Deal or no deal?

Find deals on restaurants around you

When in doubt about what to eat, a sandwich pretty much does the job. It’s quick, satisfying and filling. So while soaking in a bright sunny Sunday, I stepped into ‘Which wich’ on ‘The Ave’ to grab a sandwich. Having made my selection and approaching the payment desk I noticed mini-poster which had a rather large Microsoft tag on it promoting a special offer. It was a partnership with Pirq- a deal and discount mobile application

I whipped out my phone to scan the tag expecting to retrieve a simple mobile discount coupon which I could victoriously waive in front of the cashier. Instead, the tag opened the Pirq web page and from here on began the tap dance. Inching and pinching my way on the screen I tapped the ‘Install for Android’ button. At this point I realised that I was holding up a queue behind me and without intention had also set in motion a small chain of tag scanners. As expected, a couple of them didn’t have Microsoft tag scanner installed on their phones.

Coming back to the tap dance, the installation through the webpage failed for some weird reason and so I attempted downloading it from the Android app store. Post download I had to sign in either using Facebook or with my email id and zip code. I chose the latter hoping that I could finally stake claim to some gastronomically delightful deals. But whoever said success doesn’t come easy was right; at this stage a message popped up informing me that a confirmation link has been sent to my email id….I’m tearing my hair right now….pfff. The latent sense of achievement was now beginning to border on embarrassment and so I paid full price for the sandwich and left the place.

Determined to see this through, on reaching home I completed the email confirmation step and voila!!! …..another hoop…… I now had to choose a password to use the service.

This is a classic case of a sign in system that’s frustrating and broken. A complex process that forced me to self-forfeit a deal and a user experience that only ensured that a sandwich didn’t taste as good as it could have.

Since Pirq had a promotion running at the outlet I would’ve made one simple change to ensure that drop offs from new customers don’t occur due to the experience above. If a user didn’t already have the the Pirq app installed on his phone, on scanning the tag a mobile coupon to redeem the offer instantaneously should have been sent along with a simple app download button and a message stating “Download the Pirq app to avail of more deals like this”. Having tasted success, the user would be positively predisposed to go through the sign in mechanism. Even here, all data input ought to be captured on one form avoiding the tap dance described above.

The app itself is pretty cool. It listed offers from nearly 15 restaurants within a couple of miles from my location with a live counter of how many deals were yet up for grabs at each place. I’ll definitely make use it, but the sign in process could have been far better.

I want my NFC

Browsing through the April issue of Wired magazine at a book store earlier this week, I stumbled upon a print ad for the Lexus 2013 GS that didn’t have a picture of the car. Featured was a close-up image of the vehicle’s center console with a seemingly intrusive doodle of a phone over the dashboard screen. Looking closely was some body copy that instructed the reader to place their NFC-enabled Android phone close to the NFC tag embedded on the page to experience a demo of what is known as the Lexus Appsuite featuring apps like Bing, OpenTable, iHeartradio, Pandora, Yelp and movietickets.com transforming the car itself into one large mobile device.

This seems to be an advancement from using QR codes in print ads and it speaks to how NFC is making its presence beyond payment systems with which it has had a rather stifling experience so far. And it was not until the widespread adoption of smartphones that we’re seeing a wider canvas of innovation and a much broader opportunity for mobile marketing with NFC.

Briefly investigating where NFC is being put to use threw up some novel and potentially lifestyle-enhancing disruptive uses, below are some of them;

1)      Games: Nokia has  been experimenting with a new class of games for children and adults

 

2)      Door Security: A company called Lockitron can help you lock and unlock doors using NFC

3)       Place information / Virtual tourist guide:  NFC tags at the exhibits at the museum of London giving users more out of their visit.

4)      Unlocking much more:  BMW is attempting to take NFC a step further by building a car key that unlocks much more than just your car.

 

What works for NFC is the ease of use and quick reading on devices besides the fact that the user does not need to be hooked on to the internet. One has to just tap their device to invoke a rich experience on their screens ranging from simple check-ins and offers to groundbreaking augmented reality experiences the results of which can reveal a valuable pattern of interactions and data points for each individual customer harnessing the true power of data analysis and optimization of content and marketing programs.