Showing posts with label AR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AR. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2018

YOUR Augmented Reality Social Media Marketing?


AR And Social Media: Is Augmented Reality The Future Of Social Media?

Augmented reality (AR) is already impacting social media – and its done so for years now. In fact, it seems like AR is taking over the most popular social networks in the world.



Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat – and new AR technology is introduced all the time.

The big question is though, how will it continue to impact social media? Brands and marketers in particular need to know these answers if they are going to be at the forefront of AR in social media and find new ways to boost their sales.

So, is augmented reality the future of social media? And how will it affect brands and marketers?

What Is Augmented Reality?

Augmented reality is often confused with virtual reality, but the two are quite different technologies. While sure, there are certain similarities, virtual reality implies creating a whole new world from scratch – a simulation of the real and the imagined world, whether it’s going back in time to walk with dinosaurs in realistic landscapes, or travelling to an imagined future where nothing feels familiar.



Augmented reality on the other hand, takes the real world and projects virtual, computer-generated augmentations to it, in order to enhance our experiences.

Like when you can see the world around you from your phone camera, along with Pokemons running around.

Or when you take a picture of yourself with a virtual top hat and a moustache to share with your friends and followers.

Or when a healthcare professional can better explain their work to their patients with interactive 3D projections.

While many still see augmented reality as a means for harmless fun, whether it’s a cute little game or an exciting photo filter, the potential for this technology is absolutely amazing – it’s already disrupting numerous industries, including healthcare, education, navigation, manufacturing, marketing and so many more. And, of course, it will continue to do so at a very rapid rate as the technology evolves and it becomes more accessible.



When it comes to social media, it’s already quite clear that AR and social work very well together.

The question is, how will this change in the future? Will AR have an even bigger impact on social media as AR evolves?

Even more so…is AR the future of social media?

Augmented Reality And Social Media

AR is already closely intertwining itself within social media, in large part due to Snapchat. In fact, much of AR’s popularity is due to Snapchat, although Pokemon Go has certainly had its own great impact:

--Snapchat users can bring life to their updates with AR filters and lenses, and they can even create their own.
--Snapchat users can play games with other users and friends with Snappables, which are essentially AR selfie games.



--You can turn yourself into a 3D Bitmoji and insert yourself in the real world.
--Plus, Snapchat recently released several features called Shoppable AR which allow brands to promote their websites and sign up pages, to share a video and to get people to install their apps. In other words, to give you a practical example, consumers can try out a brands’ products using a lens and then the retailer will be able to direct the consumers to where they can actually buy that product.

Snapchat has found multiple ways to implement AR in ways that felt organic to its users, instead of forcing AR down people’s throats; and even if in the past year or so Snapchat has certainly had its share of issues and it’s still losing users, it’s not because of the AR technology that it is happening.

In fact, it’s largely because other popular social networks like Instagram are adapting Snapchat's features to their own platforms.

And it’s not just Instagram and Snapchat who are using AR to enhance the user experience, but Facebook too. In fact, the platform recently introduced the so-called Facebook AR Studio, a very powerful tool for developers and artists who want to build their own interactive Facebook camera experiences – and soon, they’ll also have access to other Facebook products like Instagram and Facebook Messenger.



Will AR Take Over In The Future And How Will It Affect Other Brands?

Considering how much AR is a part of social media today, the answer feels very obvious: augmented reality will continue to be a huge part of our everyday lives, including, of course, social media.

