Louis Vuitton is showcasing 150 years of history using an iPhone application

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News

Screen shot 2011 01 12 at 11.29.25 AM 300x64 Louis Vuitton is showcasing 150 years of history using an iPhone application

via luxurydaily.com

Louis Vuitton flaunts brand history via mobile app

Louis Vuitton is showcasing 150 years of history using an iPhone application featuring its legendary luggage in video footage and images.

The “100 Legendary Trunks” application shows Louis Vuitton luggage from every decade of its production. It also has interviews with members of the Vuitton family and a trailer of the new Louis Vuitton book “100 Malles de Legende,” where the content from the application was taken.

Mr. Pedraza is not associated with Louis Vuitton nor the development of the application. He has commented generally on the importance of history in luxury branding.

“What luxury brands most have going for them are their legacies, it’s really incredible,” said Milton Pedraza, CEO of the Luxury Institute, New York. “Their long histories show consumers why they are so special and why they are worth the money.”

lv luggage 185 Louis Vuitton is showcasing 150 years of history using an iPhone application

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Mobile Commerce Daily: Why luxury brands should embrace mobile

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

Why luxury brands should embrace mobile

via Mobile Commerce Daily

The rapid adoption of the smartphone and the mobile medium is one of the most important trends that shopper marketers are tracking this year and next.

Consumers are not only using their mobile phones to make purchases, but also increasing using them to perform shopping research on their way to a store and while they are in the store.

This trend will only increase with Google’s Android and Apple’s iPhone activating 450,000 phones a day and as a generation of teenagers, who currently average 3,339 text messages a month, come of age.

Luxury shoppers are early adopters of powerful smartphones, but paradoxically, luxury brands are lagging behind when it comes to leveraging mobile marketing.

This is not unusual in and of itself.

Mind the gap
Luxury brands traditionally trail other retail brands when it comes to technology adoption and in providing cross-channel user experiences.

Unlike wide-appeal brands such as Gap or J.C. Penney, luxury brands’ core customers often have higher service expectations due to the higher price points of luxury goods, which luxury brand managers mistakenly assume exclusively means personal service from sales associates.

In reality luxury shoppers’ expectations for high-quality service extend to great self-service tools and rich multichannel shopping experiences.

In a recent New York Times interview, Christopher Bailey, chief designer at Burberry, explained that part of the continued success of the venerable luxury fashion brand is due to its new cross-channel initiatives, especially in the mobile medium.

In fact, during the fashion house’s runway shows, spectators are furnished with mobile devices that allow them to reserve items in real-time while they are viewing them on the runway.

However, Burberry – which ensures that its customers can interact and experience brand consistency across every possible channel – is the exception to the rule.

(See Burberry takes third place: Luxury Marketer of the Year)

Many luxury retailers continue to invest their resources in the same old tools.

For instance, luxury brands spend millions on store facades and interior fixtures, yet ignore the parking lots that surround the stores – leaving them aesthetically displeasing and visually at-odds with the brand experience inside the store.

There is a similar incongruity related to mobile.

While their in-store experience may be unparalleled, luxury brands often receive failing grades when it comes to pre-tailing, an increasingly important step in a consumer’s purchase decision.

Luxury brands need to move quickly to offer mobile and online pre-shopping tools that seamlessly integrate with their existing ecommerce and retail experiences.

These marketers must ask themselves: Do all channels have visibility into a customer’s past purchases, gifts and wish lists?

In many ways, mobile represents the latest incarnation of the venerable clientelling practices that luxury brands have leveraged for years.

Associate sales, not sales associate
Why is mobile so important for luxury brands? Brand perception, loyalty and retention, for starters.

Luxury brand customers feel they have a relationship – even a bond – with the brands themselves, which does not extend, interestingly enough, to the sales associates or other human faces of the brands.

Mobile, in particular, allows customers to limit their interaction directly to the brand via the use of technology and to keep their interaction and brand experience consistent with their own perception of the brand.

For example, users of Gucci’s iPhone application are treated to exclusive music mixes by celebrity DJ, Mark Ronson, as well as sneak peeks of forthcoming merchandise, such as the Gucci Kids line.

The brand is rewarding its customers for using the mobile medium, offering a more intimate interaction than might be had in a bricks-and-mortar store, while also removing the chance that a single sales associate’s bad day could translate into lasting damage to the brand via customer dissatisfaction.

Of course, one of the primary justifications for the mobile medium is the same for Walmart as for Neiman Marcus: simple convenience.

Consumers increasingly rely on mobile devices for everything from calendaring to weather forecasts to GPS, and this ubiquity extends to shopping.

In fact, according to a recent survey by Brand Anywhere and Luth Research Inc., Web retailers could increase consumer engagement by 85 percent simply by offering a mobile version of their Web site (see story).

