With 2016 marking the milestone of my tenth consecutive Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, I went through all my blog posts, Flickr photos, presentations, and other materials to see what stood out. It covers drones, virtual reality, 3D TVs, 3D printing, and much more.
3. Time Travel: 10 Years of CES
Attending CES for ten years means traveling a total of 50,000 miles (from New York), navigating about 20 million square feet of exhibit
space, mingling with some subset of more than 1.5 million attendees, and creating at least 1,000 slides for recap decks. I also know that
one’s status as a rookie or veteran is determined by others; my familiarity with the Consumer Electronics Show is dwarfed by those who
have been attending for decades.
But, 10 CES’s is something, and attending my tenth one in 2016 has made me nostalgic for the early days, back when I wrote more blog
posts than columns and presentations, and back when the snacks a tech company served mattered as much to me as the impact of that
tech on my clients’ businesses.
As I prepared for CES 2016, I looked back through all my files – blog posts, Flickr photos, recap decks, columns – and gathered
highlights from what I’ve shared publicly (as opposed to anything presented solely to clients). I was repeatedly surprised by early
mentions of topics such as drones, virtual reality, and the Internet of Things. And yet, I had to wade through countless images of 3D TVs
(which I sensed were a flop from the start) and 3D printers (which I was way too bullish on in terms of applications for mass market
usage in the home).
I noted rather loftily in Advertising Age in 2015, “CES, at its core, isn't a show about electronics. It's a show about time.” What you’ll find
here takes a broader view of time than what we’re normally afforded in a typical column or deck or tweet. It offers the perspective that a
single year’s analysis can’t provide. If it interests or moves or inspires you in any way, please let me know.
Thanks for your time.
David Berkowitz
David.Berkowitz@mry.com
5. My first words written about CES
(I miss that sense of wonder)
“I'm laying low today in advance of
CES… It's daunting – all the
coverage talking about the #s,
somewhere between 1.6 and 2
million square feet of exhibit space,
150,000-170,000 attendees, 984
dancing Elvises…”
6. A sign of the economic troubles to come?
While representing my agency, my blog was a
more personal project, and I covered some
slices of life in Vegas that later disappeared.
Here’s one surprising passage. I wonder how
this couple fared during the recession and
after.
“The woman who helped [with registration] is
here with her husband. She's an older woman,
presumably here to retire, having lived across
the Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, and the South. She
said between her husband and herself, they
have three Masters degrees between them,
and they're making $8.25 an hour.”
7. Go figure… my first photo from CES is a selfie (I was clearly far ahead of that trend)
8. One of my favorite photos from any CES, Yahoo serving the hot ice cream brand also merited a
separate blog post entitled “Yahoo's Cold Stone Creamery Kids at CES”; the rest of the photos from
that CES are on Flickr.
9. “[I’m] blogging away with the Dell blogger, and people from Minnesota, and, well, lots of dudes, most of whom are now blogging while
intoxicated. One just said, ‘It was a blast, man,’ without a hint of irony. I get the sense that guy's a real big shot here, so he can say,
‘It was a blast, man,’ and people will think he's a god. That's what happens when you're A-list. If I said, ‘It was a blast, man,’ they'd rip
up my Bloghaus credentials. It's tough on the bottom rungs.” – from “Midnight in the Vegas Blogosphere”
10. It’s a pleasant surprise reviewing photos from that first CES and seeing a number of familiar faces, including several I’ve become
better friends with and some others who I stay connected to through social media. Pictured here from left to right: Jeremiah Owyang,
Sandira Calviac, Jay Kolbe, and David Weiner.
12. Some things don’t change fast enough
In 2008, my roundup included a note on panels that lacked 50-50 gender
balance and 20/20 vision:
“I was taking some notes during my panel at CES. I found that the audience
was 85% male, compared to the panel which was 100% male. 20% of the
audience wore glasses, compared to 43% of the panelists.”
Image: http://influxis.com/app/uploads/2014/05/photo.jpg
13. Among the best marketing I’ve encountered at CES is this children’s book from Microsoft. I didn’t even appreciate at the time how the
children’s book metaphor was all the more apt, turning the notion of stay-at-home mothers into stay-at-home servers. You can ‘read’
the book on YouTube.
14. I really was obsessed with Yahoo’s snacks
Could Yahoo have done more to court press if it just served better
snacks at CES? In my second year at CES, I expected more from
them:
“Biggest letdowns: Yahoo – this year's tent had coffee and assorted
nuts, but even the dark chocolate covered peanuts can't compare to
last year when they had Cold Stone Creamery (maybe if the stock goes
up they'll serve Sprinkles Cupcakes next year)”
The same post further noted the value of the consumer packaged
goods innovation known as 100-calorie snack packs.
16. “In January 2009, I did a horrible thing in Las Vegas: I stayed at the Luxor.” So begins my photo essay, the only review I’ve published
on SlideShare. Don Steele and I would often compare notes on who got the worse hotel room at conferences like this; we’ve
sometimes stayed in the same hotel, leading to exchanges on Twitter that weren’t exactly great ads for those properties.