And no-one will rejoice in this more than brands and marketers who will have new ways to promote themselves and their products or services in unique, exciting and engaging ways:

--AR virtual stores on social media: consumers can already buy products via social media, but with AR, this could turn into a much more engaging experience. People won’t even have to visit a brands’ physical stores any longer – they’ll be able to step into your virtual store, try out your products and buy them directly online (it will be very interesting to see how many impulse purchases this will lead to!
--AR and live events: what if you could attend an event from the comfort of your own home? Or play AR games with other fans? This technology is already being implemented by different organisations and brands such as the PGA Tour, for example; fans could download the AR app and start engaging with the event and the ShotLink player data in unique ways – all they really needed was their phone, the app and a flat surface:



--AR videos: brands will be able to further engage their audiences by creating interactive AR videos; there are many different ways that they can use these videos, such as to show customers how to use their products or how to make the most of them. Or, if they’re selling a service of any kind, AR videos can help show people what the user experience would be like if they bought the service.
--More brand awareness: a great AR experience is highly shareable. Meaning, if you create amazing AR experiences for your audience (such as lenses, games and other interactive AR experiences), people will want to share the results with their audience – this is incredible news for brands and marketers as it’s basically word-of-mouth and UGC (user generated content) on steroids.

Guest Authored By Lilach Bullock. Lilach is an entrepreneur and passionate blogger for over a decade, during which time She has written thousands of articles on her blog and many other publications. Her Forbes column is all about helping businesses market themselves, whether entrepreneurs or start-ups, enterprises, and everything in between. If she's not blogging, she loves speaking at events all over the world, spending time with her daughter, and when time permits, she's also a big fan of Zumba. Follow Lilach on Twitter.





"Augmented reality already is heavily linked to social media because of Snapchat and more recently, Instagram and Facebook. Plus, these top social networks are very much encouraging people to not only use their AR features as much as possible, but even to create their own AR experiences by giving the tools they need to build AR camera lenses and effects.

Brands, too, are starting to embrace this technology more and more, but the biggest changes will likely come when the technology becomes more accessible – the days when most consumers will try out products using their cameras via a Facebook Page are right around the corner.." -LilachBullock


    • Post Crafted By:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, CO. where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    Monday, April 23, 2018

    YOUR Social Media Empathy Technology?


    Empathy technologies like VR, AR, and social media can transform education..



    The Better Angels of Our Nature, Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker makes the case for reading as a “technology for perspective-taking” that has the capacity to not only evoke people’s empathy but also expand it.

    “The power of literacy,” as he argues “get[s] people in the habit of straying from their parochial vantage points” while “creating a hothouse for new ideas about moral values and the social order.”

    The first major empathy technology was Guttenberg’s printing press, invented in 1440. With the mass production of books came widespread literacy and the ability to inhabit the minds of others. While this may sound trite, it was actually a seismic innovation for people in the pre-industrial age who didn’t see, hear or interact with those outside of their village. More recently, other technologies like television and virtual reality made further advances, engaging more of the senses to deepen the simulated human experience.



    We are now on the cusp of another breakthrough in empathy technologies that have their roots in education.

    Empathy technologies expand our access to diverse literature, allow us to more deeply understand each other and create opportunities for meaningful collaboration across racial, cultural, geographic and class backgrounds. The new empathy technologies don’t leave diversity of thought to chance rather they intentionally build for it.

    Demand for these tools originates from educators both in schools and corporate environments who have a mandate around successful collaboration. Teachers who are on the front lines of this growing diversity consider it their job to help students and employees become better perspective-takers.

    Our need to expand our circles of empathy has never been more urgent. We as a nation are becoming more diverse, segregated and isolated by the day.



    The high school graduating class of 2020 will be majority minority and growing income inequality has created a vast income and opportunity gap.

    Our neighborhoods have regressed back to higher levels of socio-economic segregation; families from different sides of the track are living in increasing isolation from one another.

    These new empathy technologies are very different than social media platforms which once held so much promise to connect us all in an online utopia. The reality is that social media has moved us in the opposite direction. Instead, our platforms have us caught in an echo chamber of our own social filters, rarely exposed to new perspectives.

    And it’s not just social media, clickbait tabloid journalism has encouraged mocking and judgment rather than the empathy-building journey of a great piece of writing like Toni Morrison or Donna Tartt. In the rich depth of literature, we empathize with the protagonist, and when their flaws are inevitably revealed, we are humbled and see ourselves in their complex, imperfect lives. Research has since proven that those who read more literary fiction are better at detecting and understanding others’ emotions.



