Sound-Triggered Smartphone Ads

December 10th, 2011

The really terrifying aspect of this is not the technology itself, but that some group of troglodytes will actually install this on their phones on purpose.

Related: shewhomeasures.com:

How about genitalia couplers (like in the video above—yes, watch closely) that communicate with the phone via Bluetooth? You know, for those extra special notifications, like when you walk by the Nebuchadnezzar sized canisters of aerosol cHeEz at CostCo without realizing that you can buy two and get one free!

Bargains.

Bargains.

Via: AdWeek:

You can pack all kinds of marketing goodness into a smartphone app, but no app is worth the space unless consumers remember to actually, you know, open it. Trouble is, the likelihood that users will download your app and then promptly forget about it is all too high.

New York digital agency Densebrain hopes its new program, Sonic Notify, will remedy the problem. Using technology initially developed for an app that tracks buses, Sonic Notify uses bits of audio code to deliver messages, ads, and more to smartphones.

Jonathan Glanz, Densebrain’s founder and technical director, says the idea surfaced unexpectedly during a meeting with Procter & Gamble this year.

“[They] wanted to know how to differentiate themselves in aisle,” he said. “We said we wished we could just set people’s phones off when they’re standing in front of [a] product.

And all of a sudden, we thought, ‘We have something that can do that.’ ”

Repurposing the bus-tracking technology, Densebrain devised small beacons—designed to be hidden from view—that can be attached to shelves, and which emit inaudible, high-frequency sounds that trigger smartphone messages. The audio code can also be overlaid onto an existing audio track. As long as consumers have downloaded an app integrated with the technology, the smartphone will respond to the sound without user activation.

In-store, the system could alert shoppers to special promos. At home, it could provide interactive content cued to TV shows. It could even have uses for live concerts and sports events.

Sensitive to notification fatigue, the software does allow people to opt out of messages.

Glanz says conversations are under way with drugstore chains in key U.S. markets as well as some TV networks, major sporting events, and music festivals. In February, Sonic Notify will share the spotlight with runway models at the MADE Fashion Week event at Milk Studios in New York.

This past October at the CMJ music event in New York, music tech incubator Cantora Labs, as well as companies like Spotify and Turntable.fm, partnered with each other and with Sonic Notify to deliver content about the bands and on-site promotions, triggered by the music. Attendees were asked to download a Sonic Notify-powered app; of those who did, says Cantora Labs co-founder Jesse Israel, 85 percent engaged with it.

One Response to “Sound-Triggered Smartphone Ads”

  1. Crates says:

    ‘genitalia couplers’ , , , for the really, really jaded.

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