Hypertag
Founded in 2001 and based in Norwich, Hypertag is a supplier of proprietary proximity marketing technology.[1][2][3] It predominantly sells this to brands, allowing them to connect to consumers’ mobile phones based on their proximity to a physical location using short-range mobile wireless technologies such as Bluetooth, Infrared, Wi-Fi and NFC.
Industry | marketing technology software |
---|---|
Successor | Proxama Ltd |
Founded | 2001 |
Headquarters | Norwich |
Products | wireless technology digital content |
The Hypertag allows digital content such as wallpapers, video clips, games, music clips, vouchers, documents, web links or mobile applications to be downloaded direct to consumers’ mobile phones quickly and for free. Hypertag sells its proximity marketing solutions to major brands, their agencies, visitor attractions and through a network of international resellers. Hypertag also integrates its systems with third party infrastructure providers such as in-store advertising display screen providers and has been used by brands such as O2, Vodafone, Peugeot and CNN, and has installed systems at visitor attractions owned by the Royal Institution and English Heritage.
An example campaign in 2005, posters advertising the new Gorillaz single, DARE, were established in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia in September 2005. The posters contained Hypertag technology, allowing passers-by to download a 40-second ringtone of the song DARE to their mobile phones.
The technology was also used by the band New Order in advertisements for their album Waiting for the Sirens' Call, and in 2008, Hypertag won the gold award for best location-based advertising technology at the Mobile Advertising and Marketing Awards.
Hypertag was bought by Proxama Ltd on 14 January 2011.
See also
References
- "Mobiles reach out to the web". BBC News. 26 January 2003. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
- Sandhana, Lakshmi (7 October 2003). "Cell Phones, Billboards Play Tag". Wired. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
- Zamboni, Claudio (30 July 2003). ""Hypertag", dal muro al palmare lo spot viaggia via infrarossi". La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved 13 October 2020.