17. I met Alan Mulally, then Ford’s President and CEO, at Social Media Club’s Ultimate Blogger Dinner (thanks, Scott
Monty). First impressions: “He didn’t know what social media was. He candidly noted that he just found out on the
way down to the event.” But he was remarkably tech savvy. “I almost fell over when he started talking about the
car as a platform. The conversation then got into open APIs.”
18. Ford launches Sync with Microsoft
Doug VanDagens, Director of Connected Partnerships with
Ford, shared his vision for Connected Cars. The full interview
is on my blog (with text) and on YouTube.
Doug VanDagens: What we're announcing here at the show is
an ability to connect to the internet through a normal voice
plan. So all you need is your phone, and we can take Sync
through Bluetooth, connect to your phone, connect out to
Tellme, which is a voice portal - a best in class voice portal,
and Microsoft now owns those assets. From there we can
direct you to a number of Internet data sources. We can send
the GPS information from the vehicle, we can send health
report diagnostic information over your voice plan, and then we
have traffic, directions, business search, and information, all
internet-based.
19. Going for the hat trick, I interviewed Ford President of the Americas Mark Fields, noting, “A car used to be about
getting from Point A to Point B, but now new technologies have turned the car into an MP3 player, search engine,
and social network.” The 7-minute interview is on YouTube. Fields succeeded Mulally as Ford’s CEO.
20. Robert Scoble on Reading Friends
For a couple of years, Jeff Pulver brought a phenomenal roster of
speakers and attendees together for his Social Media Jungle
events. I covered the 2009 sessions, including talks by Jeremiah
Owyang and Chris Brogan. The remarks that stand out most today
are from Robert Scoble, who was a mainstay in my coverage the
first half of my CES decade.
First, he noted Facebook was getting 450,000 new members a day -
it grew by 10 million in 3 weeks. Granted, he also plugged
FriendFeed, though I commented that he was “not ready to endorse
FriendFeed for normal people yet.”
He also described Google Reader. I noted Scoble “doesn’t read his
feeds anymore; he reads his friends.” Today, that happens more
than ever, though that behavior most prominently takes place on
Facebook.
22. Remember ringtones?
This was from my Digital Hollywood recap. Some of it proved smarter, such as discussing
the importance of Android when having 20 handsets running that OS globally was a really
big deal. Below, it’s funny seeing a discussion of payments that includes Google
Checkout, as well as thoughts on Facebook monetization years before it ran mobile ads:
Consumers still largely pay for ringtones, chat, and wallpaper. Carriers take a large chunk
of micropayment transactions, as high as 30 to 60 percent. That’s fine for virtual goods
with low overhead, but it doesn’t work as well for physical goods. iTunes has established
itself in micropayments in a way that Google hasn’t with Google Checkout.
Watch out for Facebook here as it turns on mobile monetization. Its online monetization
methods such as advertising and virtual gift payments don’t exist yet in mobile, but they’ll
need to turn that on.
23. From the blog: Technology that will make you look like the biggest idiot in front of your co-workers: Zyxio’s Sensawaft.
[This] lets you control computing devices just by breathing. The guy was blowing into a mic and controlling flicking a website up and
down. I got to do this too… the direction of the air blown can make a difference. [The URL for Zyxio now returns a 404 error.]
24. Beamz wins the award for the product from my first five years that I’m shocked is still around. I noted, “If your musical talents include
banging a rock on the ground and almost kind of being able to whistle, you’ll love this.” While today Beamz promotes itself as a
product for homes and schools, it also emphasizes its value for therapy and rehab.
25. 3D TVs were eating up all the best real estate in the Central Hall of the Convention Center.
Apparently, this is not how families actually watch TV today.
26. Here are lots of people gathered in Panasonic’s 3D TV theater (I’m in the upper center with a camera, next to
Jessica Lokaj, who gave me the tour). Now, we’ll see versions of this with virtual reality headsets. What’s old is
new again.
27. This collateral cracks me up now – especially the “Wow!” at the bottom. I’m not knocking Panasonic; I just had a
booth tour (thanks, Jessica) so I took more photos there than at other booths, and all of those exhibits feel so
antiquated now.
28. Right concept, wrong screen: Panasonic showed off its Skype integration in this smart TV. Video chat has caught
on, and mobile apps such as FaceTime have become mainstays. This isn’t how people are using their TVs
though.
29. Drones started to become really prominent at CES in 2015, but back in 2010, Robert Scoble was having a blast
filming this Parrot drone. I also love that my video of Scoble droning got 44,000 views.
30. This screen from PlayOn looks like a Roku or Apple TV dashboard. It’s striking to see Netflix, Amazon, and Hulu
there, along with CBS – which only announced a streaming service in late 2014, well over four years later. Also,
remember when the Wii pictured here was the hot gaming console?
31. This image of the media storage and sharing device Pogoplug shows an option to publish to MySpace. Some
snapshots of CES are stuck in the middle, showing in retrospect not just what’s on it’s way in, but what was on its
way out.
32. Get this – an e-reader (the Que by Plastic Logic) filmed on a Flip video camera. The one filming is Michael
Learmonth, then editor with Advertising Age and now with International Business Times.