So, the time is now for luxury brands to add mobile to their channel mix.

While the benefits are numerous for all retailers, luxury brands, in particular, stand to gain higher engagement, sales and retention rates by offering a strong user experience to customers who clearly want – and expect – a direct, intimate and convenient way of interacting with the brands.

Jason Goldberg is vice president of strategy and customer experience at CrossView. Portland, OR. Reach him at jgoldberg@crossview.com.

H&M is using an augmented reality tool GoldRun on iPhone for its preview collection!

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

via designtaxi.com

H&M Goes Virtual Reality

2 H&M is using an augmented reality tool GoldRun on iPhone for its preview collection!

High-street fashion retailer H&M is now using an augmented reality (AR) app, GoldRun [iTunes link], for its New York City preview collection.

Users get to interact with and capture pictures of virtual H&M apparel and accessories in front of any of the 10 retail stores in 10 Manhattan locations. Through AR, users simply pick the items they want to view and then ‘capture’ them in their phones to receive an instant 10% discount on any H&M purchase.
It is uncomplicated. “AR + Virtual Goods = More Rewards”, as the GoldRun app shows.

Tapping into the latest technology around, this novel and pioneering approach o location-based marketing has come to represent the new age of marketing today.

“After a decade of developing digital media campaigns for top tier brands and recognizing the explosion in smartphone sales and increasing interest in location-based marketing, I realized there was a need for a new type of media buy, one tailored for the mobile space,” said Vivian Rosenthal, CEO of GoldRun and co-founder of digital media studio Tronic.

If you have other interesting design and art finds, cool websites, or anything that might catch our eye, share it with us at news -at- hillscreativearts -dot- com!

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moz screenshot 4 H&M is using an augmented reality tool GoldRun on iPhone for its preview collection!

Ebay will let you try on sunglasses on iPhone, in December

Posted by: Andrey  :  Category: News, Technology

via bloomberg.com

EBay Adds Tool to Let Shoppers Model 3-D Glasses, Expanding in E-Commerce

EBay Inc., the largest online retail marketplace, is introducing a technology that lets people browse and try on sunglasses using an Apple Inc. iPhone, as it seeks to mimic the real-world shopping experience.

The so-called augmented-reality feature is part of EBay’s fashion application, Steve Yankovich, vice president of the company’s mobile unit, said in an interview last week. The app will be available in December, he said.

EBay is using handset-friendly tools to benefit from rising demand for mobile commerce, an area of retailing where Colin Gillis, an analyst at New York-based BGC Partners LP, says it established an early lead. The company has said its apps will generate as much as $2 billion in volume this year. Worldwide, there will be about 150 million to 200 million mobile augmented -reality users by 2012, from about 600,000 last year, according to Perey Research & Consulting in Montreux, Switzerland.

“Within a year or two, I would be shocked if we didn’t see it everywhere,” said Norman Winarsky, a vice president at Menlo Park, California-based SRI International, a technology incubator known for developing the computer mouse. The future of mobile shopping will allow consumers to experience and try anything they want, Winarsky said. “You can put your finger in front of the camera and a diamond ring will appear,” he said.

Ikea introduced an app on the iPhone earlier this year that lets people see how the retailer’s furniture would fit in their homes. Companies such as Lego A/S, Europe’s biggest toymaker, have store kiosks through which shoppers may hold up a box and see what the Legos will look like assembled.

As technological hurdles fall and companies start synchronizing their online and mobile business strategies, more retailers may introduce augmented reality-style apps, said Rob Gonda, global lead of creative technology at SapientNitro, a London-based marketing firm.

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Grazia publishes 3D issue and features augmented reality codes.

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Grazia publishes 3D issue.

logo Grazia publishes 3D issue and features augmented reality codes.

The women’s glossy magazine features augmented reality codes, with music and 360-degree views of spring fashions.

The augmented reality edition of Grazia, with a virtual performance by Florence and the Machine.

Bauer Media’s women’s fashion glossy Grazia will jump on the 3D bandwagon today with an augmented reality issue featuring Florence and the Machine singing and dancing on the front cover.

The “walk-in, talking Grazia” will feature augmented reality (AR) codes throughout the issue, activated by holding the magazine up to a webcam or iPhone.

As well as a virtual performance by Florence and the Machine singing You’ve Got the Love, it will offer readers a 360- degree view of the latest spring fashion trends. Grazia’s editor-in-chief, Jane Bruton, described the effect as “stunning”.

The issue was created by Bauer and the interactive creative agency Wardenclyffe. The magazine is offering readers a guide to the new technology at graziadaily.co.uk/3D.

An iPhone app will unlock further special features, including the ability to “spin Florence around by blowing into your iPhone and take a picture of her in any location”, said Bauer.

Teaser for Grazia’s 3D edition.