Rethinking QR Codes as Part of the Customer Experience

Last March at the South By Southwest Festival, QR codes were EVERYWHERE. QR codes are those scannable funky bar code squares that look like this: At SXSW, they were in as many places as marketers could dream. T-shirts! Brochures! Posters! Mobile phone covers! Business cards!

That was my first experience with the absolute underwhelm (is that a word?) of them. They seem so cool, so new, so tech-friendly, and then they deliver a big old meh. Since then, we as customers have been trained to see them as unnecessary and useless. We’ve scanned them to find nothing compelling or new. We’ve waited to be transported to nothing more than the same information from the brochure where the code appeared. It’s disappointing. We’ve had enough!

QR codes are about 3 main ideas:

1. They must be mobile friendly.

2. The end result must deliver SOMETHING extra for the user.

3. They must be in places that are scannable.

A key point here is that users are asked to do something for your brand. The viewer/audience member/passerby must take an action to interact with the QR code. As such, they expect a pay off!

Let’s dissect these three ideas a bit more.

1. Being mobile friendly means showcasing the QR code in the right location and size for the situation. Going back to the SXSW examples, there were several presenters who included a QR code in their slides. The QR code led to…wait for it…their web site.

How on earth is that helpful, innovative, or a positive end result for the poor soul who lined up his phone in that perfect moment, scanned the code, and then ended up on a site they could have found via a regular URL address? What’s worse is that many sites are not optimized for mobile.

The QR codes blown up and printed on t-shirts make about as much sense as a phone number printed in fine print on a billboard. How, exactly, is one supposed to scan the code on a wrinkled, moving  person?

2. The “extra” is often lackluster. Anne Reuss, 360Connext’s own Community Experience Agent, provided a great example recently, after excitedly reporting that Starbucks was doing something interesting with QR codes on a brochure. After scanning, however, there was the usual underwhelming result.

Her take? I’ll paraphrase, but it was definitely Meh. This is the image she provided:

Why not offer something intriguing, like videos about the coffee-making process, interviews with coffee growers, or coupons for the effort?

3. I’ve seen QR codes popping up in the most unusual places. The ones that really baffle me are the teeny, tiny ones on nametags, the big ones on billboards, or the craziest ones on jumbotrons for about 5 seconds. How are any of those scannable locations?

I do believe QR Codes can really be helpful. How about these creative uses?

  • In our little town, a clever real estate office posted a HUGE QR code on their window, right next to a stoplight. It was easy to scan from the car, and led the user to the most recent listings.
  • At SXSW 2011, a vendor was providing QR stickers for anyone who wanted them to point to LinkedIn profiles. This was a nice idea but ultimately has been replaced by apps that do this for you.
  • How about a QR code at the Farmer’s Market for recipes for the yummy vegetables you just purchased? I have seen some paper printed out with recipes, but in the spirit of ecofriendliness, those could easily be replaced with QR codes.

QR Codes are easy to create and use, but they should have a purpose to their implementation. Consider ways to enhance your customer experience, then commit to it! What are some of the great (and not so great) examples of using QR codes you’ve seen?

7 comments
susansilver
susansilver

I would also like to see more people make an effort to brand their QR codes. You can actually design them and change some aspects. They do still work to, but they are visually more interesting that way.

RoboRauk
RoboRauk

For our Vallet iPhone app we use QR codes to link directly to the apple store to save the user a step in having to type in the name.

RoboRauk
RoboRauk

That is, linked them to the app page IN the apple store. #corrections

MLBee
MLBee

Great post, Jeannie! Timely, too since I was just discussing QR codes with a few colleagues. I think they are best used in situations where people have time to capture it (whip out their phones, open the QR reader app, open another QR reader app if the first one doesn't work, etc). Magazines, shop windows, train/bus interior ads, brochures and post cards are a few viable places that come to mind. It doesn't usually work when the code is too small to capture, or otherwise difficult to scan (on a T-shirt, high and small on a billboard, or small on the side of a bus).

jeanniecw
jeanniecw

 @MLBee A small one on the side of a bus!? Oy vey. Who approves these things!? I agree about the INSIDE of public transportation. Perfect place, actually, especially if it's something useful/entertaining after scanning. 

debmaue
debmaue

The biggest problem with QR codes is that the majority of folks still don't know what they are. I stood in a restaurant line behind a couple. She was showing him something on her iPhone. "It's a QR code reader", she said. "Whatever that is." Exactly. My guess is that even people who know what they are and know how to use them (like me) don't. I predict that they will go away soon.

jeanniecw
jeanniecw

 @debmaue You make a great point, Deb. And it's still a bit of work even if you do know what they are. I do believe there are some great ways to use them, but you're right that it will take consumer education to make it really work.

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