    What follows are several examples of empathy technologies in bricks and mortar schools, and online and corporate learning.

    Empathy technologies enhance human connection rather than replacing it. Outschool is a marketplace for live online classes which connects K-12 students and teachers in small-groups over video-chat to explore shared interests. Historically online learning has offered great choice and access but at the cost of student engagement and human connection.

    Outschool’s use of live video-chat and the small-group format removes the need for that trade-off. Kids and teachers see and hear each other, interacting in real-time like in a school classroom, but with participants from all over the world and from different backgrounds.




    The intentionally of curating a diverse library of content is a key difference between the new empathy technologies and social media.

    Newsela is a news platform delivering a bonanza of curated, leveled content to the classroom every day. It’s the antidote to the stale, single source textbook, refreshed once a decade. In the screenshot below, children are exposed to stories about Mexico, gun rights and Black women. Teachers often use Newsela articles as a jumping off point for a rich classroom discussion where respectful discourse skills are taught and practiced.

    Business leaders are increasingly touting empathy as a critical leadership trait and using these technologies in their own corporate education programs for leadership and everyday employees. Google’s Sundar Pichai describes his management style as “the ability to trancend the work and work well with others.” Microsoft’s Satya Nadella believes that empathy is a key source of business innovation and is a prerequisite for one’s ability to “grasp customers’ un-met, unarticulated needs.” Uber’s new CEO Dara Khosrowshahi and Apple’s Tim Cook round out a cohort of leaders who are listeners first and contrast sharply to the stereotypical brash Silicon Valley CEO.



    To deepen employees empathy, cutting edge corporations like Amazon are using virtual environments like Mursion to practice challenging interpersonal interactions.

    Mursion’s virtual simulations are powered by trained human actors who engage in real-time conversations with employees. I tried it out by role-playing a manager discussing mandatory overtime with a line worker who was struggling to keep two part-time jobs. The line worker described to me how last-minute overtime requests threw his schedule into chaos, put his second job at risk and impacted his childcare situation.

    For Mursion and Newsela, empathy-building is an intentional outcome of the product. They are deployed in learning environments where trained educators can use them as scaffolding tools. With Mursion, employees can practice hard conversations and receive feedback from their facilitators and peers. With Newsela, teachers can use the gun rights article as a jumping off point for a richly facilitated group discussion.

    Guest Authored By Jennifer Carolan. Jennifer is a general partner and co-founder of Reach Capital. Follow Jennifer on Twitter.





    What the broader tech industry can take away from educators’ adoption of empathy technologies..

    Storytelling, elevating common elements of the human condition and taking a humanist approach to building products will help us break out of our tiny echo chambers and by doing so, enrich our own lives..” -JenniferCarolan


      • Post Crafted By:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

      Monday, December 18, 2017

      2018 Social Media Trends To Watch For?


      ‘Twas the week before Christmas, when all through the agency, not a new brief was opened, blame it on post-Christmas party complacency..

      The inboxes are tidied and auto-responders set with care, in hopes that no last-minute meetings drop in, but surely they wouldn’t dare?



      With a toast to 2017 the year that it was, the astute digital agency executive must look forward, well, a little just because;

      A new year of social, with developments ahead,

      ‘Sigh’ says Mark Ritson while he watches TV ads (all of them in full) from his bed.

      Social media is in for a ride and one must attest that this 2018 prediction list is most likely one of the best. Enjoy.

      Robots won’t take your job…in 2018. But you’ll engage with one every single day.

      Bots and AI won’t replace humans just yet. But they will get better as marketers explore creative options and gain better understanding of the potential of the technology.



      This year we saw an explosion of brands utilizing bots as a communication tool and they were, at best quite primitive but still engaging. Check out Katy Perry’s bot on her official Facebook page – it’s the framework of an exciting future for personalized customer and fan engagement at scale.

