QR Codes and Non-Line Marketing Campaigns
I was recently asked at short notice to stand in for a speaker on Mobile Marketing at the Central and Eastern Europe Digital Marketing Conference in Budapest. As luck would have it, the speaker's table had a bottle of Pepsi on it and gave me an extra 10 minutes worth of content. On the bottle label was a QR Code and so I talked enthusiastically about how this technology can drive traffic to web sites for free.
In short, a QR code can hold a huge amount of information but all most of us need it to do is carry a url. Then, anybody with a smart phone that has the software installed can take a picture of the code and open up our destination site. Cost of creation of QR Code? Nothing. Cost of printing on label? Nothing. Value of free traffic to your site? Priceless!
I've been following the development of QR codes for several years and whilst they are big in Japan, they do not really seem to have caught on in Western marketing culture...until this morning. There I am, munching on my super-food muesli flicking through the daily paper and out pops a full page display ad with...a QR Code!
To be honest, I'm not wildly excited about what Siemens has to say about "Climate Change and Energy Supply", but they did take me from an off-line display ad to a mobile web site in seconds, for no effort. I'm also just a little more engaged. And I think Siemens is a bit cooler than before thanks to my multi-channel customer journey (how sad am I?)
So, what are the opportunities for QR codes? Well, they should probably augment all ad copy that currently just has a url...why ask people to go to a long site address when you can whisk them there in seconds by mobile? That means we can deliver them to deep url's and not just easy to remember/type urls.
How about store windows taking people to a "Voucher download" page? Or they should be on all direct mail collateral. And packaging, and exhibition stands...and posters. Business cards? Company Cars?!
Then there is the art and science of building landing pages; how can we harvest personal data from the visit? What should be the call to action? How do we measure success? In truth, the volumes from this activity will not be overwhelming, but for the tech savvy segment of your prospect pool this may be cool enough (and easy enough) to tip them over into becoming customers.
So, we've a long way to go with QR Codes, but what an exciting journey. And for those of you wanting to play with me in the land of QR, here is all you need to begin:
- Create your QR Code web url - it's free and easy at this site
- Or if you want a Vcard - Nokia have a jolly clever tool for that (accept their T's and C's before use)
- Scan it using QR Code smart phones - here is Nokia's range
- Or download the software
That's it - just to get you started, here's my QR Business card. And just for the record, even I'm not geeky or sad enough to have my Facebook url printed on a T-shirt, but if that's your bag, this company will do that for you. Happy QR Coding!
Reader Comments (2)
This is amazing. Thank you for the information. I have few questions please. IS QR code different from Nokia code? Which code is most widely used and has better chance to become a standard?
I'm in love with QR codes. In fact, I'm in love with anything that drags people from the offline world into the online world in an inventive manner.
I'm waiting for these to take off in the UK as I have plans to use them in exhibitions that I organise. Imagine going to an exhibition and the stands having the company name displayed in big bold letters with a QR code next to them so you can check out their website and learn a little about the company to make a more informed decision about if you should be talking to them or not.