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Posts Tagged ‘Foursquare’

Has Foursquare reached the tipping point?

Friday, March 12th, 2010

flickr-2157101503-imageIt has been a pretty good year for Foursquare so far. The number of people playing the online location based game has rocketed, it recently announced some interesting partnerships with UK retailers and it has Vodafone on board too.

And now Foursquare appears to have landed the big one. According to Mashable the company has just agreed a deal with the biggest coffee maker of them all – Starbucks. The actual deal itself isn’t very exciting either for Starbucks or Foursquare addicts. Starting today, frequent Starbucks visitors who check in at retail locations using Foursquare will earn customer rewards. Although there’s no financial incentive or free coffee to begin with, customers can unlock the “Barista badge” after five check ins.

Starbucks, however, has a very high profile customer loyalty scheme in place where regulars can get free extra shots, syrups and soy milk just by using their Starbucks card. The company is clearly monitoring Foursquare to see how popular it has become and then will try to work out if it can incorporate it into its loyalty schemes. The New York Times Bits Blog writes that the company is “hoping to use Foursquare to provide even more meaningful prizes, like invitations to special events, photo-sharing or online reputation scores.”

Incidentally there’s no confirmation that the deal will apply in the UK.

The real win for Foursquare is that it is being taken very seriously by the world’s largest coffee chain; this can only lead to other deals with other innovative brands.

Foursquare on the surface might look like a geeky game (albeit an addictive one) but once users start collecting badges and tokens that they can exchange for real world goods and services it then evolves into something very exciting.

Is Foursquare now the hottest thing in social media?

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Foursquare_1572965cInteresting news from online traffic researchers Hitwise about the location based games social network Foursquare. Apparently the game, which is available on the iPhone, Google Android, Blackberry and other platforms, saw a 50% growth spurt in the US in January. There is also evidence that Foursquare is attracting users in the UK – it only launched here in October.

In case you missed the hype Foursquare is a location-based social network based around going out: users upload venues and places they like and can see what their friends have uploaded. The gaming aspect comes from making you the mayor of the places you upload or visit the most, and it gives you points and badges according to how often you go out.

If you’ve never played it then check it out. It really is quite addictive. Foursquare has made some really interesting moves recently too. Firstly it has partnered with augmented reality specialists Layar and developed a version of the gamer that adds Foursquare data into images of real world buildings. Sadly Layar isn’t working on the iPhone at the moment, but there should be a relaunch of the browser in a month or so.

Foursquare has also begun to do deals with brands. At the moment this is on small scale and the most high profile has been a deal with TV station Bravo which enables Foursquare players to compete for and win special badges. However with an API out for developers to work on their own uses for the game it can only be a matter of time before someone comes up with something special.

In some respects where Foursquare is now reminds me of the early days of Twitter. There’s a real buzz about the game and there is a group of very evangelical users who are utterly addicted (just like Twitter). Whether this is enough to drive the same kind of numbers as Twitter remains to be seen, but I wouldn’t be surprised if Foursquare became one of the buzz words of 2010.

How to make your iPhone app stand out

Monday, February 8th, 2010

It was perhaps inevitable that Apple App store would hit 3 billion downloads in January, as the app rollercoaster goes on with no sign of stopping. With Gartner recently predicting that the app market will be worth $29.5 billion by 2013 with an estimated 21.6 billion consumer downloads, there are obvious benefits for brands for brands to reap.

However, there are over 20 different categories of apps available on the App Store (everything from games to travel, to weather) and it’s a space in which Google Android, Samsung and Nokia will gain a bigger piece of the pie in the next few years.  With over 100,000 different apps available, it’s becoming an increasingly crowded platform where there is more of a challenge for brands to make their voices heard. 

So what works when developing mobile applictions?  For repeat use, we’d suggest developing apps which are fun or functional, designed to solve a particular problems for a particular audience, or involve a useful application of innovative technology.

 It’s also important to invest time and money to promote the app and make some noise around it. It’s no longer a case of just building it and having in on a platform being enough

What is also key is that brands think long term about apps if they want it to be used after the initial download – more gimmicky apps with limited functionality have a short shelf-life after downloading. Brands need to create apps with a long lifespan, and promote them wisely.

Here’s a selection of iPhone apps which have really stood out for the team recently:

Acrossair – a browser for genuinely useful augmented reality applications : from the Stella bar finder, to the Becks gig finger, and Google, Qype and Yelp listings for everything you’re likely to need when out and about – from restaurants to supermarkets to petrol stations

Guardian Mobile – the option to personalise content, create your own personal news stream and download to read offline are likely to change the way we consume media – with over 70,000 downloads it’s also shown people are willing to pay for the pleasure of reading

Tesco Wine Finder – out in a restaurant, love the wine you’re drinking not sure you’ll remember it the next morning? Take a photo, upalod it to the app and the handy use of recognition technology will match the label against Tesco’s wine database, tell you where it’s stocked and even allow you to order some to be delivered to your door.

Foursquare – it’s not the first location-based app, but it’s having a moment in the spotlight at the moment. As well as consumer applications, the real strengths lie in benefits for brands, which we’ll be talking about later…

Case studies

Bassetts Becta ebay McDonalds National Lottery Panasonic Pfizer Sky Very Cobra Beer

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