Tag Archives: shoppers

Mall App Tracks Shoppers With Ultrasonic Device

iSenze deviceThe white device here (pictured next to a phone for scale) is in the process of getting mounted on store walls in Singapore malls. When active, the device will emit an ultrasonic signal that an app can pick up, and will allow participating stores to broadcast deals and rewards to shoppers. The device is called the iSenze, and is made by a startup in Singapore called Rainmaker Labs. Rainmaker’s bigger plan is to roll out a service called ShopGuru to stores, which allows them to list deals on it. Users who have the ShopGuru app can browse for deals. How it all connects is that some deals require users to physically step into these stores, and the iSenze will ensure that their presence is logged. Alex Leong, co-founder at Rainmaker Labs, showed me the device recently. The service isn’t live yet, but will be in a month or two. The company intends to get its clients properly onboard before launching, he said. Rainmaker is first targeting fashion brands and will go to F&B chains after that. It’s signed about 18-20 so far, and has been trialing the device in stores over the past six months. The company has a “six-digit” budget to push out its marketing campaign, so they’re taking their time to get it done right, he said. The way the app offers rewards is to award users points for browsing deals on it. You get more points for walking into the store, and should you buy anything, you can log your purchase with your user ID at check out for additional points. These points are redeemable for other goods from participating stores. On the retailer’s end, the ShopGuru service will provide a dashboard with some customer analytics in it, said Leong. This is derived from customer behavior in the app, as well as their physical movements, as tracked by the iSenze. This can provide more accurate feedback on what customers are interested in, and what deals don’t get picked up. It’s free for shops to sign up with the ShopGuru service, but Rainmaker takes a cut of the sales made through it. Rainmaker was founded in March 2011, and closed its first seed round of S$ 590,000 last November, led by Singaporean tech investor, Incuvest. Together with some angel funding at the start, Rainmaker has hit $ 800,000 so far, said Leong. Ronnie Wee, managing partner at Incuvest, said the
TechCrunch

Startup Lets Retail Stores Track Shoppers As Websites Do

By monitoring people’s mobile devices, brick-and-mortar stores can get data on foot traffic much as websites follow clicks.

To get a sense of how much time customers spent in his shopping centers, John Smith, a 1960s pioneer of the modern mall, would walk around the parking lot and feel whether car hoods felt hot or cold.







New on MIT Technology Review

Startup Lets Retail Stores Track Shoppers More Like Websites Do

By monitoring people’s mobile devices, brick-and-mortar stores can get data on foot traffic much as websites follow clicks.

To get a sense of how much time customers spent in his shopping centers, John Smith, a 1960s pioneer of the modern mall, would walk around the parking lot and feel whether car hoods felt hot or cold.







New on MIT Technology Review

Dwolla Launches Guest Checkout Option For Merchants, Allows Shoppers To Pay With Dwolla Without Signing Up

DwollaPriceOnline and mobile digital cash network Dwolla is breaking down one of the barriers to entry to using its service with today’s introduction of a new “guest checkout” feature for online merchants. The option will allow non-Dwolla users to pay with Dwolla on e-commerce websites, possibly even getting a discount on the item or service being purchased in the process.

TechCrunch

Securing one million shoppers for the holidays

Like all malls in the United States, the Arden Fair Mall in Sacramento is being overrun with shoppers as the holiday season kicks into high gear.
Computerworld News

U.K. Mobile Shopping Startup, Tapestry, Trials Barcode/NFC Scanning App To Link Shoppers With The Physical Things They Fancy

Screen Shot 2012-11-27 at 23.50.36Tapestry, the latest contender in the fashion-tech startup space, wants to connect a shopper’s digital identity with the physical products in the store they’re in by using barcode/NFC-scanning smartphone apps which shoppers use to build up a virtual collection/wish-list of items they might like to buy in future that are linked to the retailer’s ecommerce database.
TechCrunch

Shoppers spent record $1B online on Black Friday

Bargain hunters’ spending leaps 26 percent over last year’s Black Friday, surpassing the $ 1 billion mark for the first time, ComScore reports. [Read more]


CNET News

Your first glimpse of Walmart shoppers fighting over phones

There is no greater post-Thanksgiving tradition than witnessing what the craving for gadgets has done to humanity. Here’s some of the first footage of the Zombie Apocalypse, Walmart-style. [Read more]


CNET News

Shoppers, be wary of Black Friday scams

Thanksgiving is just around the corner, and you know what that means … Black Friday and Christmas shopping, and Black Friday scams.