33. Another sighting earlier than expected: a demo of Square, founded in February 2009 and shown here in January 2010. I blogged,
“The idea’s that you plug this little box – not more than a square centimeter (it’s TINY) – into your iPhone or other mobile device, and
you become a mobile merchant.”
34. No CES recap is complete without celeb sightings. So, here’s LeVar Burton.
36. Foursquare launched in 2009. Come 2011, booths were promoting CES check-ins. I had noted about 500 people
were checked into the main CES event at any given time, though that wasn’t a lot for an event attracting nearly
150,000 tech savvy attendees. And is the image on the left SCVNGR? Ahh, the memories.
37. From the “gone but not forgotten” field is Quirky, the crowdsourced product development company. I loved pretty
much everything about them, from their business model to their design, and it was rough seeing them file for
bankruptcy in September 2015.
38. In 2012, Nike launched FuelBand, but the year before, it used CES to promote its SportWatch GPS, which offered
similar functionality and pioneering features such as the option to share runs on Facebook so that friends can
cheer you on live.
39. Since my first year at CES, a lot of my best experiences were hanging out with bloggers and those at the forefront
of social media. Pictured here is Social Media Club founder Chris Heuer, a generous host who had run some of
my favorite events.
40. Why there are no tablet marketing agencies
In Ad Age, I described fundamental differences between mobile
devices and tablets. The stationary distinction excerpted here has
become more important over the past year with Apple, Google, and
Microsoft releasing high-end “pro” tablets that are increasingly laptop
replacements.
There's a difference between mobile and stationary. Mobile devices are
designed to be used when you're in motion and physically moving. With
tablets, you're sitting down somewhere – possibly out of the home or
office, but in a stationary mode where you might have used a laptop or
netbook before.
41. No, this isn’t another post commenting on snacks served at CES. Reese’s used central convention center real
estate to launch a product that had nothing to do with tech. It did stand out, but the connection seemed too
nebulous. A friend told me that as tech got smaller, so did Reese’s. The booth didn’t bother pointing that out.
42. Big brands, bigger ideas
Each year, non-tech brands gained greater prominence. In this MediaLink-hosted keynote, Coca-Cola CMO Joe
Tripodi (who just went to Subway) talked about community trumping advertising. But he also discussed being able
to reach 20 million Facebook fans for $0 in media spend – a very quaint notion. I miss those days.
46. CES: Consumer Electronics Socialization
In 2012, I wrote my strangest column about CES, which was also perhaps the most prescient. It took
the vantage point of hardware devices to show how they are starting to communicate with each other
and with various media. A few excerpts:
Nest: We’ve got a new thermostat that adapts to people’s lifestyles and adjusts energy usage to fit
with their consumption patterns. You can then access the thermostat via mobile apps.
Whirlpool: I’ve come out with new washing machines and dryers that allow people to monitor the
status of their laundry cycle on their mobile devices.
Ford SYNC: I’m an actual platform, so I can become a search engine, an entertainment console, or
just about anything else. When you pair your phone with me, I make communicating even easier.
Mercedes: I’m also pairing with Facebook, Yelp, and others. Just think of all the ways you can
rationalize buying me now. Pay $50,000 for Facebook, and the car is free!
Android: From early on, I’ve been designed to sync up with the Chrome browser and other Web-
based services.
47. 3D TV
This is a reminder that what works in the movie theater doesn’t work in the living room. When I’m at home, I’m not
going to eat $25 worth of snacks drowning in butter with more calories than two supersized Big Mac meals, nor
will I do anything like this. But for Avatar 2? You bet.
48. 3D TV
One of my favorite 3D TV shots, this guy looks like he’s watching a football fly straight into his groin.
49. Virtual reality headgear by Sensics
(proof that the movie “Disclosure” was infinitely ahead of its time)
Come 2012, more VR headsets populated CES, bringing back memories of the movie “Disclosure” from 1994.
50. Drones were mentioned again in the 2012 recap. Note here, as in 2010 when Robert Scoble was flying the same
kind of Parrot drone around a blogger party, drones are cited as a toy, in the same slide as Discovery Bay Games
(top left) and WowWee (bottom left). Their potential to be used in business and war wasn’t yet top of mind.
51. 3D printing was a hot topic by 2012, extending from plastic to applications such as this unit from Essential
Dynamics which can also print with food such as chocolate and cheese. The holding company still seems to
specialize in “nanomaterials,” but the Imagine 3D printer product page is a dead link.
53. Scoring 5 predictions for CES 2013
1) TV is no longer the first
screen
2) Touch, gesture, voice
devices need new types of ads
3) The internet of things
expands its social network
4) As tech titans bruise each
other, consumers benefit
5) The product announcements
won’t matter by Feb
1) TVs were dominant but
connected with other devices
2) Samsung AdHub could tap
voice, startups addressing this
3) CES 2013 was filled with
connected devices
4) Many brands were platforms,
few adapt to others
5) Bingo. Look what’s outside
main hall for what matters
The Prediction The Result
56. By now, CES emerged as a tentpole event for marketers – a far cry from how it was when a few brands and
agencies sent bloggers and some token execs back in 2007.
58. CES is a show made for some weird selfies. I managed not to buy this headset. As of December 2015, it’s still on
the market, going for $299.
