Wednesday, February 22, 2012

QR Code Review: L'Oréal, minus 10 for style

See, this is what is killing QR code use in America. Here is an ad that clearly shows a product called Magic Lumi and what it does to help make your face extra purty. And when I see the code, I cheer because I think, Wow, now I can finally learn how to apply foundation and concealer to cover up these dark circles under my eyes that I get from looking at the computer screen all day.

But I guess not. Scan the code to get HTTP://SCN.BY/9T9AB0HTW8GNRC which resolved to http://www.yourstyleyourstudio.com/howto?cid=studio_qr_studioline_120611_howto_1x1 which is not at all mobile friendly since the images are the same ones as on the regular web page, only much much much smaller. And worse, the flash video won't play on my Android phone.

But when it plays on my pc, I don't see any information about make-up, but only hair care products which is not anything like what the code promised me. Yes, it's fabulous that I can Learn how to get the top Studio Line hair looks with expert stylist Johnny Lavoy. Because Johnny looks like he knows everything about my hair. But the ad wasn't about hair; it was about face. So L'Oréal, what about my face?

So, if don't learn this lesson, people are not going to scan your codes. Stop linking your codes to crap. Don't link to stuff that does not work on my phone and don't link to stuff that is unrelated to what you say it is. The image says, "Scan here for application tips and tricks" and I got nothing. So why should I trust you next time?

Yes, this is just about some make-up that you probably don't care about, but the lesson is the same. It doesn't matter from where you learn it. Just learn it.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

The Death of the Death of QR Codes

People keep talking about the death of QR codes. "Oh, look, some new phone works with 'near field communications' chips and maybe one retailer in Chicago has the transmitter/receiver to talk to it, Oooooooh."

Or maybe there's some other new thing; it doesn't matter what it is, they (those people who want to be the first to predict the death of everything) are always hammering the first nail into the coffins of everything.

The biggest complaint I read from every coffin-nailer about QR Codes is that you need to open the app to scan the code. WTF? Everyone has 100 apps on their phones and they regularly open and close them to do stuff. But for some reason, the line over which no man shall pass was drawn at the QR code reader app.

One article complained that it was too difficult to fit the code within the app's tiny focus box... WELL THEN YOU HAVE THE WRONG APP. The app on my phone uses about 75% of my screen and it's nearly impossible to NOT scan the code. I would need to be actually falling, tumbling down the stairs, head over heels, for the app to not work. And that's only because I switched apps so I could take video of myself falling to put on YouTube. "Oh, man, check out this video this guy took of himself falling down the stairs. Oh, man, is that his tooth? Did you hear his spine snap? Is that blood on the screen? I'm forwarding this to everyone."

This is nitpicking because we all fiddle with our phones all day long, enabling and disabling GPS, Bluetooth, muting the sound while we play Temple Run, and asking Siri what she's wearing today.

But the biggest ACTUAL USEFUL ACCURATE complaint is that many codes simply link to crap. I don't need to describe what crap is in this post because I have enough reviews that point to examples. In fact, I might go back and relabel them all with the word crap. What marketers fail to accept is that the mobile user is enormously fickle and disloyal. Everyone is always looking for the next hot trend, and trends, by definition, are not loyal to any product or image or brand. Not everyone who uses a QR code is hip to what attracts customers. And they make the rest of us look bad.

The reality is that if QR codes don't survive as an essential marketing tool because they get surpassed by something better, that something is still going to require you to fiddle with your phone to make it work. You will snap a photo, or enable communication between a payment system, or whatever.

Because no one can afford to leave an app that accesses the camera running all day long; it just sucks the battery dry. Same thing if it's a chip that broadcasts a signal. And if it's a chip or app that links to any payment system, you're only going to enable it when you are actually paying because if you leave it running all day, someone is going to find a way to exploit it and steal your money through your phone.

Now, given that I've just argued against the death of QR codes, let me point out they have limitations that could lead to their inevitable demise. The truth is that any middleman application is doomed at some point. And the QR code is essentially a middleman. It's a broker, negotiating the transfer of information between the seller and the consumer. There are four basic components to the QR code transaction: the customer receiving the information, the information provider, the QR code that links to, or contains the information and the application to read the code. And four parts, for many people, is one too many.

