Posts tagged billboard
Japan launches billboards that can read your mind
Sep 6th
Imagine a billboard that can read your age and what soft drinks you like just by looking at you. Billboard advertising, after falling a little behind in the ‘cool’ stakes of the ad world lately, is coming up with some pretty nifty that take ‘interactive’ and ‘digital’ to a whole new level.
Japan is taking the lead when it comes t billboard advertising. It is developing flat-screen monitors used like billboards and is incorporating mobile phone technologies to make them more interactive.
Inside the bustling Shinagawa train station, a futuristic-looking vending machine has replaced rows of drink bottles and cans with a 47-inch touch-screen monitor.
When a person stands in front of the screen, a camera captures his image and a sensor determines the person’s gender and approximate age.
Based on that reading, the machine “recommends” drinks that fit the customer’s profile.
The idea is to transform billboards and the like into sophisticated marketing tools that identify and target a specific audience.
NEC, the third-largest maker of public displays, behind Panasonic and Samsung, is using facial-recognition technology that can determine how many people looked at a particular display, their gender and even their level of attentiveness.
NEC said the technology allows advertisers to gather hard data about the display’s effectiveness.
The company says its system can identify people’s gender correctly about 90% of the time and guess a person’s age within a 10-year range about 70% of the time.
But the technology raises privacy concerns — as does everything that has to with advertising these days, it seems.
The problem is that there’s no clear regulation that prohibits those signage systems from storing images.
The protection of personal privacy depends too much on the conscience of each company involved.
The question is though, is this sort of advertising fool proof? Or is it just another advertiser trying to convince us we want something we don’t actually need?
Tell us your thoughts.
You too can own a digital billboard!
Jun 29th
Californian politicians are at the very early stages of a scheme to allow drivers to offer their license plates as a digital advertising billboard.
Car owners could earn a little extra on the side sure, but the revenues will also have to be split with the cash-strapped Californian government.
The technology, owned by the company Smart Plate, only exists in patent form at the moment. It would mean cars had a digital plate which would normally show the registration number of the car. If the car was stationary for more than four seconds, for example in congestion or at lights, the ads would appear.
The most likely set-up would be that the state would run a pool of advertisements and would be forced to include any ad which didn’t breach obscenity laws. However, drivers could veto individual ads from appearing on their vehicle.
Funny that a state government would turn to advertising to make money…but then again, they have a movie star for a Governor – anything is possible. It just goes to show the power of advertising.

Google Voice Search journey goes public…in Times Square
Nov 27th
Here’s a clear picture on how billboard advertising is moving on from being just a poster advert on the side of a highway to the one of the most exciting ways to involve consumers in your ads:
Google, Verizon, Reuters, and R/GA have teamed up to take over the largest displays on Times Square that will allow for a giant Google Search by voice experiment/Droid advertisement.
On Black Friday, anyone who calls 888-376-4336 and does a Google Search by voice, will see their results displayed on either the Reuters sign or the NASDAQ sign in Times Square, as reported by TechCrunch.
If ask about a new CD, for example, the display will come up with a giant Google Map of where you can find it.
The activity is part of a big promotion for Droid, the new Android phone built by Verizon and being heavily pushed by Google.
This year has been a great one for billboard advertising. Remember when MasterCard took over the Old Street roundabout billboard in February with a special Valentine’s message?
But what makes Google’s idea so cool is that it is actually getting people to interact, and that is what is key in the new world of advertising.

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