59. One of the stranger products featured at CES were these Necomimi cat ears that read your brainwaves and move
based on your emotions. Stranger still, they’re still on sale, going for $50 on Amazon. I may need to finally buy
these. Brainwave scanners would wind up getting hotter over the years.
60. The Qualcomm keynote, remembered most for its Big Bird scene, was by far the most lambasted CES talk during
the decade I’ve attended. Read The Verge to try to understand how bad it was, or just watch the thing.
61. Colbert on HAPIfork
“
The HAPIfork remains one of the stranger products to gain attention at CES, as it flies in the face most consumer behaviors, and it’s a
symbol for when the Internet of Things craze turns absurd. But, you can still buy one of these for about $100. Stephen Colbert said it
best: “What is the point of consumer technology that stops you from consuming?”
62. to Roku (but you still need
cable)
In 2013, Time Warner Cable announced it was coming to the Roku. Only in the past few months have I come to appreciate this,
thanks to TWC offering more programs on demand, and the interface for both Roku and the TWC app getting much better. While I still
have a cable subscription, I’m watching TWC far more through my Roku than my TWC box.
63. Google announced Glass (right) in the spring of 2012. It hadn’t shipped until its developer model was made available for $1,500 in
April 2013, but it had come to symbolize the whole wearables field. Vuzix (left) had been in the smart headset and eyewear business
for years and used CES to one-up Glass. Vuzix continues to be one of the more interesting CES stalwarts.
64. Long before there was Apple Watch, Pebble raised $10 million, setting crowdfunding records. While I loved my first version of the
watch and even bought a second, Pebble’s destined to be remembered at best as a pioneer that paved the way for Apple, Samsung,
and others.
65. ODB enables an API
CES is now one of the best car shows, and many companies are piggybacking on that trend of cars becoming a more central focus.
Dash, which continues to show its wares at CES, featured its software that provides safety, financial, and social functions by tapping
into auto data generated by hardware that plugs into cars’ on-board diagnostics (OBD) ports.
66. Reality can still be virtual
and not just augmented
In 2012, I first featured virtual reality, but 2013 included a nod to Oculus, which ran its Kickstarter campaign for the Rift in the summer
of 2012.
67. Yes, robots are fun, and I guess this model from RoboteX was some kind of telepresence model. But my original caption for this photo
was, “Careful: you may step on robots trying to Snapchat you.” While January 2013 feels like early days for Snapchat, by November
2012, peopled were sharing more than 20 million photos daily through its iOS app, and the total photos shared passed one billion.
69. “The new world order is
complete collaboration,
and CES is a great
showcase for that.”
- Carolyn Everson,
Facebook
As CES keeps evolving into a show designed for marketers, sellers courting ad dollars send their leaders to shake hands, kiss
babies, and provide good quotes to use in decks like this. You can find the full 2014 recap on SlideShare.
70. Here’s one framework I’ve used to describe CES announcements in a single slide. Note
that this can be customized for every brand or audience, as what’s applicable or
innovative to one isn’t necessarily so to another.
Innovative
Applicable
BreakthroughUseful
Underwhelming Exciting
71. The 12 Principles of CES
1. Every device should be able to connect to other devices, and the cloud
2. Every surface can be a screen
3. Sensors are getting small and cheap enough that it will be cost effective to incorporate them into practically every kind of
product and package within the next several years.
4. Your car can drive and park itself (and far better than you can drive and park it)
5. Your car is another connected home
6. Your home and your car have operating systems
7. Your home and car operating systems will soon sport app stores far more robust than what you have today on your
phone
8. Wearable technology will scale when the emphasis shifts from technology to fashion
9. 3D printing has expanded well beyond plastics to ceramics, metals, food, and even human organs
10. Within the next 5 years, 3D printers will be cheap enough that they expand from the hobbyist market to the mass market,
with people paying a nominal amount for the printer and more, over the course of its use, for the ‘toner’ – whether
plastics or other materials
11. Within the next 5 years, mass market 3D printers will be able to print common household goods, of the same quality that
consumers would expect from local stores
12. TVs will always get bigger and thinner, with the picture more captivating. The quality of the screens will always outpace
the content available to take advantage of that quality. It’s an arms race ad infinitum
72. I was way too bulling on the speed at which 3D printers would become home office equipment. The potential for the fields that 3D
printing can change remains tremendous (my Binghamton University Commencement Address from December 2013 further
discusses this), but we’re not exactly printing our own buckles at home en masse.
73. Fitbit’s partnership with Tory Burch, where the designer would create accessories for wearables rather than compete with the
technology, epitomized much of how any kind of brand can be a part of CES and the trends represented there.
74. Overhyped
T-Mobile CEO who
crashed AT&T party
This wasn’t
even bigger?
Christopher Lloyd
is back!
Meet your
overlords
Ubiquitous
presence there
Looking ahead
to February
Instead of just featuring some published reports from research firms analyzing the buzz around CES, this time, I took a report from
Kontera and added some speech bubbles with my own context.
75. Any doubt CES has become a major car show? The most popular posts shared about CES were all cars, based on data from
Keyhole.
