Digital Evolution
by James J. Hodl
September 1, 2008
Already a vital promotional tool, technologically powerful signage is offering more versatility to target messages to customers and to be more interactive
Casinos have long stressed the individual versus
the house aspect of gaming. But with the recent introduction of some innovative
new game designs, slot and table game manufacturers are creating a new
competitive gaming atmosphere in which community-based games are allowing
players to interact with each other and to compete for and share in bonuses and
jackpots.
TIt’s a neon jungle out
there, and with so many choices available, casinos are increasingly turning to
cutting-edge digital signage technology to differentiate the property from
competitors and to draw customer attention to specific areas and opportunities.
Although a relatively
new phenomenon, digital signage already has become a major marketing tool
inside casinos, explained Brent Brown, vice president and chief information
officer of International Business Systems (IBS) Inc., based in Mercer Island, Wash.
They can be used to
enhance the players’ overall experience, boost profits by influencing what
customers demand on premises, and to burnish a casino’s image.
Current digital signs
are an indirect descendant of the huge electronic signs used outside casinos to
entice customers inside with ads for current and future entertainments,
sporting events and new gaming options.
Reduced to a more personal
size, these indoor digital signs perform the same marketing mission, but also
can be personalized for customers. Some can target promotional messages to
individual customers based on their known preferences (from data collected on
past visits through player card systems) and encourage customer interaction
(such as ordering deli sandwiches so they’ll be ready when one gets to the
front of the line).
“The best part is that they put casino
management in the driver’s seat by enabling them to create and schedule the
marketing messages to gain maximum exposure to the most receptive audience,”
Brown added.
Digital signage results from a collaboration
of various computer component experts, combining hardware (from Dell,
Hewlett-Packard, etc.), plasma and LCD screens (from LG, Panasonic, NEC, etc.)
and software (3M, Cisco, Planar, etc.). But the most important component, said
Brown, is “the message; the content that attracts attention from the customer.”
Firms such as IBS and
Harris Broadcast Communications offer help to casinos in creating content,
including templates in which to insert text, photos and videos.
Once content is
created, a standard desktop Windows PC can be used to dispatch the data to its
appropriate locale, and ultimately transmitted over a standard network
(Ethernet) to the digital signs. These signs, while most often plasma screens,
can also be LCD screens, LCD projector and laser projectors. Such signs can be
placed almost anywhere a casino manager can imagine, including on elevators and
in parking garages, Brown noted.
A natural fit
One of the best places to reach players is to place
digital signs on the gaming floor adjacent to slots and table games.
The InfoCaster digital
signage solution marketed by Harris Broadcast Communications, Mason, Ohio,
is designed to interface with Bally Technologies’ and Paltronics’ slot gaming
systems. to provide players with useful information and promotional messages.
InfoCaster comes with a
complete suite of systems for creating, scheduling, distributing, playing and
reporting live video and graphics on HDTV-quality screens throughout the gaming
floor. Users can acquire or create digital content and manage it throughout the
entire delivery chain from a central site or multiple remote locations along
the digital signage network.
InfoCaster’s media
controller also enables the system – using XML schemes – to grab rapidly
changing data from Bally and Paltronics slots and continually update and
display in real time the value of the progressive jackpot for a bank of linked
slot machines. No matter where the guest plays, he need only glance at the
digital screen to know the size of the jackpot, which can encourage him to play
longer. And should the jackpot be hit, InfoCaster relays on digital signs
throughout the gaming area the size of the win and location of the winner’s
machine. This information also can be relayed to other digital signs throughout
the casino property.
Other data InfoCaster
can distribute throughout the digital sign network include current casino
promotions, a list of daily events, acknowledgement of organizations meeting on
premises, restaurant hours and menus, and live video. In addition to
broadcasting promotional data, InfoCaster’s technology also enables casinos to
target specific audiences, or narrowcast, throughout the entire property.
Delivering that winning feeling
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| A 3M
Touch Systems' Interactive Wayfinder sign. |
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Gaming Support B.V., Rotterdam and Las
Vegas, offers three levels of promotional digital
signage through its JackpotJunction platform.
JackpotJunction Lite is a
standalone media controller with two software components (Video Junction and
Jackpot Data Exchange) that enables promotions at the slot bank level. Besides
encouraging players to try the newest slots games on the floor, this system
also alerts players of winners in the vicinity.
JackpotJunction Pro is a
venue-wide digital marketing system that creates a fully integrated multizone
broadcast environment that enable multimedia broadcasts in all corners of a
property, including gaming, hospitality, retail and restaurants.
JackpotJunction XL is a
multivenue broadcast management system that enables delivery of multimedia and
integrated gaming content to all properties of a single enterprise. This
server-based system sends promotional content through the Internet to each
location, yet allows individual locations to add local content.
