Apple Watch
Apple Watch can be used to track wearers
Tim
Cook gave an interview to Bloomberg over the weekend and in it he
confirmed that Apple Watch will be able to track its users via Bluetooth
signals as they walk around.
The confirmation is something
Apple observers have suspected for a long time, but it's interesting
that the company is now saying more about it publicly.
He said,
"And of course, we have iBeacon over on the side that a lot of people
have forgotten about — a very interesting technology that we're using in
our stores. And you can imagine a future connection there that is
interesting."
In principle, Apple Watch wearers will be tracked
via Bluetooth signals coming from real-world locations, like shopping
malls. The immediate purpose will be so that users can get alerts from
nearby businesses who think you may be in the mood to buy something.
(Walk near a Starbucks, for instance, and a Starbucks app on your phone
or watch may suggest that you nip in for a quick coffee.)
For marketers, this type of hyper-localized advertising is gold.
Specifically, the tracking mechanism on Apple Watch will be similar to
the little-understood mechanism currently used in Apple's iPhones. It
combines Bluetooth 4.0 (the localized wireless signal system that lets
you transmit or receive data from a nearby device), iBeacon
(signal-emitting beacons that Apple is seeding all over stores and other
physical locations in the real world) and NFC (another wireless
transmitting system that Apple has incorporated into iPhone 6 and iPhone
6 Plus, and the Apple Watch).
What's new in Apple Watch
(according to Apple's press release) is the Bluetooth, iBeacon and NFC
combo. Previously, iPhone users could be tracked by iBeacons if they had
their Bluetooth switched on. (Keep it off and you're invisible.) But
even if an iBeacon detected you, all it did was send a signal to an app
that could alert you. That was useful — as in the Starbucks example, it
could send you an offer for a muffin, for instance — but it doesn't
necessarily result in a sale that can be attributed to the system,
especially if after seeing the iBeacon alert you paid in cash.
The NFC aspect closes the loop, as marketers like to say. Now, an Apple
Watch or iPhone 6 user might get a signal from a beacon, that might
trigger an app to send the user an offer, and the user can use Apple Pay
(which uses NFC) to complete the purchase. At that point, marketers
will be able to see exactly how successful their tracking of Apple
customers is, and which types of offers work best. It will also generate
a ton of data, especially in terms of your exact location at any given
time, as the devices only detect iBeacon signals if you walk right next
to one.
iBeacon technology is limitless in scope, you can use
it any physical location where emitting a signal might be useful. The
beacons themselves don't actually record your location — that happens on
your phone or watch when you switch Bluetooth on and the signal
interacts with the apps you're using or are signed in to.
The
system will generate a massive amount of data on users' locations and
shopping habits. It might also, in theory, produce a massive map of the
indoors of large public buildings.
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