76. With Google Glass still a hot topic, an exhibit featured smart eyewear through the years.
77. Wearable tech took new turns at CES with new kinds of value propositions, such as the Sensible Baby senor that alerts caretakers to
changes in a baby’s breathing, temperature and position.
78. The virtual reality drumbeat sounded louder in 2014 as Oculus Rift won top honors from The Verge and Engadget. The real killer
apps for it are still to be determined.
79. Don’t always believe ‘best of’ awards if you’re looking for a cheat sheet on what products you’ll still hear about a year later (or a day
later). When Engadget featured the wireless connectivity dongle Airtame, it was offered on Indiegogo for $90 – three times the price
of Google Chromecast, and Chromecast was already improving. Google and Apple really deserve ‘best of’ honors in this field.
80. Yahoo gallantly returned to my coverage, and for a change, I wasn’t covering their snacks. Their keynote announced its ad platform
and Tumblr integration, but none of this seemed newsworthy; it’s what they should have been doing already. As opposed to
Qualcomm’s memorably weird ‘Big Bird’ keynote, Yahoo missed an opportunity to show off an innovative vision and strategy.
82. CES 2015:
50+ Highlights for
Marketers
David Weinstock, creative chief at MRY, is the cover model for what has to be among the all-time greatest conference recap deck
cover photos.
83. CES 2015 Top 10 Takeaways & Trends
1. Non-tech brands are taking more of the CES spotlight, and that will be a theme the rest of the decade
2. Big screens get thinner and prettier, but brands should focus on viewing shifting to smaller screens
3. RIP 3D (for now); momentum has shifted virtual reality, which could offer people a more enticing reason
to wear such headsets
4. Drones and versatile cameras such as GoPro are opening up new photo and video production
possibilities that give consumers completely new perspectives
5. Every product that doesn’t have a sensor in it might within a few years
6. The Internet of Things (IoT) could face new walled garden hurdles with devices only working with their
proprietary operating systems (eg another Apple vs. Google battle)
7. For wearables, success will hinge on what’s affordable, fashionable, and offers a clear value proposition
8. 3D printing is still mostly for industrial and professional use cases, but partnerships between hardware
manufacturers and consumer brands may help popularize the technology
9. As cars and other experimental vehicles get smarter (while also getting greener), brands will have more
ways to reach consumers while in transit
10. Many of the best technologies are designed to let people have fun, or even create a sense of wonder.
Tap into that however possible to create new kinds of emotional connections with consumers.
84. The caption: “What other show can serve up every single tech buzzword in a single room?” 3D printing, drones, selfies, connected
cars, VR… this show has it all!
85. Column: The Future of CES belongs to marketers
A column in Ad Age expressed why marketers need to embrace CES en
masse:
“CES, at its core, isn't a show about electronics. It's a show about time.
Products unveiled there reflect bets on how people will spend their time.”
The column went on to describe just how well marketers understand
time, and recaps some of the more impactful brand partnerships coming
out of CES.
86. There are now sensors for everything. This one scares me. What if we start relying on sensors for everything? What if we get a
sensor like this and stop checking ourselves if our baby’s in the car? We can’t outsource all of our most important responsibilities to
technology.
87. The Belfie Stick got more buzz than some of the CES keynotes, and it has one of the best logos ever. Now that’s category
innovation.
88. Google Cardboard’s minimalist headsets sold 500,000 units by CES 2015, hinting at a way to bring VR to the mass market.
89. This was a big year for big announcements from big brands. Under Airmour announced its social network, built on its $150 million
acquisition of MapMyFitness in late 2013. Hershey announced the CocoJet 3D printer for custom chocolate in conjunction with 3D
Systems. Misfit, later acquired by Fossil for $260 million, announced its Swarovski Shine Collection for crystal-studded wearables.
Makerbot showed off its Martha Stewart Trellis Collection, with designs available in the 3D printer manufacturer’s digital store.
90. Nixie debuted a wearable selfie drone prototype. Way to cram so many buzzwords into a tiny device. They haven’t released the
product yet.
91. Shadow CES
Already getting nostalgic at the start of 2015, I wrote a LinkedIn Pulse column describing the experience of attending
CES my first few years:
This was my ninth straight year attending CES representing a marketing agency. It was a strange
experience in earlier days. Clients weren’t there, unless consumer electronics brands happened to be
clients. I’d spend time hitting up side events of some digital pioneers I admired like Chris Heuer’s
Social Media Club and Jeff Pulver’s 140conf. I was the only person representing my agency, and most
places I went, I was the only person representing any agency….
Then, I got to the meat of the story, discussing the differences between Public CES (the one everyone talks about) and
Shadow CES (which is where most of marketers’ education and deal-making happen).
The other CES is the Shadow CES. This is the one that tends not to get as much attention, but for
some brands, it’s more productive. It happens at places like the Cosmopolitan or Four Seasons. A
more official version of the Shadow CES took place at the Aria this year. Dubbed the C-Space, it was
where marketers could meet up with established media companies like NBC Universal and emerging
ones like Samba TV. They could also meet with each other. I joined one private discussion with select
executives from an advertising trade association. While it had little to do with CES directly, it was a
terrific opportunity to learn from these people who I wouldn’t have readily met otherwise.
