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“Digital filling stations” supplant
traditional media at InMotion stores
From October 2008
By Craig Guillot
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With iPods and portable media devices
becoming as common as cell phones, digital
content represents a huge market opportunity for
all types of retailers. New York market research
firm eMarketer forecasts that U.S. consumer
spending on digital audio and video content will
approach $7.8 billion in 2010, up from $1.3
billion in 2005.

Entertainment and electronics airport retailer
InMotion Entertainment has seen rapid growth in
the digital download market and, through the use
of kiosks, it can stock thousands of products in
a small space in the corner of its stores.
While digital music already constitutes a large
segment of the entertainment market, books,
games and other downloadable merchandise are
becoming more popular. Many retailers are also
finding that downloadable content can help
consumers learn more about other products that
they are buying.
With their iPods or smart phones, customers can
download construction directions at home
improvement stores, instruction manuals for
televisions at electronics stores and
information about their prescriptions at
pharmacies.
Seattle-based Displayware produces kiosks and an
infrastructure that allows retailers to
merchandise and sell any type of digital product
directly to consumers. Currently in 26 of
InMotion’s 50 locations, Displayware’s DIGpad
digital filling stations will roll out to all of
the company’s stores by the end of 2008.
With air travelers always in search of
entertainment for those long flights (and
waits), digital downloads are a perfect medium,
and Displayware co-founder and managing partner
Joel McConaughy says that there is pent-up
demand for digital content at kiosks.
“At the locations where we have stations, every
single day they are getting asked over and over
again when they can get more content,” he says.
Eden Goldberg, vice president of marketing and
business development for InMotion, says that in
the past year, the company’s product mix has
quickly gravitated from CDs and DVDs to digital
content.
Quick response to demand
Through the kiosks, InMotion sells DRM(digital
rights management)-free albums for $11.99. It
may soon begin single-song sales and might
eventually move into digital audio books and
movies. Whatever the product, one of the biggest
advantages of digital content is that retailers
can instantly react to the latest market demands
without having to stock physical inventory.
“We can provide a variety of content targeted at
our various types of clientele, but we can react
to the sales history quite quickly without heavy
inventory costs,” Goldberg says. “Digital
delivery offers immediate convenience and
immediate gratification.”
Bringing the online experience to
bricks-and-mortar stores, the kiosks allow
retailers to add any type of digital products to
their mix. And Displayware’s DIGpad includes an
e-mail manager that can deliver personalized
offers and information to consumers based on
what they have previously downloaded.
“I think we’re right at the tipping point of
this kind of fulfillment,” McConaughy says.
“It’s been only recently that hand-held media
players have become so common that everybody has
one. Digital delivery is now a huge distribution
channel and it’s a big opportunity for all types
of retailers.” |
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