So any new technology that utilizes an application that can successfully broker that meeting between the user and provider without requiring a QR code is going to be the killer. And there are applications out there that already do this. They take a photo of a printed page or an ad or an image or even an object and then contact a server to retrieve more information about whatever was photographed. To some degree, Google Goggles can do this. There is also an app called Shortcut that can do this. These products are still limited in what information gets found, but they are here now.

Another option for future QR code killing could be a Visual Siri. If you've seen the ads, Siri responds to voice commands and does a pretty good job at finding information and answering questions. But what if you could point your phone's camera at something and ask, "What is this?" And your phone could say, "That is a 2012 Ford Focus. I've found 3 Ford dealers pretty close to you." Or point your camera at a Philly Cheese Steak and the phone says, "The 1200 calories for that would put you off your diet."

Or point it at this guy and your phone says, "He's a wanted man. He has the death sentence on twelve systems. Mess with him and you'll be dead." (Yes, that's a Star Wars reference.) That could be pretty helpful to know if there were no Jedi around.

Having your phone become your brain can open up a whole new area of study for social scientists: what happens when everyone receives the same answers from a single voice? Will we hear, "Siri, who should I vote for?" coming from the ballot booth during the next election?

As devices become more powerful, some new technology will leap easily over the limitations of the QR code. But that will never mean that the code is bad technology. It does a few things extremely well. It's free to make one any time you need one.

The downside to that is that anyone can make one, even someone with evil intentions who wants to infect your phone with some malicious software.

And chances are pretty good that any new reader application will work with them, just as they should work with 1D bar codes to allow us to scan products in stores for inventory or identification purposes. Because, even if we begin using our cameras in combination with some new image capture app, it's still going to be nearly impossible to tell the difference between a 14 oz. box of Captain Crunch cereal and a 17 oz. box, unless you scan the bar code and read the universal product code.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Create a Simple Custom QR Code

This is a simple 4-slide presentation for how to use the QR code generator MOJI-Q and a simple image editor to make a custom QR code that contains your logo.

(Don't forget to first shorten a long URL before you make your code.)

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

QR Code Review: Two for Tuesday.

The magazine American Rifleman gave me two codes on the same page. The first one isn't anything special and only links to the NRA store, not a mobile site, just the regular web page of the holster bag, $169.95. Scan the code to get to http://tinyurl.com/3bkbb4r which redirects to http://www.nrastore.com/nrastore/ProductDetail.aspx?p=HO+22606&ct=e . At least they know enough to shorten that URL before they generate the QR code.

The second code is much better as it links directly to a video for the Heckler & Koch .22 LR with some hardcore rock music blasting and some hardcore dudes in black tactical gear busting out from a garage in slow motion into the falling snow to sneak up on and blow the hell out of some empty soup cans. Groovy. I watched it through twice.

But it crashed my browser on my Android phone. FAIL. And it didn't play in IE8, but it played in Firefox. The code scans to http://goo.gl/luDnd which directs to http://web28.streamhoster.com/umarexusa/americanrifleman/hkmp5.mp4

I always say that video is a great way to jump in to using QR codes. Most companies have video of their products, video reviews, product tests, slow motion somebody's doing something to music... this is where you want your codes. Give me a 30-second commercial for your product that you could never show on television. And I will watch it over and over again.

Monday, February 13, 2012

QR Code Magazine Check

Some people still don't know what QR codes are. Ideally, a QR code is used on a printed page or even a web page. So it's disappointing when I look through current magazines and find only a few codes inside.

Now, think about the situation when someone is reading a magazine or newspaper. They are probably reading in a chair or on the couch or someplace where it's comfortable to sit. They could also be browsing at a bookstore or on the street at a news stand. But I don't imagine that they are in front of a computer. It's not convenient to open a magazine near a computer because of the limited space.

So it's easy to imagine that someone would be reading in a space not directly next to a computer.

So why don't more companies use QR codes to connect with readers in their print advertising? If I'm reading an article and I see some message like "visit our website for more information," I know that I'm probably going to forget to make that effort later. Or even worse, "Like us on Facebook," which means I have to get to a computer and sign into my Facebook account to Like you because I'm not typing that string into my phone.

But if I have my phone with me, I can tap the app to open it and scan the code to see what it is they want to show me. I'm not going to type a web address in my phone because I'm lazy, but I might tap and scan.

