Experiential Marketing Summit - Best of Exhibit Floor
EMS 2008 ended last Wednesday, but there is still much to share. The exhibit floor contained more than 60 exhibits covering a wide range of event technology and services. As you might expect at a marketing summit, there was pretty much every type of audience acquisition tactic deployed there - SMS text message contests, the ol’ bring-the-thing-in-the-swag-bag-to-our-booth-and-enter-to-win-a-thing…. thing, great big steaming heaps of swag, big lead-gen contest giveaways, bikini’s and “brand ambassadors” (the linguistically neutered version of “booth-babes”), a guy projecting logos on the wall using a video-projector-on-a-stick, digital versions of “spin the wheel to win a prize”, oxygen bars, massages, video games, and the old standby - chocolate. I did not, however, see any sweaty Buddha’s on unicycles. Someone was asleep on the job.
Here are three of my favorites:
KAON Interactive featured a unique kiosk solution, called the v-OSK (see example screen below), that allows exhibitors to showcase products that cannot be on the show floor due to size or other constraints. An entire library of products can be featured on the interactive touch screens and operators can easily get a feel for the product by rotating and zooming around a photo-accurate 3D model. Having produced many kiosks of this type of over the years, I think this is the slickest virtual product demo solution I have seen.
It isn’t 3D stereo, but I imagine that is the next step in this product’s evolution. I was particularly impressed that the assets and most of the interactive experience can be replicated online as well as on the kiosk, making the solution immensely more valuable. KAON can produce these as a turnkey service but they also work with production and design agencies for content creation, including model building.


Pixman, the army of ambassadors-for-hire schlepping 30-pound knapsacks connected to LCD-monitors-on-sticks that hover over the wearer’s head like a freakish square digital halo, were the ones with the video-projector-on-a-stick. They obviously like to stick stuff on sticks. But they also like being the center of attention, which is good because they usually are. They have upgraded the LCD monitor knapsack rig to include a qwerty keyboard built into the arm band of the wearer for data entry - sort of what Wonder Woman’s amazon bracelets would look like if Microsoft made them. The projector-on-a-stick was very clever as a way to sneak a video onto a surface and then turn and run when the fuzz get the call. All of their technology supports their “nomadic media” tagline - media that can wander and deliver a message to a large event from within the crowd.
Last, but not least, I liked the Immersa-Dome from Aardvark Applications - a rentable sensory thrill ride that bombards you with immersive video, programmable scents, wind, seat vibration, and wrap-around sound. They can even add interactivity and high definition video. Since throughput is an issue with this one-seater device, I think the price is a little steep, but if you have the space and budget, and if you need to get someone immersed in the sights, sounds, and smells of a brand - then this is the coolest way to wrap that all in one. They also make multi-sensory theaters for larger crowds, but they aren’t quite as immersive. Considering how dorky you look sitting in the chair with your head inside a dome that makes you look more than a little like the Martian from Bugs Bunny, the theater may be the way to go. Use your own judgement to gauge the dork-tolerance of the crowd.


(2 votes, average: 4.5 out of 5)

May 1st, 2008 at 6:40 pm
Rob - thank you for featuring the Immersa-Dome in your blog. The Immersa-Dome delivers a sensation of immersion that is unique due to the hemispherical display. One thing about the “goofy-factor” we found is that HMDs or head-mounted displays are even more of an issue for public space and will cut out a huge percentage of potential users due to hygiene and an even more intimidation factor for many women. With headsets, unless they are wiped between every use with a hypoallergenic wipe (a huge and nearly impossible expectation for pubic space usage) men and a larger percentage of women will less apt to try out the experience. Also, throughput is way better with the Immersa-Dome since the dome lifts up and doesn’t physically touch the user when getting in and out of the seat. We also found when wearing headsets that women are more concerned about looking goofy since spectators can see the user’s head moving around in space and the user can’t see them. When in the Immersa-Dome, the entire head can’t be seen by spectators so there is less intimidation. I know this from selling headset-based technology for over 10-years for public-space environments. Our multisensory theaters are great, but there is not a more personally immersive visual platform that I have ever experienced than the Immersa-Dome with its patented hemispherical display.
May 1st, 2008 at 11:35 pm
Haha - thanks for the comment! And thanks for the context that reminds us just how goofy we can get. I’m not sure the throughput is there for many busy shows, but there is something to be said for having a line of people who want to interact with your brand. Just ask Nintendo.