FOX News

Early holiday decorations driving shoppers online?

A survey suggests that shoppers loathe that stores put up their Christmas decorations before Thanksgiving, so they are even keener to shop online. [Read more]


CNET News

A smartphone shopper’s dilemma: Wait for the next iPhone or go Android 4.0?

Apple’s new iOS 6, which is coming to next iPhone later this year, is looking pretty good. Will be it enough to beat out the current crop of Android 4.0 phones? Ask Maggie offers some insight.
[Read more]
CNET News

Attention Walmart, Best Buy Shoppers: New iPad on Sale Starting at Midnight

Want a new iPad, but don’t want to stand in a ridiculously long line that wraps around the building at least three times? Smart shoppers can calmly stroll into their local Wal-Mart 1 minute past midnight to pick up the new iPad. According to Bloomberg, Wal-Mart will have a limited amount of the treasured tech on sale starting at 12:01 — eight hours ahead of the legions of Apple fanboys and girls camped out at Apple stores nationwide. 




FOXNews.com

Cyber Monday will see more mobile shoppers

Mobile buying is expected to be more popular than ever on Cyber Monday and throughout the 2011 holiday season, according to the latest Motricity Mobile Shopping Survey.
Computerworld News

Rafe Recommends: Apps for dumb gadget shoppers

Get Amazon’s Flow and the new Decide.com app to save yourself from spending too much.
CNET News

Intel and MasterCard to offer Ultrabook users ‘safer’ NFC checkout via PayPass, impulsive shoppers rejoice

Entering a 16-digit credit card number may be a thing of the past with a new initiative from MasterCard and Intel, which allows users to checkout online by tapping a PayPass-enabled card, tag or smartphone to their Ultrabook. Calling the checkout “safer” and “simpler,” Intel is bringing its Identity Protection Technology to the potluck, giving shoppers two-factor authentication and chip-based display protection when forking over that hard earned cash. Here’s how it all works: when you tap a NFC smartphone or other PayPass-enabled device, it will communicate with the Ultrabook, generating a six-digit code from the embedded processor or from within the Manageability Engine. The ME hardware, encrypted with third-party algorithms, then transacts with the e-commerce site, hopefully offering shoppers more protection than standard software solutions. Since using the feature requires an NFC-connected device as well as the Ultrabook and a username and password, forgetful folks who tend to misplace their phone or computer won’t have to worry about unwarranted spending. Sadly, the solution won’t protect your wallet from the perils of a late night shoe shopping spree. Check out the full PR after the break.

Continue reading Intel and MasterCard to offer Ultrabook users ‘safer’ NFC checkout via PayPass, impulsive shoppers rejoice

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Intel and MasterCard to offer Ultrabook users ‘safer’ NFC checkout via PayPass, impulsive shoppers rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Nov 2011 00:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

More shoppers drawn to cheaper, smaller Kindle Fire over iPad, survey says

More than three times as many shoppers for tablet computers are considering the $ 199 Amazon Kindle Fire over the bestselling iPad, according to a new survey.
Computerworld News

Holiday shoppers move toward mobile

According to the latest IBM Coremetrics Benchmark numbers, traffic to retailer Web sites from mobile devices will more than double this November, with 15 percent of people who log on to such sites doing so with a mobile gadget.
CNET News

Australian Malls To Track Shoppers By Their Phones

Fluffeh writes “Australian shopping centers will monitor customers’ mobile phones to track how often they visit, which stores they like and how long they stay. One unnamed Queensland shopping center is next month due to become the first in the nation to install receivers that detect unique mobile phone radio frequency codes to pinpoint location within two meters.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Best Buy HTC Flyer goof frustrates $100 slate shoppers

Red faces and frustrated shoppers at Best Buy today, with the retailer refusing to honor a $ 99.99 sale price advertised online for the HTC Flyer. Eagle-eyed shoppers caught the Android 2.3 Gingerbread WiFi-only tablet market down by $ 200 from its regular price, but Best Buy is now claiming it is a SKU error and won’t [...]
SlashGear