So here is a survey of a few current magazines and the codes I found inside:

M Music & Musicians, December 2011
I grabbed this one from the shelf because I thought that music would be a great area for using QR codes to connect readers with performance video clips or track downloads. But that's not the case with this issue. I found 4 codes for different musical instruments and mixing equipment.

Guns & Ammo, March 2012
There are 6 codes in this issue for pistols, rifles, ammo. I don't know what it is about gun manufacturers, but it must really sell product to show a video of some guy shooting the crap out of tree stump.

Esquire, February 2012
There's a code right on the cover, in front of Bill Clinton's crotch. Point your phone at it; you know he would want that. Do you think the editors made a conscious choice to place it there?

There's also a code inside the magazine for bourbon, but that's it. I don't know; with so many interviews and photos and how-tos in Esquire, you'd think a link to additional web content like video of the interviews or more fashion photos would be a bonus selling point.

Entrepreneur, February 2012
FTW! An article on QR codes is on p. 56. Awesome. And 9 codes inside. And the one on p. 79 for School of Rock uses a code in the shape of a guitar. Super cool. There's got to be a QR code texture out there that makes it easier to fit your code inside of a logo or design. I'm going to google "QR code background texture" right now. ... but I bet there's a way to add the right amount of noise in Photoshop...

Saturday, February 11, 2012

QR Code Review: Mazola

This is cool. They worked the name Mazola into their QR code. It's not big or fancy, but it adds "brand awareness" to the simple black and white image. Companies need to find more ways to use QR codes to promote their brand, either by inserting an image into the code or inserting the code into a logo (as Macy's did with their red star logo).

But even then, there needs to be some meaningful content on the site where the code links. You can't be too clever and create a mobile site that doesn't work with many phones and you can't be too dumb and just link to your generic html home page. So take tip from Mazola and learn how to use a QR code.

Another good thing Mazola does is tell us to "Search for QR Scanner in your app store" which is still necessary since many people don't know what these codes are for, even if they have a smartphone.

You know some idiots will ask, "What's an app store?" but then, maybe the goodness of Mazola corn oil just isn't meant for them. Maybe there's a lard product out there they can use to fry their drumsticks.

But scan the code and you get http://www.mazola.com/m/plantsterols/ which creates a simple mobile site on my phone OR scans to a completely different site if I visit from a PC. Why the discrimination? Dunno. The PC page tells me to go to Facebook and Like them, but doesn't tell me anything about the health benefits of Mazola.

But the mobile page has large buttons that are very easy to read and tap. The site tells me all about "plant sterols" and says that I need about 1500 mg a day or else I will die. And then Mazola asks me to take a pledge to "set a healthier table" and they will donate $1 to something called WomenHeart, which I think is a remake of Braveheart, but starring Drew Barrymore.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

QR Code Review: Gaga's Workshop and Bal Harbour Shops

I was digging through the garbage and found a The New York Times Style Magazine from a few months ago and since I'm a very NY Style kind of dude and there were a couple of QR codes it, I figured I'd scan them to see what I'd find.

The first is for Gaga's Workshop at Barney's in NYC, which is NOT mobile-friendly. The code points to http://scanco.de/19A which redirects to http://www.barneys.com/GaGa's-Workshop/GAGA_SALE,default,sc.html.

Scan the code and go to the current sale page for what's left from the Workshop: "Visitors to the workshop will catch the first glimpse of our Gaga-inspired windows. And once you’re ready to take the plunge, you’ll walk through the giant monster-like Gaga mouth that will take over our 60th Street entrance. Upstairs, the entire 5th floor of the men’s store has been transformed into 5,500 unforgettable square feet of Gaga-dom."

How did I miss that?

It's amazing how this tribute to Gaga-dom seemed so exciting just a few months ago; yet, now just seems creepy and destined for the trash like the $157 (sale) metallic razor press-on nails.

Okay, I'll stop h8in the Gäg. After all, 25% of sales from all items in Gaga's Workshop go to the Born This Way Foundation. Which I guess is a good thing. Even if you poke your eye out with them fake nails.

Bal Harbour Shops epic FAIL.


The code for the Bal Harbour ad scans to http://ww.balharbourshops.com/app

Notice something missing? Apparently, they couldn't afford a third W for their web address. So the code doesn't scan to a working address. Shame on you, Bal Harbour Shops.

