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Digital displays offer Virgin an expanding
list of marketing, promotion capabilities
From June 2008
By Craig Guillot
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Sponsored by
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Digital signage has gone mainstream and can
be found everywhere from hotel lobbies and
restaurants to national retailers and corner
convenience stores. With the costs of display
panels dropping and new technologies emerging
every year, it seems paper signs could be on
their way out.
Virgin Entertainment Group has introduced a
number of digital marketing efforts that combine
sight, sound and interactivity since it
partnered with Epson. By promoting new movies
and music with relevant and fun dynamic in-store
advertising solutions, Virgin has been
increasing both traffic and sales.
Founded in London by Sir Richard Branson in
1971, Virgin Entertainment Group has grown to be
one of the world’s leading multi-channel and
entertainment retailers. Its 10 U.S. locations
offer broad store-based selections of music and
DVDs, as well as games, books, fashion
accessories and electronics. |
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Teaming with technology giant Epson, Virgin
first incorporated new digital marketing
technologies in 2005 at its Times Square and
Hollywood locations. An interactive floor
display projected imagery from the iconic sleeve
of Nirvana’s seminal album, “Nevermind,” a key
seller at Virgin.
When shoppers entered the store and moved within
a perimeter, it became animated and created a
full-body interactive customer experience
combining movement, sight and sound. With more
of today’s customer purchasing decisions being
made in the store, Virgin realized that bringing
the album cover to life would break new ground
for in-store advertising.
The entertainment retailer has since worked with
Epson to create a number of digital projects,
including an 18-ft.-wide projection screen at
the Downtown Disney store in Orlando and a large
digital banner at the Times Square store.
Resembling a DVD box, the banner at the New York
location was used to promote the release of the
first season of the NBC television program,
“Heroes.” Ken Donham, senior manager of store
environment and merchandising for Virgin
Entertainment Group, says that the digital
marketing campaigns have helped draw customers
into the stores and kept them focused on the
product experience.
“Digital marketing has developed opportunities
within our stores, creating new visibility
options, which mainly increase customer foot
traffic by keeping the Megastore environments
exciting, modern and relevant,” he says.
According to Donham, digital marketing campaigns
on large displays not only help bring visitors
into the store, but also help move them around
to various departments and levels. And in a
store like Virgin (the Times Square location
features 44,000 sq. ft. on three levels), moving
customers about the premises is critical.
Eye-catching displays are projected on screens,
the latest television programs are broadcast on
plasma TVs and audio commercials and
advertisements ring through loudspeakers.
Video game promotion
Virgin Megastore caters to a wide audience, but
in the digital age younger customers are
expecting more digital marketing and interactive
experiences. In March, Virgin used Epson’s
digital marketing technology to produce the “I
Love Rock Band” tournament, an engaging
promotion for the popular video game, Rock Band.
Contests were held at two Virgin locations: an
image of each group of contestants was projected
onto 9x12-ft. screens, along with a real-time
tally of competing bands’ scores.
Dee McLaughlin, vice president of marketing for
Virgin Entertainment Group, says the promotion
helped drive significant store traffic and
ultimately increased sales in the gaming area by
10 percent over the previous year.
“We wanted to build excitement for our gaming
arena by encouraging competition and making the
tournament larger than life,” McLaughlin says.
“Gamers are used to compelling visual displays,
and the Epson digital projection technology
enhanced the multimedia experience of both the
contestants and the audience.”
The most attractive aspect of digital marketing
is its flexibility, says Barry Wise, a senior
marketing consultant for Epson. Because digital
marketing campaigns use projection monitors and
plasma screens, the content can be changed at
almost any time and constantly altered to keep
up with new promotions. That flexibility allows
retailers to perform marketing and merchandising
within the stores themselves.
“We are seeing more and more companies realize
that the consumers are making their decisions
when they get to the store,” he says. “You need
to help them decide what to buy … through some
incentive or creating a need or interest.”
That flexibility also helped Virgin promote new
products with the same signage. Once the
original “Heroes” launch was complete, the same
signage and applications were used to promote
new DVDs, and Donham says it also allows Virgin
to manage and update vendor content. Many of the
latest digital installs are wireless, giving
stores even greater flexibility.
“One of the biggest advantages is that you no
longer are producing hard banners and materials,
which allows for quicker turnaround,” Donham
says. “We can do all content updates on all of
our screens within 24 hours.”
The technology gives Virgin the opportunity to
capture the customers’ attention through
curiosity about the medium and with the content
being shown. It gives an existing product new
life, revitalizes the brand and educates viewers
about new products and their benefits. Streaming
content also offers more flexibility in
communicating an idea because the content itself
can be more compelling than printed material.
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