Kiosk Solutions Apr-May 2016 | Page 44

opinion are filled with young blood. Still, the practicalities of usability, desirability and manufacturability must come along with this voracious appetite for new. These are all critical factors in the Value Proposition of any technology company in the 21st century. I mean come on, no one really made a living from vapourware did they? This is where the experienced older people come in. They care about the detail and intuitively know what will work. Yeah, great idea kid – now let’s design this thing with just the elements on the periodic table, shall we? Manic Designer and His Jet Set Willy When I touched and pushed the buttons of the Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48k for the first time in the 1980’s, I unwittingly demonstrated how the kinesthetic, aesthetic, electronic and mechanical elements play their part in the ultimate user experience. My ‘speccie’ was ace – I spent hours with my father trying to write code that ran simple games. A playful boffin designed it for an age where anything was possible and the pots of money were bottomless. Get the design of a product right and we will learn by doing, enjoy by experiencing and stay through engagement. Which is great because for the most part that is the aim of engagement technology, to get people to spend more time on it, right? Well, not always is it the case that a company wants their customers to hang around. Sometimes the customer journey is SAS style: in – done – out. But largely the experience should be lingering, engaging and allow you to take away more than you came with. Bring Your Own Wearable But as usual, our workplace lags behind. Why is that? Well, for a start it can be a hassle getting authorisation on new technology, procurement drag their heels and integrating it requires the buy in from a whole army of doubting IS/ 44 KIOSK solutions IT gatekeepers. So, for the most part companies avoid nu-tech like the plague. This won’t get any easier as the tech gets cheaper and sexier. Bringing your own wearables – or indeed any technology – into a company is slowly but surely becoming accepted. This is usually back office stuff though. Once we bring it to the shop floor – ooooph (sharp intake of breath) we are in a whole different place. For many fair reasons, retail and banking have seen BYOD tech interaction in branch as less than desirable. From uncontrollable show rooming (the art of touch feeling in branch and then buying online for less) to man in the middle attacks (grey hat pranksters getting int