But when you fix the address in your phone, you get a nice little (but slow) mobile page/app with fashion videos of women applying fake eyelashes and running through Vizcaya in fancy dresses in slow motion. Pretty cool. But not cool enough to repair your reputation in the QR Code Universe. SPELL CHECK.

A Simple QR Code Project for your library

If your library lends eBooks through Overdrive, then this is a simple project you can set up in about a day.

Take a look at this page, http://www.pbclibrary.org/classic-ebooks.htm
Classic eBooks to Download

(Not just for) Homework Downloads

What if you need to read a book for school, but all the copies are checked out? If it's a "classic work of literature" (meaning "old") book and you have your smart phone, you may be able to download it and read it on your phone right now. The black and white images below are special codes, called QR codes, that link to eBooks you can read on your phone or tablet computer.

But you'll need a few things to use the codes: your phone, the Overdrive Media Console software and a QR code reader.

If you don't already have it, you can download the Overdrive Media Console from here: Overdrive Media Console. Install it on the phone or portable device you'll use to read the eBook.

If you don't have a QR Code reader on your phone, you can download one from the iTunes App Store, Android Market, Windows Marketplace or BlackBerry App World depending on your phone.

Once you install the code reader, you can open the app and use your phone's camera to scan the code for the book you want. And when the book downloads, it will be yours to keep, for free!

And if you don't have a smart phone or app-enabled device, you can still click on the code and download the book to your computer.

The collection of texts on this page was chosen from the most popular downloads and from popular selections from student reading lists. If you want to browse through over 34,000 free texts available for downloading, click here.
This is the project. It's a simple web page filled with QR codes that link to "always available" Overdrive-slash-Gutenberg texts. The codes are generated through goo.gl (Google) in a account created to monitor the use of the codes.

If you use Project Gutenberg, then you know that each item includes a QR code for easy downloading to a mobile device. And if you want, you can create a page by simply linking to those codes without creating your own. But since we get circulation statistics from our Overdrive downloads, we chose to create our own codes that link to our Overdrive Digital Media Collection, http://palmbeach.lib.overdrive.com/.

We chose a theme of "homework help" for our list of downloadable classics and researched the most popular titles from local school reading lists and the Top 100 from Gutenberg and chose 40 titles that were available from Overdrive. But you can use any theme.

Then we copied the link from the Overdrive version of the book and shortened the URL at our goo.gl account to create the QR code. The original URL for the eBook looks like this, http://service.overdrive.com/GUTENBERG/ebooks/palmbeach/epub/514 , while the shortened version looks like this, goo.gl/JY7Gt.

Now, in addition to our monthly statistics we get from Overdrive for each downloaded classic eBook, we can also view statistics at our Google account to see how the codes are being scanned. We can see simple counts for each day, week, month, all time, and also view whether the device is running on an iPad, iPhone, Windows or Linux (etc.) platform.

Here are the first ten in the list:





Author

Title

URL

1

Alcott, Louisa May

Little Women

http://goo.gl/JY7Gt

3

Anderson, Sherwood

Winesburg, Ohio

http://goo.gl/uUFAw

4

Anonymous

Beowulf

http://goo.gl/59WxS

2

Austen, Jane

Emma

http://goo.gl/JhLAu

5

Austen, Jane

Pride and Prejudice

http://goo.gl/UpGGD

6

Bronte, Charlotte

Jane Eyre

http://goo.gl/oSoOQ

7

Bronte, Emily

Wuthering Heights

http://goo.gl/ropog

8

Carroll, Lewis

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

http://goo.gl/JKkEo

9

Cather, Willa

My Antonia

http://goo.gl/0zn2P

10

Chopin, Kate

Awakening, The

http://goo.gl/Va1ep



Future plans for the project include adding QR Codes to "dummy" books that would be placed on the shelves next to our classic paperbacks. If someone wanted a copy of Jane Eyre but they were all checked out for a school assignment, then the student could still scan the code right there in the stacks and get a copy of the book on her phone or tablet. And we plan to advertise the downloads to the local schools.