93. For 2016, I published my first preview of CES a full month before the show. It was more fun to
create than recap decks, as I could make everything up, while in turn skewering pundits like myself
who have to make up the supposed themes of any given CES.
94. The CES 2016 Preview included a few Bingo boards,
such as this one for drones
Slices bagels Waters plants Takes selfies of
you
Takes selfies of
itself
Kills spiders
Whispers sweet
nothings in your
ear
Prays Tickles Farts so it
covers up when
you do
Shuts up movie
talkers
Plays a perfect
game of Jenga
Fights fires FREE
(park your
drone here)
Dances
(Hammer pants
optional)
Clips toenails
Votes Tortures
terrorists
Tortures non-
terrorists
Sweeps
chimneys
Plays soccer
Collects stamps Cuddles Gives rides to
hamsters
Fetches
newspapers
Holds your
place in line
95. Highlights and final thoughts from 2016 will be added to this deck soon. Follow me on SlideShare to receive updates whenever this
deck is updated.
96. Thanks for the memories; keep in touch
David Berkowitz
CMO, MRY
@mry / @dberkowitz
www.mry.com
www.marketersstudio.com
David.Berkowitz@mry.com
http://www.marketersstudio.com/2007/01/vegas_first_imp.html
I'm laying low today in advance of CES (I'm speaking Wednesday at noon with Digital Hollywood). It's daunting - all the coverage talking about the #s, somewhere between 1.6 and 2 million square feet of exhibit space, 150,000-170,000 attendees, 984 dancing Elvises (okay, the last one I just made up).
Tomorrow, I'm planning to take the monorail down to the convention center (I'm staying at MGM, in a surprisingly modern, sleek room in the West Wing of the hotel), soak in the main show floor, and then duck into PodTech's Bloghaus at the Bellagio before hitting ShowStoppers at the Wynn.
Any recommendations you have here are welcome. I'll blog the show, post photos, and try not to get married too many times (Cara's put me on a 2 weddings per day limit). If you're here, let me know and I'll try to see you over the next few days.
http://www.marketersstudio.com/2007/01/ces_update_regi.html
https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidberkowitz/351082358/sizes/o/
I took the monorail from the MGM Grand to the Convention Center this morning.
The good: I had the foresight to get a monorail pass last night. That's a trick I've learned in Manhattan - everyone buys their tickets before they need to get on the train in the morning, and the lines are basically nonexistent at night. Sure enough, there was a massive crowd waiting at the ticket machines, jamming the entire hallway, and I squeezed right through.
The bad: I'm wearing a jacket. Google Weather told me it's 41 degrees. A) It's not. B) While I tried to pare down other items to bare necessities (okay, maybe an Ipevo Skype phone isn't a necessity, though it will come in handy later for some calls), a coat was just a bad idea. I'm ditching that Tues.
The ugly: Registration hell. As I made my way off the monorail, I asked about half a dozen people where to pick up a speaker's badge, and 4 directed me to 250, 2 to 263. Someone in 250 then told me 263, and someone in 263, after not finding me, directed me to 259, the room where I'll be speaking. A very kind woman then saw to it that I'd get registered, and she convinced someone in 250 to register me as an attendee, who gave me the special gold/industry relations pass. Then I went back to 263, and they had a badge waiting for me - the gold kind, but this one with the speaker's badge. I could finally get my frosted doughnut and cranberry juice (plus a pear and a Diet Pepsi for good measure).
An aside: the woman who helped is here with her husband. She's an older woman, presumably here to retire, having lived across the Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, and the South. She said between her husband and herself, they have three Masters degrees between them, and they're making $8.25 an hour, just like everyone else.
It's hard to figure out what to make of it, though I guess, at least for this week, it beats being a Wal-Mart greeter. I did get the sense, conveyed from her, that she could be doing something more meaningful.
Then again, selfishly speaking, I'm glad she's here.
Stone Cold Yahoo
http://www.marketersstudio.com/2007/01/yahoos_cold_sto.html
Yahoo! offered CES attendees a chance to sample what's cool - namely Cold Stone Creamery.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidberkowitz/351093896/sizes/o/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidberkowitz/351422416/sizes/o/
It’s a pleasant surprise reviewing photos from that first CES and seeing a number of familiar faces, including several I’ve become better friends with and some others who I stay connected to through social media. Pictured here from left to right: Jeremiah Owyang, Sandira Calviac, Jay Kolbe, and David Weiner.
http://www.slideshare.net/davidberkowitz/20-reasons-the-luxor-sucks
“In January 2009, I did a horrible thing in Las Vegas: I stayed at the Luxor.” So begins my photo essay, the only review I’ve published on SlideShare.
http://www.marketersstudio.com/2009/01/social-media-jungle-coverage-at-ces-morning-sessions.html
I'm having the pleasure of participating in Jeff Pulver's Social Media Jungle at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas today. Below are my notes from the morning sessions; I'll try to blog more with some of the coverage from the afternoon. You can also follow along by monitoring the smjces tag on Twitter. Names below link to their Twitter IDs so you can follow them.Jeff Pulver IntroGrowing up, he had his real identity - a lonely kid. And then his radio identity, where he engaged in conversations with people all over the world. Now, no one needs licenses to broadcast.
