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Get Ready for Takeoff: When Travel Brands Should Consider Emerging Tech

4 min read
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Today’s consumer expects relevant, personalized content delivered in the right place at the right time. As they move across channels and devices, it’s essential that brands provide a consistent experience throughout and respond to user engagement from one touchpoint to another. This omnichannel marketing approach is especially beneficial to the travel industry, whose customers are quite literally on a journey that will require calling up information in the most convenient way possible at any given time.

Does your customer need to look up a guide of tourist hotspots without Wi-Fi? How can they best arrange a taxi ride at zero notice, or understand the city’s public transit system? Where’s the best place to eat or sleep when plans have changed? Context is key for travelers’ digital experiences, and brands will need to identify—then fill in—those experiences by delivering content tailored for the best channel to reach consumers in the moment.

A Forrester report about building portfolios of digital experiences points out that apps are essential for brands, but they accomplish little on their own: “New enabling technologies have made conversations, connected devices, web-based experiences, and notifications viable alternatives.” This means brands shouldn’t place all their eggs in one app basket. Instead, they should keep an eye on the emerging tech that’s available, then carefully consider if it can help them provide the content or experience that’s so essential to their customers. Don’t chase the latest tech trend just for the sake of it; instead, start with a key experience or moment in which you can provide a better experience to the customer and what technology best supports that.

Connecting to Consumers with Integrated Activations

In support of its #LifeChangingPlaces campaign, which provides a series of video and audio content that tell the stories of “places that have turned people’s lives upside down,” Lufthansa sought a simple way to inspire a sense of wanderlust and adventures with users. Taking a cue from conversational assistants and the popularity of WhatsApp, the brand and its agency DDB envisioned a mobile assistant that could take users on a journey through one simple, instant interaction. And what better way to radically change their perspective than to begin with their current view?

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First, users take a photo of what's in front of them.

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The web app then pairs the view with an unexpected destination!

Powered by Google Cloud Vision, the web app asks users to take a photo of whatever’s in front of them. After, it whimsically offers a travel destination in response to the object photographed. If the user takes a photo of headphones, for example, the assistant will invite them to try hearing something new—like playing bagpipes at the National Bagpipe Centre in Glasgow. It doesn’t just offer destinations, but surfaces up specific experiences they can find there that users may not have considered before.

To make this style of recommendation possible, we worked with DDB to implement a CMS that could connect Google Cloud Vision’s image recognition with the agency’s stellar copy and destinations—including different recommendations based on the same object. The CMS also made it possible for them to import animated flourishes that made the experience more engaging. From there, users are invited to share their destination on their social network of choice or to browse the #LifeChangingPlaces narratives, connecting the tool to the wider content ecosystem.

The app serves as a nice example of how brands—and travel brands in particular—can consider small moments and white spaces along the user journey. The experience fits mobile well because it puts focus on the user’s surroundings: the more varied objects or they see, the better. Activated via mobile web, it doesn’t require users to seek out, download and install an app, either, which is key for snackability and engaging new leads.

Mind the (Digital Experience) Gap

The travel experience is modular, built from a series of experiences and stops along the customer’s (literal) journey. For airlines, this means providing a great experience even before customers board their flight, whether it be their commute to the airport or their wait once there. KLM understood that waiting for a flight can be a real drag—and this wait can make a bad first impression as customers set out on their trip.

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The solution? Get customers in the holiday spirit before they board the plane with a series of fun, playable AR effects. Working with KLM, we designed and developed a handful of Facebook Camera effects that incorporate both facial masks and world effects that give travelers a head start by whisking them away to virtual, cartoonish destinations, like a tropical island featuring a groovy, dancing starfish in sunglasses, transforming the airport around them.

Facebook has a strict file size limit for its camera effects to ensure instant, smooth activation on any modern device, so the project required some creative ingenuity to squeeze as much as possible into the experience. The resulting environments, outfits and props are vibrant and irresistible for selfie-lovers, which fits well with the trend of documenting one’s journey—including the idle moments at the airport—and makes a great first impression along the user journey. Travel brands might consider other such moments (like sitting in a cab) to fill in engaging ways that weren’t possible before.

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As new technologies emerge, travel brands aren’t the only ones that must continually reconsider how they interact with consumers. While a website and mobile app may have sufficed in the past, expectations of today’s users are rising—and if an organization’s digital maturity doesn’t increase at the same rate, it will lose perceived value. And again, fostering new customer interactions by investing into emerging tech shouldn’t feel like wandering into uncharted territory. Instead, keep your focus on providing value to the customer experience first—your destination—and the best route will emerge.

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The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

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