Doubling QR codes are the Flixbus of mobile marketing: the opposite of fancy, ubiquitous, cheap and easy to use, and pretty reliable for getting where you want to go. Since Apple, with the release of iOS 11, equipped the iPhone camera with the ability to read QR codes without having to use another app, the circle of potential users has expanded enormously: around 800 million people can now use their iPhones to bridge the gap between offline and online. The use of QR codes has increased in Europe. doubled between the years 2015 and 2018.
And this is thanks to social networks in particular: LinkedIn, Facebook, belgium telegram Snapchat or Instagram have now integrated QR codes into their apps for networking with other users. The codes have thus become a natural part of our digital-social behaviour. Other companies have meanwhile recognised that the aesthetically unpretentious squares with their functional depth can be real hidden champions of dialogue marketingNetflix, for example, promoted its Gilmore Girls with Snap codes on 10,000 coffee mugs. This led to one million visits to a special mobile site where users could have fun with photo filters. The car manufacturer Porsche let visitors to a trade fair configure a Cayenne Turbo via a QR code on a digital poster.
Disappointments The examples show: the success of QR codes depends enormously on the consumer's expectation of benefits. Those who merely enrich their advertisements with QR codes that lead to the start page of their own website will disappoint users and should not expect any results other than a few website hits. After all, a QR code is supposed to be the shortest possible link between the printed and the digital, without sending the user on a virtual scavenger hunt on his smartphone. Those who use QR codes without even having a responsive website are guaranteed to annoy users. On the other hand, the codes are ideal for leading to tutorial videos or to mobile landing pages that can be used to download apps.
The most important thing here is to understand the landing page as a simple and clear content hub that provides brief explanations of what may follow - whether it is a video or an app. Digital Genius The QR code is now more established in the logistics sector than in other industries - after all, that's where it comes from. This has prompted us to publish "Digital Genial", a special issue of our logistics magazine "dispo"which our clients can use as a printed gateway to their videos or apps. In doing so, we not only create a QR code for the advertisement, but branded mobile landing pages on which several videos can be shown, apps for both the Apple Store and Google Play can be presented and links to one's own website or social channels can be set - of course with all social sharing options. The landing pages can then unfold their effect as a media bridge for a whole year: every customer can use the corresponding QR codes in their own marketing materials until the end of 2020.
Doubled between the years 2015 and 2018.
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