People here are change agents in the world of social media.
Presence is the new trigger for communications platforms. we're always just one click away from calling someone.
March-April-May will take social media jungle on the road to a dozen cities around the US.
Chris BroganThere was some long metaphor about raising a navy or something. I tried taking notes and lost track when he started mentioning pirates. Yar, social media matey!Brogan by CC Chapmanr
He says PR people got social media faster than others in marketing. Really? Just because social media's conducive to use for PR, that's not what I've found. I think both PR firms and ad agencies have been generally slow and misguided, with a few exceptions on both sides. I also think PR firms (ahem, Edelman, ahem) have done the biggest harm to their clients' brands by some major misuses of social media. It's much worse to have a PR effort backfire than an ad campaign that underperforms.
The rest of the talk was about empowerment. "Let's stop talking about talking." Ahh, the irony - why was he talking then? Also, he was very dismissive about people who 'don't get it.' He'd rather 'spend his calories' on people who do get it.
Jeremiah Owyang, Forrester dude (and the person I first followed on Twitter - though he's on a Twitter hiatus) - he called in via SkypeImage by Laughing Squid via Flickr
The Future of Social Media
Social Technographics: how people behave and interact with technology (complements demographics, psychographics)- Showed the ladder of participation (Creators, Critics, Collectors, Joiners, Spectators, Inactives) (see all this for yourself with Forrester's online tool)- US youth much more active as creators, critics, joiners
And now... Jello- Social media takes different shapes - The same content can take the form of blog entries, RSS, Twitter posts, FriendFeed listings, etc
Shish Kabobs- Content is becoming bite sized, not just steak- Twitter is the fastest growing social network (Nielsen, Sept 08)
Some analogies he didn't use:Bacon- Content's inedible at first, but it gets really tasty once it heats up in its own fat
M&Ms- It comes in lots of different colors, and even though they all really taste the same, people swear the different colors have unique flavors
Pizza- Some people like to have it by the slice, but some have it by the pie, and then there's the personal-sized pie that just throws everything off, and don't even get me started on Sicilian.
Robert ScobleImage via CrunchBaseInitially, lots of stuff on sharing events on Upcoming.org, what FriendFeed's about - basic tech review. It was a good refresher of some other tools like TweetDeck, FriendFeed rooms, etc.
- Not ready to endorse FriendFeed for normal people yet
- Google Reader: he doesn't read his feeds anymore - he reads his friends
- Facebook is getting 450,000 new members a day - it grew by 10 million in 3 weeks.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidberkowitz/4260790807/in/album-72157623177574054/
http://www.marketersstudio.com/2010/01/paying-20-for-the-privilege-of-trying-square-twitter-founder-jack-dorseys-new-payment-startup.html
The idea’s that you plug this little box – not more than a square centimeter (it’s TINY) – into your iPhone or other mobile device, and you become a mobile merchant. The Square scans the credit card, then the merchant can take a picture of the purchase, you get your signature, and the merchant can email you your receipt. Just like PayPal made it easy for anyone to be a merchant online, this allows anyone to be a merchant offline. While you could see this working for staff in retail stores, various mobile businesses from contractors to farmers market vendors would probably find this valuable.
They’re gorgeous
Everyone visits the exhibits and oohs and ahhs
And then no one actually buys them
Biggest drawback today: with the glasses on, one can’t interact with their digital devices… or other people in the room
They’re gorgeous
Everyone visits the exhibits and oohs and ahhs
And then no one actually buys them
Biggest drawback today: with the glasses on, one can’t interact with their digital devices… or other people in the room
Photos my own
More background: Sensics Smart Goggles - http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/10/sensics-head-tracking-3d-goggles-hands-on-video/
Disclosure
http://lonelysandwich.com/search/disclosure+1994
Wowwee - http://venturebeat.com/2012/01/08/wowwee-shows-off-its-latest-app-gear-toys-that-interact-with-downloaded-apps
Discovery Bay Games - http://discoverybaygames.com/
The biggest gaming news was from Microsoft – 66MM Xbox consoles in use, 18MM Kinects
Innovation is happening everywhere in the gaming field
WowWee showed off new toys that interact with tablets
Discovery Bay Games turns the iPad into an old-fashioned Atari arcade game, among other interactive games and hardware it produces
Parrot’s AR.Drone 2.0 is the latest version of hovercraft that flies with the aid of augmented reality, beaming back what it ‘sees’ to the controls on a mobile phone
Essential Dynamics showcased a printer that “prints with a whole host of materials, including food, chocolates, silicone, cheese, epoxy, organics, etc.”
I’m not sure how much you’d want cheese to come out of your printer, but 3D printing is becoming more accessible
This one is $3,000, and once it gets under $1,000 it will migrate from professional hobbyists to early adopters
Ad Age - http://adage.com/article/digitalnext/trends-marketers-watch-ces/238998/
Follow up - http://adage.com/article/digitalnext/scoring-5-trends-marketers-ces/239176/
Aaron Levie - CES: people travel from all over to play with gadgets and not buy anything. Not to be confused with Best Buy.
https://twitter.com/levie/status/288120050672599040?uid=1051731&iid=0506bbb9-4ed6-430f-9c5c-87d760418013&nid=12+45+20130107
A memorable Qualcomm keynote…
Qualcomm keynote in The Verge - http://www.theverge.com/2013/1/8/3850056/qualcomms-insane-ces-2013-keynote-pictures-tweets
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2HXGm0YK24
Colbert - http://techcrunch.com/2013/01/12/in-defense-of-the-hapifork/
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/422778/january-10-2013/tip-wag---hapifork---kevin-garnett
What is the point of consumer technology that stops you from consuming?”
