Tag: mobile devices

Adoption of Digital Health and #mHealth: Where Do Consumers, Providers and Payers Stand?

Adoption of Digital Health and #mHealth: Where Do Consumers, Providers and Payers Stand?

While patients and doctors work on their relationships with healthcare data, insurers are working out some of their own issues with technology. Whether through online cost and price transparency tools, new mobile apps or other digital health initiatives, payers are figuring out how to use technology to improve products and customer service for the same very compelling reason: it’s what consumers have come to expect.

Mobile Marketing Is a Necessity, Especially for Luxury Brands

The penetration of smartphones and other mobile devices, such as tablets, into the affluent consumer market offers luxury brands ideal platforms to target, communicate and engage with customers and prospects. And with roughly 61 percent of the wealthiest Americans owning a smartphone (those making over $330,000 in annual household income), luxury brands who haven’t optimized their websites for mobile devices are sorely remiss. Mobile optimized websites should be the cost of entry for luxury brands, particularly retail brands. Amazingly, they are not, as Chanel, for example, is the only brand among Dior, Louis Vuitton, Hermes and Gucci to offer an optimized web presence as of early May).

Infusing the Dreamscape

I turn to Dwell for inspiration, for new ideas to populate my dreamscape. So maybe the context made me more “prepared” to see deeply into this recent article in the magazine. On one level, it is a pretty prosaic story about the gadgets and software that connect the online and real world. But somehow, the idea that architecture and portable communication technologies are allowing us to interact with space and with each other in new ways struck me as profound.

App Spotlight: Google Buzz

By now, I’m sure you’ve heard all the “buzz” about Google’s latest announcement. Buzz is Google’s (late) entry into the oversaturated social networking game, predominately ruled by Twitter and Facebook. Buzz is built into Gmail, so once you’re logged into your account, you’re automatically connected to all of your contacts that you email/chat with. You’re then able to post and share your status updates either publicly or privately, check in to a location, and share photos and videos. Basically, Google wants you to think it’s streamlined what all the other social networks (you’re already using) do into one simple and familiar interface. However, I’m still not convinced.