STORES Magazine - July 2008 - (Page 56) NUTS AND BOLTS / STORE DESIGN “AT&T has managed to reach the consumer with a mix of digital signage, interactive kiosks and hands-on experience,” she says. “Consumers are looking for this type of experience. We’re seeing more messaging directly to consumers, giving them the ability to interact with the store.” With the volume of information available to consumers on the Internet, those customers want — and expect — the same details and specs no matter where they are. But when they enter a bricksand-mortar environment, they also want a sensory experience. That’s where store employees come in: All involved in the development of the experience stores were quick to point out that the technology was not meant to replace human interaction. Instead, it is intended to “augment” the communication. “There are never going to be completely automated environments where there’s nobody in the store,” Riegel says. “These continue to be people businesses. This technology is there to help facilitate discussion, or maybe for those times when the associate is busy with someone else or when [the customer doesn’t] want to talk to anybody.” Holistic vision Riegel says he’s a seeing a shift among the clients his company works with, a greater understanding of using technology like digital signage to knock down walls between retailer and customer, allowing them to experience something together. “It’s a much more one-to-one relationship, and a more laid-back environment in the retail store,” he says. 56 STORES / JULY 2008 To make it work, however, all the pieces must fit, Shapleigh says. A retailer can’t change an environment with digital signage alone. “The experiencebased environment has to have a holistic vision that ties all of those aspects together,” he says, “so that when the customer walks in, it all works. It’s the entire mix that makes it successful.” AT&T’s experience stores are roughly 5,000 sq. ft. and include a variety of stations that allow customers to quickly home in on exactly the products and services they’re interested in. Those stations include entertainment, home connections, music, gaming, messaging/video and laptop mobility/e-mail and data. Customers can test a variety of wireless phones, PDAs, Bluetooth accessories and the like; download games to wireless phones; test-drive web-based and wireless remote access features; and experience remote monitoring through an in-store camera. There are also numerous LCD displays running digital messages about lifestyle, product benefits and features. In order to cut down on the stimuli, Callison designed a space with “a band of light and ambient graphics,” Shapleigh says. This created “a backdrop for the products that wasn’t aggressive. We wanted the technology to feel less intimidating.” To further the point, all of this was done without sound. “We’re doing more and more work with our clients with triggered audio, instead,” Riegel says. “If a user walks past a motion detector, it will trigger an audio loop specifically for them.” Another partner in the process was Cisco, which provided high-speed Internet connectivity and traffic management through the company’s 2821 Integrated Services Router and WS-C3560-24PS switches. AT&T also installed wireless access points technology/wireless controller services. Surface technology One of the most exciting applications is the integration of the new Microsoft Surface table, which allows customers to place devices directly on the display and receive information about them; it also allows customers to put two devices down simultaneously for side-by-side comparisons. Through infrared technology, the Surface table “reads your devices and lets you see what features it has, what capabilities, how it can work for you and how you can add features to it,” Riegel says. “It lets you see in three dimensions, for example, exactly what your wireless phone can do.” With so much going on in the stores, however, it might come as a surprise that the biggest challenge for Riegel and his cohorts was to create a periodic “synchronization of displays” featuring the brand name. “That cross-branding effect was a real technical challenge,” he says. “In that retail store environment, to be within a millisecond of having everything playing the same AT&T logo at the same time, that takes incredible accuracy.” StORES Fiona Soltes, who splits her time between “retail therapy” and freelance writing, lives near Nashville, Tenn. WWW.STORES.ORG http://WWW.STORES.ORG
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of STORES Magazine - July 2008 STORES Magazine - July 2008 Contents Executive Editor's Page President's Page Dearth of Retail Creativity What Shoppers Think Wow, Is That a Wawa? 10 Things You May Have Missed Numbers Worth Counting Full Price/Markdown Retail People Merchandising Strategy Concept2Watch Point of Sale Outsourcing Human Resources Top 100 Retailers Store Design RFID IT Operations Systems Managements LP Vantage Point Newsbeat Cover Story Emergency Response Systems Background Checks LOEB Retail Letter Point of View NRF News Retail Crossword Retail Industry Calendar Last Laugh STORES Magazine - July 2008 STORES Magazine - July 2008 - STORES Magazine - July 2008 (Page Cover1) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - STORES Magazine - July 2008 (Page Cover2) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - STORES Magazine - July 2008 (Page 3) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - STORES Magazine - July 2008 (Page 4) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - STORES Magazine - July 2008 (Page 5) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Contents (Page 6) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Contents (Page 7) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Contents (Page 8) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Contents (Page 9) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Executive Editor's Page (Page 10) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Executive Editor's Page (Page 11) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - President's Page (Page 12) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - President's Page (Page 13) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 14) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 15) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - What Shoppers Think (Page 16) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Wow, Is That a Wawa? (Page 17) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Wow, Is That a Wawa? (Page 18) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Wow, Is That a Wawa? (Page 19) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - 10 Things You May Have Missed (Page 20) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - 10 Things You May Have Missed (Page 21) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Numbers Worth Counting (Page 22) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Full Price/Markdown (Page 23) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Retail People (Page 24) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Retail People (Page 25) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Merchandising Strategy (Page 26) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Merchandising Strategy (Page 27) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Merchandising Strategy (Page 28) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Merchandising Strategy (Page 29) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Concept2Watch (Page 30) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Point of Sale (Page 31) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Outsourcing (Page 32) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Human Resources (Page 33) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Human Resources (Page 34) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T1) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T2) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T3) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T4) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T5) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T6) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T7) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T8) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T9) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T10) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T11) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T12) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T13) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T14) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T15) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T16) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T17) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T18) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T19) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Top 100 Retailers (Page T20) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Store Design (Page 55) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Store Design (Page 56) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Store Design (Page 57) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - RFID (Page 58) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - RFID (Page 59) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - RFID (Page 60) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - RFID (Page 61) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - IT Operations (Page 62) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - IT Operations (Page 63) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - IT Operations (Page 64) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - IT Operations (Page 65) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page 66) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page 67) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page 68) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page 69) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page 70) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page L1) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Systems Managements (Page L2) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - LP Vantage Point (Page L3) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Newsbeat (Page L4) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Newsbeat (Page L5) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Cover Story (Page L6) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Cover Story (Page L7) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Cover Story (Page L8) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Cover Story (Page L9) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Emergency Response Systems (Page L10) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Emergency Response Systems (Page L11) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Emergency Response Systems (Page L12) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Emergency Response Systems (Page L13) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Emergency Response Systems (Page L14) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Emergency Response Systems (Page L15) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Background Checks (Page L16) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Background Checks (Page L17) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Background Checks (Page L18) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Background Checks (Page L19) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Background Checks (Page L20) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - LOEB Retail Letter (Page 91) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Point of View (Page 92) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Point of View (Page 93) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - NRF News (Page 94) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Retail Crossword (Page 95) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Retail Crossword (Page 96) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Retail Industry Calendar (Page 97) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Last Laugh (Page 98) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Last Laugh (Page Cover3) STORES Magazine - July 2008 - Last Laugh (Page Cover4)
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