- Stephen Colbert
TWC + Roku - http://techcrunch.com/2013/01/07/roku-700-streaming-channels-twc/
www.roku.com
Thingiverse buckle - http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:227635
11) Within the next 5 years, mass market 3D printers will be able to print common household goods, of the same quality that consumers would expect from local stores
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0ZuobfuLPQ
Kontera – www.kontera.com
Parsing CES buzz: why did some trends pop?
http://keyhole.co/insights/CHLJYj/topstories
Top posts shared are all about the cars
Glasses through the ages: so many failed attempts that get closer to a vision of the future
Sensible Baby - http://mysensiblebaby.com/
Sensors in baby clothing alert changes in breathing, temperature, and position
http://www.theverge.com/2014/1/10/5277618/the-verge-awards-the-best-of-ces-2014
Oculus Rift wins Best of the Best… if only normal people wanted to consume media like this
Engadget - http://www.engadget.com/2014/01/09/best-of-ces-2014-awards-winners/
Oculus Rift finally brings augmented reality past Disclosure level of immersiveness
Engadget
http://www.engadget.com/2014/01/09/best-of-ces-2014-awards-winners/
But Indiegogo price is $90 – 3x Chromecast. And Chromecast keeps improving
Airtame wins Engadget’s Best Startup – though Google Chromecast has major leg up
Yahoo keynote announces ad platform, Tumblr integration. Weekend Update more newsworthy
New media properties built using Tumblr… and an ad platform most people would have assumed existed already? No, not newsworthy
http://mashable.com/2014/01/07/marissa-mayer-yahoo-advertising/
http://rack.3.mshcdn.com/media/ZgkyMDE0LzAxLzA3LzFjL1NOTHlhaG9vY2VzLmI3YTMzLmpwZwpwCXRodW1iCTg1MHg1OTA-CmUJanBn/5a43c8fd/551/SNL-yahoo-ces-2014-1.jpg
But… Yahoo’s acquisition of Aviate does indicate a future of a more personalized, responsive home screen
http://venturebeat.com/2014/01/07/let-the-2014-acquisition-spree-begin-marissa-mayer-reveals-yahoos-acquisition-of-aviate/
The Future of CES Belongs to Marketers (David Berkowitz column in Ad Age)
Live Blog: The CES Panel on Video Advertising (Danny Sullivan coverage of Berkowitz’s panel in Marketing Land)
CES is Shaping up to be the Next Cannes (Adweek quotes Berkowitz)
The Technology and Trends Breaking Through CES This Year (CEO Matt Britton featured in Adweek video)
A Second CES for Marketers Rises from the Shadows (Berkowitz writes about Shadow CES for LinkedIn)
Sneakers, Bling, and Chocolate Steal CES Spotlight: 5 Brands That Outshone Electronics and Tech Companies (Berkowitz byline in Ad Age)
Features on MRY’s blog:
2015: The Year of the Smartwatch?
The Future of Automobiles is Now at CES
Cyber Security in a Connected World
Hospitality in 2015 and Beyond
More: http://www.businessinsider.com/belfie-stick-2015-1
The Belfie Stick got more buzz than some of the keynotes, and has one of the best logos ever
Google Cardboad’s makeshift VR sells 500K units, hints at way to bring VR to mass market
More: https://www.google.com/get/cardboard/
http://adage.com/article/digitalnext/sneakers-bling-chocolate-steal-ces-spotlight/296550/
2015 is the year non-tech brands stole the CES spotlight, with Under Armour, Hershey, Swarovski, and others announcing products and partnerships. There is no turning back. What’s YOUR plan for 2016 and beyond?
http://adage.com/article/consumer-electronics-show/armour-debuts-fitness-tracking-app/296479/
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/01/07/under-armour-incs-new-app-wants-to-put-your-fitnes.aspx
UA Record, Under Armour’s social network, connects fitness lovers with friends, plus stars like Gisele
More: http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2015/01/07/under-armour-incs-new-app-wants-to-put-your-fitnes.aspx
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More: http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2015/01/06/now-you-can-print-chocolate/?mod=e2tw
How to get 3D printing mainstream? Hershey’s partners on printing chocolate COMBINE WITH PREVIOUS
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https://store.misfit.com/collections/swarovski-shine#swarovski_shine
http://techcrunch.com/2015/01/05/misfit-debuts-a-new-swarovski-shine-wearables-collection-featuring-crystal-jewelry-solar-charging/
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https://digitalstore.makerbot.com/martha-stewart
Holy mother of buzz: Nixie debuts a wearable selfie drone prototype
More: http://makezine.com/2015/01/07/nixie-the-wearable-selfie-drone-delights-crowd-at-ces-2015/