Posts Tagged ‘user engagement’


Musings on Media at ASCO 2010

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

I attended ASCO last month to get a sense of how various companies are handling the new fair balance guidelines, to check out the Boehringer Ingelheim booth for which D2 Creative provided rich media, and to see how other pharma companies are using interactive media in the trade show setting.

cimg1308

With their hands tied by regulatory minutiae, pharma’s media is traditionally several steps behind other industries from a storytelling perspective.  It is in the area of technology where pharma is much more free to flex its creative muscles.

A huge, international meeting like ASCO is exactly the type of showcase where one would expect to encounter the latest, greatest media wizardry.  Granted, ASCO attendees are an unusually learned audience who are most interested in the science, but they interface with technology just like the rest of us.  And when technology enters the fold, the importance of usability—and the user experience—cannot be ignored.
(more…)

Better

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

Better by Atul Gawande

I just finished reading “Better” by Atul Gawande, a frank yet compassionate study of the question of how physicians can do a better job of providing care. I highly recommend it for anyone who is a doctor, might ever want to be a doctor, or might ever visit a doctor.

At the end of the book Gawande provides some recommendations on how physicians can begin working to close the gap between best intentions and best performance. He calls them “Suggestions for Becoming a Positive Deviant.”

My work does not have life-and-death consequences and yet Gawande’s suggestions resonated with me. So, here they are, with my own commentary related to business communication and marketing:

1. Ask an Unscripted Question. It’s an old truism that the best sales people are good listeners. But listening is important for all of the things we do in the world. Part of listening well involves asking questions that initiate full responses. Start asking open-ended questions and you may find out more than you wanted to about your client’s summer vacation in the Poconos, but ultimately you’ll know each other better.

I actually play a couple little conversational games: one is to try to come out of the conversation having said nothing about myself. That’s good evidence that I asked, listened, and asked follow-up questions. My other game is to open up conversations with people I might not normally think of talking to. (Who knew that the UPS driver has a son who’s a chess champion?)  When you work a little harder to ask questions and listen to the answers from customers, suppliers, the woman who sits near the copy machine, and that quiet guy in your yoga class, you may be surprised at the new ideas and perspectives you hear.

2. Don’t Complain. My boss is big on this one, too, I wonder why ; )  Still it’s true that although work (and life) are often frustrating, if we complain we get pulled into a kind of negative conversational gravity, bringing others down with us. After a session of kvetching about everything that’s wrong with the world, do you walk away feeling better? Of course not! “It’s boring, it doesn’t solve anything, and it will get you down,” as Gawande writes. Find something else to discuss: a problem you are trying to solve, an idea that interests you, a joke; but resist the impulse to gripe.

3. Count Something. A friend of mine used to say, “50% of my marketing budget is wasted - I just wish I knew which 50%.” How often are we or our clients engaged in an initiative, and 6-12 months later we have no measure of its success? Gawande proposes that, “if you count something you find interesting you may learn something interesting.” Maybe you can find ways to count what was formerly uncountable.  I recommend that you build measurement into your plans from the start of a project.

4. Write Something. I am a huge proponent of blogging. I agree with Gawande that you shouldn’t underestimate the effect of your contribution, even if you think it’s small. Also, the act of writing is very powerful, even if you don’t publish. When you write, you’re forced to step back and order your thoughts, think about the big picture, and even check your facts. Gawande hints at how writing for an audience affects the writer. “An audience is a community. The published word is a declaration of membership in that community and also of a willingness to contribute something meaningful to it.” In an individualistic culture, we often lose sight of how satisfying it is simply to communicate with others.

5. Change. We talk about early adopters (Brian in our office had an iPad the first day they were on sale), late adopters (Robert just got his first smart phone), and resisters (Mike prints all his emails).  The point is not to become a different kind of person, but rather to think about why we resist certain ideas and practices, and to stay open to new input, even if you think you’ve already made your decision. We all like consistency, but take a tip from Albert Einstein. Try something else. Actively look for inadequacies in what you do - even ask others for positive criticism. If you are open to change, solutions may come more easily.

First Contact

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

HelloPerhaps the most undervalued page of your Web site is the “Contact Us” page.

Here’s a story from my friend, Jon Websurfer. Jon was assigned the task of finding a supplier to make customized edible treats to use as corporate gifts for his company. He typed some keywords into his search engine, including his location. Out of thousands of bakeries in the U.S., a lucky eight showed up on the first page of  results (the rest of the results weren’t bakers). Jon clicked on the results for five or six of these and looked over their websites, taking a maximum of two minutes on each page (for some it was more like 10 seconds). He evaluated them for:

  • Presentation (if the site looks good, chances are they’ll do good product presentation)
  • Ease of navigation (if he’s frustrated with your site, he may be frustrated with your service as well)
  • Best looking (and best variety of) product photos
  • How well they explained their ordering procedure, packaging, delivery and lead time.

Hoping to patronize a local supplier, he was frustrated at how hard it was to find out their locations. (more…)

What really motivates people?

Friday, May 21st, 2010

A colleague here at D2 Creative forwarded this great YouTube video to me yesterday.  Not only is it entertaining from a visual perspective the subject matter is really very interesting.

The video primarily focuses on what motivates people to succeed at work.  It is common to assume that money motivates people.  It turns out that assumption is dead wrong! The video features white board animation (think UPS commercials) set against a presentation given by author Daniel Pink at an RSA event.  If you’ve got 10 minutes I highly recommend you watch it.

Don’t touch me there…

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Touch screen kiosks are becoming more popular at trade shows. Here at D2 Creative we’ve done a few, using various types of display devices, and we’ve learned a thing or two.

Here are five rules for creating great touch screen presentations:
D2 Touchscreen

  • KEEP IT SHORT.
    Average length of time spent at a trade show display is shorter than you think.  So focus your message and make sure you get it to the user within half that time.
  • KEEP IT SIMPLE.
    Create a road map of where you want the user to go, and help them get there by making the route as uncomplicated as possible. It’s easy to imagine that because you have assets, (testimonials, case studies, data), including them into your interactive piece will make it better. Au contraire, mon frere. Think of this as a poem where every word and every cadence supports the central idea.
  • KEEP IT FUN.
    It’s a touch screen, it should be engaging. Think outside the box when you create your user interface. Examples we’ve seen or done:
    -When the screen is touched, water ripples across the screen
    -Use a real word object (a key, a cell phone, a face) and interacting with it via a camera.
    -Using technology that allows hand gestures to take the place of a mouse
  • WAIT LOOP TELLS ALL.
    Your wait loop will be running just like a screen saver whenever no one is using the display.  It should not be an afterthought. The wait loop needs to arouse curiosity.  It also needs to tell your story, in case people don’t have time to stop.
  • DON’T FORGET THE TAKEAWAY.
    Give people something to take home to remember their kiosk experience. It allows them to explore at their leisure, and spread the word.