We also hope to work with other local agencies to get the QR code for the classic eBooks page displayed in high-traffic public areas, such as the local airport. Travelers could download a book while they wait for their flight. And we have a very large code ready the poster in the event that works out:



And any location that offers free wi-fi could also become a partner in this project. But wi-fi isn't really necessary as most eBook files are very small; it's only the Overdrive software download that might use a little bandwidth.

The preparation for selecting the initial title list took the most time on this project, but once that was done, everything else was just simple copy & paste to create the codes and the web page.

We hope this project gets a chance to expand to more than just the web page, but for right now, this is a quick, simple project any library can do to promote and connect their eBooks to their mobile users. Leave a comment if you have any questions.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

QR Code Review: Who wants a footlong?

Here is something I haven't seen before, a mobile page that adjusts to your screen. The Subway QR code scans to http://qr.prizelogic.com/FNAFS which redirects to http://nation.subway.com/ which is self-adjusting! (You don't even need a phone to see the page with how I so helpfully put the code right here for you to copy and paste.)

This is pretty cool. Look at the link on your computer and it expands to fill the screen. But look at it on your phone and it stays tiny; yet it still displays all the exact same info.

But as much as I love this code use, I don't want to win free footlongs for life. I don't know what I would do with that much food. Other than keel over. If I had a lifetime of free subs, I'd probably eat 10 years worth in one month until my gigantic body crushed my exhausted heart.

But you all can play. You can look for more codes on Twitter from @subwayfreshbuzz or you can like them on Facebook or just ask for some codes in your email, if you still use that.

And even if you don't play, try to scan some QR codes. They're out there, all over. And if you don't scan them, then these companies won't keep using them so that next year or the year after when everyone is looking for ways to get information on their phones quicker and easier, these companies won't be using codes.... because you didn't scan in 2012! And there won't be free footlongs for anybody!

Monday, February 6, 2012

Vampires in Love

The current Target ad includes a QR code for the "special event" about blah blah blobbity blah Twilight DVD whatever. It says, "Be the first to get the DVD or Blu-ray." feh. No, sorry, Target, the first DVD went to some guy in Guangzhou two weeks before the movie opened in theaters.

But I'm not here to knock Twilight. After all, I've seen all the movies, so long as there's only been one. I'm here to talk about the code. And this one is great. It's not fancy, which would have been a plus, but it does exactly what we want.

Scan the code and it takes you to http://qr.tgt.com/twilight/cir which is the shortened version of http://mobileconnect.target.com/twilight/?ref=tgt_adv_qr_cir_twilight. This is a mobile page with shop, share and show links for their Twilight promotions. This looks great on my phone.

Clicking around the site keeps me in a mobile friendly environment. But when I look for the contact info for the local Target, I get this strange set of symbols for the services they offer:
there's a needle, capsule, shirt with a kerchief around the neck, camera, plus sign, banana, glass of wine, coffee travel mug, eyeball.



I'm not sure what services these are. I guess they give shots and dispense pills, develop film and print photos, offer eye exams and other stuff I'm not too sure about. But they don't serve wine, do they? And what do they do with the banana? I guess I'd need to get drunk at my local Target to find out.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Neal-Schuman ugly code

The image is bad because I don't have time to scan the ad, so I'm just holding it up to the camera. This is about as much effort as I feel Neal-Schuman Publishers put into their QR code plan.
Scan the code on this ad page and it takes you to, surprise, http://www.neal-schuman.com. Which is a regular web page and not-at-all mobile-friendly.

This is idiotic, since the ad where the code appears is for "The Tech Set" of books with titles like, Building Mobile Library Applications, you mean like a mobile web site? or do they just ignore the site development and jump directly into apps?

There's nothing suckier than having some app or mobile link dump me onto a site or application that looks ugly on my phone.

And Ugly is unusable in the mobile world.

It's not like I'm making this up. Every marketing site out there will tell you that a code is wasted if it does not enhance the user experience. How long does it take to make a simple front end to welcome the mobile user? It doesn't need to say much. In this case, N-S has a marquee frame on the top of their page with 5 large clickable areas that could have made a great place for a mobile user to land. And then you can give me the option to visit the full site.

Don't make a code just because everyone else is. Make it because you have something to share. I bet that's in one of your books somewhere.

Don't get me wrong; not every site needs to be mobile-friendly. But when a freakin' pre-cooked meat company (see Curly's review) can arrange for a mobile site, then I'm starting to think that pretty much everyone should.