Zappar: Top Augmented Reality predictions for 2019

Augmented Reality (AR) content is growing fast thanks to the launch of Apple’s ARKit, Google’s ARCore, Snap’s Lens Studio and ZapWorks.

It is also easier for consumers to access AR experiences as the technology is embedded in a range of apps and platforms and people are unlocking more content through their smartphones.

Zappar has partnered with Mindshare and Neuro-Insight to produce the Layered report to explore user behavior and come up with the key AR trends for 2019.

In 2018 Zappar successfully predicted five changes in the AR industry surrounding bigger players entering the AR space, content becoming more targeted and contextually relevant, the rise of connected packaging and active learning, as well as the evolution of AR strategy,” said Max Dawes, partnership and marketing director, Zappar.

We had the privilege of helping companies like 7-Eleven and Shazam create exciting experiences for their customers, and saw some interesting sector-wide developments in AR innovation

It was a pleasure to be able to continue to contribute to all sorts of new and creative marketing strategies that provided memorable experiences

Last year we made a number of predictions about what could happen in the AR space during 2018. As we wrap up the year, we take a look back and see which predictions did come true, which we are still anticipating, and some new predictions for 2019.”

New AR Trends We Expect to See In 2019

The advancement of mobile-web AR

We expect to hear a lot about this in the coming year. We’re entering an interesting phase where native apps generally will become the preserve of services and utilities that genuinely add value to a user’s life (ie banking app, retailer loyalty app, music subscription service) as well as games. For everyone else, there’s the mobile web.

For Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) brands who are interested in what AR has to offer but can’t command an app of their own, they have often been left to make a choice between social media apps that can support AR to reach their audiences through an app users already have on their devices. These social apps offer scale, but don’t necessarily meet the strategic needs of brands or deliver the content and contextual relevance to their end users when it comes to AR. The choice of a social media platform also ties the brand to one specific tribe which may well age much younger than their core target consumer. 

Enabling rich mobile AR experiences to be delivered directly on a mobile web page will give businesses more control over the distribution and marketing of their content, whilst still being instantly available for users to experience without the requirement for an app download. 

FMCG brands needing to tell their stories better and more memorably

Getting creative with connected packaging is just the first step. FMCG brands are now needing to tell their stories and add value. This comes in the face of the “un-branding” of the consumer world through (for example) Amazon Prime customers, and other data-and-voice-integrated retail giants, encouraging consumers to ‘buy the product’, not the brand. This doesn’t provide the same value as creating a memorable experience that leaves an impression on the potential customer, and goes the extra mile to share the brand, which ultimately sets it apart.

The Development of Consumer MR

The hype around consumer Mixed Reality has come up against a hard dose of reality now that Magic Leap has released its first developer-focused hardware to somewhat mixed reviews. For me, this demonstrates the gap between lofty ambition, which is to be admired and the current limitations of available technology, which is where the rubber hits the road. Now you have to start somewhere and it’s great to see both Microsoft and Magic Leap helping develop this new market which is fantastic for everyone. We believe immersive Mixed Reality experiences offer enormous potential for both education and business alike, but the consumer proposition is just not there yet given the price-point of dedicated hardware devices.

AR becoming an always-on communication channel

The widespread embrace of AR could lead us to a shift from single-instance marketing campaigns, toward a consistent communication channel that drives a direct dialogue with end users that are contextually relevant. As AR specialists and enthusiasts in the growing “experience economy,” we have a serious opportunity to create lasting experiences that go beyond one-off AR campaigns. Before we know it, we could be part a world of permanent digital discovery driven by daily information and utility - not just transient moments of surprise and delight.

What does seem inevitable is the era of spatial computing and story-telling is here to stay. In an increasing age of information and experience, we expect more of the services, products and packaging around us driven by our growing distrust of government and corporations in general. When I interact with a product I expect it to give me more information on its inherent makeup, provenance, social and environmental impact, and instructions for use than would ever fit on its physical footprint. So the question is: ‘What is the cost as a brand owner of not enabling your products, packaging and print to connect seamlessly to your users on the devices they care most about in their lives?’

The areas of computer science devoted to AR, ML and AI will help deliver this new age of assistance and it will happen in the next five years. The great news is business can get a head-start on the competition by exploring what is possible in AR right now, and set themselves up to be well-placed for the future. Bring on 2019...

What We Predicted For 2018, What Came True & Where We’re Going

Bigger Players Have Entered the Space, Advancing More Widespread Interest in AR

This was almost certainly an inevitability and is a positive step forward for AR. The caveat is that new providers of major scale AR will need to navigate the demands of varying brand and industry marketing needs (one size will never truly fit all). Even so, the more people who embrace AR as a tool, the more creative uses we’ll see.

Content will become more targeted and contextually relevant

Through the year, developers and creative strategists have been able to work together to bring people content that is more unique, relevant, and memorable than ever before. The collective consciousness of pop culture has begun to fuel more interest and creativity in the AR space. Additionally, customers are increasingly eager to learn more about the stories of brands they support, and marketers are paying attention. The experience-focused nature of AR is a great way to meet this customer demand, and we’ve seen businesses of all sizes realize it's a marketing method worth investing in.

Connected Packaging

The penny has dropped at a C-level that brand owners are sitting on a goldmine. Their passive print, comprising billions of products and packages, are lying dormant but have the ability to be instantly activated through AR. Connected packaging has the potential to be their most powerful always-on communication channel - driving a direct dialogue with their end users in a growing experience economy. It’s the future of owned media and first-party data (GDPR compliant of course).

Advancements in AR as a powerful L&D tool

Research on the effect of AR inputs on the brain (aiding attention and memory encoding) has highlighted the positive impact of AR as a facilitating technology for ‘active learning through doing’. Many businesses are beginning to see the power of AR in Learning, Training and Development. AR is increasingly seen as a tool that can drive both top-line growth and increase operational efficiency. This becomes a major factor in optimizing overheads and delivering on the bottom line.

The evolution of the AR strategy

Businesses such as 7-Eleven are approaching AR as an always-on play, around an ongoing and full calendar of content. They've leveraged the power of their own app and their stores to drive app downloads, repeat visits, reward point redemption and ultimately transactional value. The Deadpool 2 campaign was just the tip of the iceberg: a nine-week launch programme to kick things off that got 7Rewards customers used to the behavior of interacting with the camera function in the app and earning reward points. New content launches have since followed with brand partners including Mondelez (Hershey's), Red Bull (Pac Man promotion), and PepsiCo (Doritos, Dr Pepper) with more to come.