One feature of all
JackpotJunction systems is the ability to send live video to screens throughout
the network. Casinos often experience a one-third drop in play during a major
sporting event, so its systems can send a video feed of that game through the
network, reducing promotions to a text crawl at the bottom of the screen, said
Nick Hogan, Gaming Support vice president of sales and marketing.
Video of the game can be
interrupted to congratulate a winner, though the company has added an override
to avoid a situation that happened in a Greek casino. A World Cup soccer game
came down to an overtime kick, and just as the player was about to kick the
ball for what would be the winning shot, the video was interrupted to
congratulate a minor winner. “They almost had a riot on their hands,” Hogan
noted.
While Gaming Support
offers templates to help clients create digital signage content, Hogan suggests
casinos can do better hiring the services of advertising professionals.
“You have only two seconds
to grab customers’ eyeballs,” he said. “The better the content, the more looks.
And one also should have a greater variety of promotional and other content, as
running the same stuff over and over gets stale in a hurry and inadvertently
trains customers not to look.”
Path411 from IBS is a
complete digital signage suite that serves many needs throughout a casino
property.
The Digital Signage
Network is designed to enhance a casino’s brand by incorporating live and
dynamic data within its key messaging system. Casinos can use text, moving
graphics, animation and streaming video to promote on-premises events,
entertainment, restaurants, ultralounges, and amenities like golf and spas in a
manner that both informs and entertains viewers. Content can be input from
remote locations, but it is controlled from a central location on the property.
Winner’s Playlist not
only directs players to their favorite games, but also provides a showcase for
big winners. Soon after a player scores a big win, a congratulatory message
noting the player’s name, his photo (from his player card), game played and
date of the bonanza goes into rotation on screens throughout the gaming floor.
The constant motion of changing messages and winner’s happy faces attracts
guests’ attention, and knowing which games paid off also entices guests to try
them. Casinos have the option to also display the content playing on Winner’s
Playlist on the property’s CATV channel.
Dynamic changes
The Path411 Digital Menu
Board enables casino foodservice venues to easily change what is offered
without printing new handheld menus or addendums to existing menus. Using any
remote computer using a Windows operating system, meal choices can be rotated
on and off the board as required. One-day specials can appear as part of the
regular menu, and prices can be instantly and seamlessly altered as warranted
(instead of altered by pen on static menus). Menus can be spread out over
several screens.
Micros Systems Inc., based
in Columbia, Md., also offers a digital menu board that
can easily be changed and upgraded from a central computer as part of Micros’
RES.40 POS (point-of-sale) system.
Using plasma video screens
that can be placed around casual dining and bars around casinos, the board
displays menu items in crisp easy-to-read letters with full-color
illustrations. From a central location, restaurant manager can quickly change
prices as required and to alter the menu to include specials and
season-specific menu items. The boards also can be programmed to switch from
lunch to dinner menus (or in bars during Happy Hour) at the same time daily.
Features of this digital
menu sign include the ability to create the sign as one would design a web
page. The system incorporates a web browser, ASP applications, and a web
service to deliver customized content to the menu sign. Custom content can
include the use of attention-getting graphics that can grab hungry customers as
they walk by, said Jennifer Hauf, Micros marketing specialist.
Interactive digital
signage is made possible by the MicroTouch DST System, the latest hardware
component offered by 3M Touch Systems, based in Methuen, Mass.
By adding a critical
interactive touch feature, digital signs can not only provide information to
guests, but also help them find what they need inside the property, said David
Henry, marketing retail business manager at 3M.
“Interactive Wayfinders
set up at crucial locations [are] interactive signs can perform many vital
services,” Henry explained. “Customers can use them to locate favorite slot
machines and table games, thus eliminating wasted walking around time and
perhaps result in longer playing time. The signs also can direct guest to
restaurants by the type of food served, find out where to go to find rooms and
other features around large resort-casino properties.
“Once a casino gets a
handle on the abilities of these interactive signs, there is no telling what
you can do with them,” Henry said.
These additional tasks can include helping guests select
hotel rooms based on layout; reserve seating in the poker room; make
reservations for dining, shows and golf tee-off times; and even pre-order meals
so guests can be served as soon as you are seated.
Interfaced with player cards, signs
need only receive information that you want to play a little Texas Hold’em and
it will automatically reserve a favorite seat at a favorite table, and arrange
to have a favorite quaff delivered to your seat soon after you begin play.
Current MicroTouch
displays are made of chemically strengthened glass through which fast touch
responses can be made unaffected by surface contaminants. The surface is
treated to minimize glare. Offered in sizes from 32-to-46 inches wide, these
displays have no moving parts, thus making them virtually maintenance free.
Casinos can expect even
better and more effective digital signage choices in the near future.
“As the market for such signs increases,
manufacturers are trying to increase their share of the market by engaging in a
battle of one-upsmanship, trying to develop the best and most technologically
advanced systems they can,” Gaming Support’s Hogan said. “There is no end in
sight.”
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