Free Wi-Fi is often the reason you visit the
local café in your neighborhood and spend maybe hours of your weekend sipping
slowly a cup of coffee. This is not the case in small businesses only; just
think of how many people are going to Starbucks-let’s be honest-not for their
great coffee but for the free Wi-Fi.
What’s more, when we finally do leave, the
owner — unlike the proprietor of any online business — has no record we were
ever there in the first place. Brick-and-mortar merchants collect little, if any, information on the
customers visiting their stores daily. Unlike online commerce, physical store
merchants are still living in a largely analog world without collecting
in-person data for their record. Imagine if there was a way to turn free Wi-Fi
into valuable customer data. Well, Mike Perrone (co-founder of SocialFlow) has
thought about it. According to Wired’s article, his latest startup, which he co-founded with Jeff Lanza, is called
SocialSign.in, and the concept is brilliantly simple. To access the Wi-Fi in a
SocialSign.in-enabled space, customers have to log in with their Facebook,
LinkedIn, or email credentials. Once the account is activated, the customer
will be prompted to “like” the business’s page on Facebook, subscribe to a
mailing list, or opt in some other way to connect with that retailer. Even when
customers don’t bother with that optional step, businesses can still glean
meaningful insights about their customers through their social sign-ins alone.
It’s a compromise that could get merchants to the data they want without
angering their customers, since they know they’re getting something in return.
“It’s really important for us to maintain the balance between
what the location wants and what the end user wants,” Perrone says. There are
companies like Retailnext are tracking store customers with Wi-Fi, video, that
customers don’t realize that are being tracked, which is a huge privacy and debatable
issue. So would you trade data collection for merchants and analysts for
consumer privacy?
Read the entire article here.
No comments:
Post a Comment