      AI will continue to drive improved digital ad-serving outcomes and increased ROI – taking out some of the guess work from successful digital strategies.

      Augmented reality ends its false starts and it will absolutely change social media advertising.

      The AR vs VR battle will be put to bed as both android and iOS platforms are now packing some serious AR capabilities.

      Facebook will launch incredibly immersive advertising experiences on their platform and have already partnered with over 700 of the most creative brands and agencies to develop AR-enhanced advertising. We’ll likely see a staggered release to other users in early to mid 2017 which will see advertising experiences blend the digital to the physical world. This may also pave the way for physical advertising assets like outdoor, POS or packaging to tie into rich digital experiences via the Facebook Camera Effects Platform.



      Niantic, the power behind the Pokémon Go craze will be releasing Harry Potter powered by the latest and greatest AR technology.

      The success of Pokémon Go took both the world and Niantic by surprise. Now that the potential has been realised there will be greater desire by brands to work in commercial deals here.

      Horrendous digital ad creative will begin to disappear – digital inventory prices will rise.

      Higher demand will begin to weed out shitty creative attempts – at least on the most popular sites and platforms.

      The lead up to Black Friday and Cyber Monday saw advertisers slogged with staggering CPMs and dwindling conversion rates as available inventory was at an all-time premium. Only the best creative that resonates the highest with audiences wins out in these times of advertiser saturation.



      Shoppable social media will see the words ‘social and ‘ROI’ be in the same sentence without ‘f*ck all’ written in it too.

      Social will further provide evidence of ROI through shoppable posts, making the path to purchase shorter and more instant.

      More platforms will enable sales windows to occur ‘on platform’ which ensures a greater more stable e-commerce experience and a quicker time to checkout for our dwindling attention spans. Instagram’s “swipe up for more” in stories is already testing this user behavior.

      AI will continue to further play a role in smart ad-serving and dynamic product offerings better tailored to individual users making the e-commerce experience much more tailored.



      Voice Search and the rise of the Amazon advertising marketplace.

      Voice search will be an emerging frontier that will further position platforms like Amazon as powerful advertising market places. Amazon has been doing the agency rounds in 2017 in preparation for an all-out assault on 2018. The online market place will become a savage battle-ground for screen space not unlike what we’ve seen in traditional supermarkets. Features like voice search, free, same-day and drone delivery will only make the decision to shop here easier than saying ‘Alexa, let’s get pizza.’

      This will see Amazon compete for the lion’s share of digital ad revenue along with Google and Facebook.

      RIP Organic Reach

      Organic reach will be pronounced dead and the life support will be switched off. Social is pay to play if you’re expecting any measurable results. It’s time everyone got very comfortable with this as social space is at a premium as the major platforms reach advertising saturation point.



      Bad boy digital will clean up.

      Digital will clean up its act in 2018 as major platforms work hard to continue to convince major advertisers of high quality inventory, real impressions and proper consumer engagement. Pressure will continue to mount for there to be a standardized system of digital measure-ability and until then it rests on the shoulders of marketers to use their expert judgment.

      Digital disruption as the beast evolves.

      Social media is a fast-paced industry built on continual and unrelenting change. This online social space is having major real-world impacts influencing everything from our purchasing, behavior and even the outcome of elections. Social media is where we research, discover, choose, fight, discuss, share, learn and play and it’s hard to imagine the world without it.

      Digital disruption is a phrase we’ve been using for a few years now but in 2018 the impacts of this will be felt even more than ever before.

      Guest Authored By James Towers. James is an Ad Guy, Marketer, Creator, Entrepreneur, Founder of 16K Agency, and lead Facebook ads strategist. Follow James on Twitter.




      Social media is a fast-paced industry built on continual and unrelenting change.

      This online social space is having major real-world impacts influencing everything from our purchasing, behavior and even the outcome of elections.."


        • Authored by:
          Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBr@nd.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)