Korea’s Google: Flagship store for emoticons December 27, 2023November 1, 2022 by Florian Rotberg Seoul | Emoticons bring emotion to digital communication. Kakao, South Korea’s answer to Google, goes one step further. Various stores around town offer merchandise dedicated to the cute emoticons from the company’s own social media platforms. invidis tested the omnichannel experience and the balancing act between online and offline.
Dunkin’ Donuts: A temple to worship donuts December 27, 2023November 1, 2022 by Florian Rotberg Seoul | Dunkin’ Donuts stores are generally not places that invite customers to linger, let alone offer retail experiences. A flagship store of the donut chain in Seoul proves the opposite – great customer experiences surrounding the sticky-sweet pastry. An invidis site inspection
LG Flex: 20 levels of immersiveness December 27, 2023November 1, 2022 by Florian Rotberg Seoul | Curved displays are a must, especially for gamers. But motorized screens with adaptable curvature are new to the market. LG presented the first OLED Flex Displays at the IFA in September. In Seoul invidis was able to test the motorized OLEDs in an LG Flex pop-up store.
Uncommon Store: Like Amazon Go – only cool December 27, 2023November 1, 2022 by Florian Rotberg Seoul | On the top floor of the Hyundai Seoul department store, the Uncommon Store is hidden in a comparably measly 33 square meters, probably the most beautiful store ever realized using Amazon Just Walk-Out technology. The stylish shop provides a rare insight into the effort that Amazon puts into it and explains why the …
Metro: DooH meets Digital Signage June 28, 2024December 17, 2019 by Florian Rotberg Seoul | Samsung Electronics is installing over 4,200 digital signage displays for passenger information, way-guiding and DooH in 90 subway stations in Seoul.
DooH: Confronting Trump and Putin with disturbing headlines August 20, 2024July 16, 2018 by Florian Rotberg The Finnish daily newspaper Helsingin Sanomoat welcomed US President Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in a digital and critical way. Finland’s largest daily booked almost 300 digital screens and billboards on the route between the airport and the summit venue – and gets serious.