Incredibly cool 3D printer creates objects out of titanium

Somebody please help FabLabs around the world get their hands on this!

Amplify’d from thenextweb.com

See that golf ball-esque piece in the top there? That’s created from pure titanium powder by a company called i.materialise. The idea is that, instead of just doing 3D printing to show prototypes, you’ll actually be able to have pieces crafted that can be used in the real world:

Of course it’s a bit pricey, so you’ll need to bear that in mind before you go having your titanium chess set crafted. A 2x2x4-centimeter item will run you a cool $124. Want to super-size? You can step up to an internal volume of 4 centimeters for a mere $192. Then again, compared to the over $1 million price tag to buy the printer for yourself, that’s quite the bargain.

Read more at thenextweb.com

 

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The Rules of Geolocation Marketing

Amplify’d from thenextweb.com

DO aim for utility: Badges and points are fun, but in order to engage with customers and build a long term relationship, you need to provide relevant information and apps that leverage location information to make shopping more convenient. A recent study found that 9 out of 10 mobile Internet users have logged on while in a store, most of them (50%) to research their buys and, for just over half of them (51%), in-store mobile research has led to a purchase. Brands could use customer’s location to provide relevant information to their products and services in order to facilitate their research and ultimately trigger a purchase.

DON’T Be A Stalker: There is enough worry about privacy issues concerning location-based services, without brands stalking their customers or pushing aggressive offers and promotions to their smartphones. As Pauly D knows best stalking is a huge turn off and once trust over use of customer’s data is lost it is hard to regain. Show respect to your customers with opt-in and out options, to avoid spamming them with unnecessary information.

DO know what to measure as success: When McDonald’s announced they managed to increase foot traffic by 33% through their Foursquare campaign there was a lot of speculation about what foot traffic meant and how they measured it. As for all social media platforms, the issue of how each brand defines and measures ROI is hot for LBS too. Information about the number of check-ins doesn’t seem enough, it needs to be combined with information on spending, purchasing choices and demographics over time in order to derive conclusions about customer buying behavior.

DON’T neglect loyalty: Location-based services provide a great platform for loyalty programs, but so far this only translated in rewards for check-in points. Loyalty programs with use of LBS could help brands build strong customer relationships online and offline, providing rewards cut out based on each customer’s social media profile. LBS could bridge the gap between the two worlds and offer custom made offers and personalized customer service, providing the basis for a long-term engagement between a brand and its loyal fans.

DON’T isolate location-based services: Running fragmented campaigns, programs or projects is confusing to your customers. Integration is key to success, especially at a time when social commerce is getting stronger and stronger. Enrich social shopping on any platform, e-commerce, social media, in-store, with location relevant content.

Read more at thenextweb.com

 

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It might be about the size of the screen and whether or not you’re standing up.

Amplify’d from sethgodin.typepad.com

It’s in the last two categories that these other devices, things that don’t involve sitting down, are superior, not just a mobile substitute. The social graph is a very low bandwidth, peripheral attention interaction, perfect for this audience and this medium. And the last category–tell me where I am, where to eat, who’s near me, what’s the weather, get me a cab right now–is all about me and now and here.

I don’t believe this is a winner take all situation, any more than one bestselling book makes all other books obsolete. I think different pillars work for different devices, and there will continue to be winners in all of them.

Read more at sethgodin.typepad.com

 

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