.  Here are a just a few I could imagine for some smart forward thinking marketers:

  1. Food and Lodging Recommendations – This is probably the most obvious application, as you are in a single physical location so you are most likely to agree to receive information for places to stay (if you are looking) or a good restaurant to eat at.  Any restaurant guide service like Zagats could easily use this as a promotion to share their content.
  2. Personal Homing Beacons – Who hasn’t been stuck in a new location and unable to describe your location to someone else who is trying to make their way there?  Street intersections are good, but sometimes that is not descriptive enough.  Imagine semacode lamp posts where you could snap a photo and essentially create a homing beacon for yourself for anyone to find you.  You could help your friend with no sense of direction find you through Google maps on their phone, or more usefully, order a Domino’s pizza straight to the middle of nowhere.
  3. Scavenger Hunt Style Promotions – As these rise in popularity, using semacodes imprinted onto locations or objects could enable a really fun chain reaction game where you find one clue and get a message telling you about the next one.  These would be indecipherable to people who do not know what they are, but provide essential clues to game participants.  For more interaction, a brand could even let people generate their own and generate clues for others.
  4. HyperLocal Town/Suburb Info Guides – Walking into a new city with a Lonely Planet guide is great, but in smaller areas or suburbs, the infornation is often very little for travellers.  Semacodes printed into public spaces could bridge this gap by offering a way for local citizens to contribute content online and share information about destinations and attractions that no tourism book would likely cover.  Think more broadly about this, and it’s easy to see how semacode marketing could reinvent how small towns or even suburbs market their localities as tourism destinations.

I am sure there are lots more possibilities for using semacodes – especially as camera phones become more common and people get more sophisticated about how they use their mobile devices to access timely and relevant information.  I will definitely be watching this space.

About the Idea Bar:  Working in a creative team, the life of our business is new ideas.  We come up with them every day for clients, but sometimes there are ideas that just don’t fit a client.  They are too big, too different, or just not quite right. Inspired by John at Digital Influence Mapping Project, the IdeaBar is a category of posts that are meant to be "open source" and offer new ideas for marketing.  Take them and use them … all I ask for is a link back to this post if you find these ideas useful and talk about them.  Read more IdeaBar posts on this blog.

13 thoughts on “IdeaBar: Still Seeking The Great Semacode Marketing Idea”

  1. I agree this could be really cool – though it reminds me of that creepy mall in the Minority Report!

    All in all lots of cool potential uses – though I disagree with you on women not buying clothes on the spot. When you think about it, it’s not any different from a catalog – just a different skinny chick on a bigger surface. (I think the real issue is that H&M clothes are among the most ill fitting I’ve ever tried on. And if they do fit they have something really strange – like a giant flower attached to the shoulder or a bow on your stomach – that totally ruins it.)

    Reply
  2. Or it could be a boring but incredibly time saving and convenient function. What if parking meters had these codes? When your time is running out, it will SMS its’ code to your phone and you can put more money on the meter using your phone from where ever you are. That’d be cool. Avoid a $33 ticket in San Fran by leveraging a $0.15 SMS. Sounds like a deal to me.

    Reply
  3. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  4. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  5. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  6. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  7. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  8. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  9. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  10. I think the key value of not having to type a (complicated) url on a cell-phone is a great value. I wonder if semacodes make it any easier though? After all you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg. Check out https://www.fonemine.com as an example. In any case, I am sure semacodes and QR codes as well, are perhaps more natural to use in countries where language is already pictorial

    Reply
  11. its great smart forward thinking marketers.ll you still have to take a picture of the ad; go to the site of interest; and then decide to buy (or not). As an alternative to semacodes, why not just provide a short code and a keyword, which when texted to that short code, would automatically result in a response text message that contains the url embedded in the text msg.visit at-mobile marketing

    Reply

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