ZIVELO Launches Virtual Banking Expert Kiosks

ZIVELO Virtual Banking Expert Kiosks are Designed to Connect Your Customers with Expert-Level Services Regardless of Location

zivelo kiosks PHOENIX (April 06) – ZIVELO designs, manufactures and supplies Virtual Banking Expert kiosks to some of the largest banking and financial institutions in the country. These kiosks provide business solutions such as connecting customers with Virtual Banking Experts that can handle complex financial services during and outside of branch hours, regardless of location and peak loads in branch traffic.

These specially designed kiosks offer a way for financial institutions to connect with customers and provide services that may not otherwise be available within individual branch locations. Alternatively, some branches may have underutilized or over-extended staff depending on demand and day to day traffic. When kiosks are placed in high traffic areas they encourage interaction, and they can also be placed in dedicated, card accessed rooms that can be utilized by customers outside of regular business hours extending the bank’s hours via kiosk-based interactive remote banking staff.

The technology behind the Virtual Banking Expert kiosks can be custom designed with touchscreen displays, HD cameras, motion detection, speakers, card readers, microphones, and more. ZIVELO’s unique patented modular design solutions make maintaining and updating kiosks with new technology low-cost and efficient, without having to ship or replace entire units. Segregated data paths are used to facilitate compliance with strict banking data security standards so that customer data is never compromised, even when wirelessly instigating videoconferencing capabilities.

“Our banking solutions systems have allowed Financial Institutions to improve the efficiency and time management of their bankers while increasing customer satisfaction at the same time.” said Chris Augur, President of ZIVELO. “Data from our customers has shown that video conferencing allows banks to more efficiently utilize staff, while offering additional convenience and extended benefits to their customers, and increasing interactions per branch.”

For more information on ZIVELO, and to learn how to pilot test Virtual Banking Expert systems, visithttp://www.olea.com/vbesm/.

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AMC Kiosk – AMC Theaters Case Study

AMC Theater Ticketing Kiosks

AMC Kiosk Case Study

Second-largest US cinema chain deploys new Omni-channel strategy to accelerate their business. Customers benefit from new features, quick ticket purchases and an improved service concept.
Pyramid AMC Kiosk

Pyramid AMC Kiosk

2023 Update — Determining the exact number of kiosks AMC currently has deployed is a bit tricky, as their deployment and removal varies between locations and over time. However, based on the available information, I can give you an estimate:

Initial Deployment: In 2016, AMC partnered with Pyramid Computer Systems to roll out Polytouch® all-in-one kiosk systems across its theaters. Though the exact number wasn’t officially announced, considering AMC’s then-operating size of roughly 5,000 screens across 340 locations, it’s reasonable to assume several thousand kiosks were initially deployed.

Present Scenario: Several factors contribute to the difficulty in pinpointing the precise number today:

  • Removals: Over time, some locations might have replaced kiosks with newer technology or opted for an app-centric approach, reducing the installed base.
  • Variations: The number of kiosks per location could differ based on theater size and foot traffic.
  • Limited Updates: AMC doesn’t readily share updated information on their kiosk deployment numbers.

Therefore, an accurate figure remains elusive.


Driven by the big success of e-commerce and developments like the Internet of Things (IoT), shopping behavior has dramatically changed and customer expectations have grown within the last years, triggering the generation of various concepts to fulfill the new customer needs and implement an integrated approach. Much effort was put into optimizingg check-out processes to avoid waiting times at the cash desks. Another challenge was the integration of multiple sales channels like online, mobile and the theatre itself (Omni-channel strategy). Enter the AMC Theater kiosk.

Pyramid’s polytouch® kiosk has been a real game changer for AMC

As part of its customer experience leadership program, AMC Theatres – operating almost 5,000 screens in over 340 locations – has selected Pyramid’s polytouch® all-in-one kiosk systems to enhance the ticket purchasing experience for their guests.

AMC Kiosk

AMC Kiosk – Click for full size

AMC started a quest for a more suitable kiosk with a compelling design to better fit customer expectations, as part of a multi-year remodelling programme, and its theatre operations. The result is polytouch® featuring “experience the difference” at AMC.

AMC Theatres is known for its customer service leadership and commitment to delivering a premium movie-watching experience with more comfort and convenience, inspiring greater customer loyalty.

Technology is a key component, and the polytouch® team helped to redefine the next-generation kiosks, featuring advanced touch technology, the flexibility of deployment and design and a future-proof upgrade path for payment technologies “Pyramid’s polytouch® kiosk has been a real game-changer for AMC,” said Scott Winters, VP of Theatre Systems at AMC. “With its all-in-one design, placement within our theatres is highly flexible, giving AMC options previously not available. Its attractive look immediately catches our guests’ eyes and entices them to give it a try. As a result, theatres deployed with polytouch® experience a significantly higher usage rate and guest acceptance than our legacy kiosks. Pyramid has been with us every step of the way to help ensure the success of this exciting, new kiosk.

It has been fantastic to see the level of acceptance among guests across different age groups.” stated Alberto Perandones, VP Business Development at Pyramid Computer GmbH.

Within only a few weeks of engaging with AMC, Pyramid developed a fully customized polytouch® kiosk to address the AMC needs: a portrait multi-touch screen tailored to AMC’s corporate identity packaged with state-of-the art Intel® components and a series of peripherals including a thermal printer, a mag-card reader for payments and loyalty programme bonuses and a bar-code and QR-code scanner, that en-courage guest interaction.

Due to the excellent response through-out the pilot phase and initial locations, AMC has decided to extend the use of the polytouch® self-service kiosks beyond its remodeling programme to include the replacement of older generation kiosks throughout the circuit.

Theatres deployed with polytouch® experience a significantly higher usage rate and guest acceptance than our legacy kiosks.

AMC needed the proposed solution to have several vital characteristics,” said Alberto. “It had to be very high performance in order to optimise the customer experience. It needed to be rugged and reliable to withstand constant use. The ability to customise and upgrade was also important to enable AMC to take advantage of future new technologies. Modularity and integration were key requirements for facilitating easy deployment. An appealing design would enhance the movie-theatre environment. Finally, this all had to be backed by responsive, professional technical support. Our polytouch® delivered on all counts.

The Pyramid polytouch® integrated kiosk chosen by AMC features capacitive multi-touch (processing up to 20 touches simultaneously with less than 10ms latency), IP54-rated screen with chemically hardened, non-reflective glass. Running at full HD resolution, it features an Intel Core processor and allows for customised expansion modules such as a QR / barcode scanner, digital I/O, programmable buttons and an emergency shut-off button.

AMC Kiosk Benefits — 4 good reasons

1. Reduce guest waiting times
Optimize your check-out processes and avoid waiting times for your guests. Give them a better experience!
2. Anywhere and the way you like it |
polytouch® high flexibility and modular concept provide AMC with new options not accessible before.
3 Appealing design
Attract guests through an intuitive and customized design. Its user- friendliness is a real game-changer for your guests.
4 Future-proof investment
polytouch® designs allows for a seamlessly upgrade to comply with new standards and protect your investment.
Introducing EMV-payment in AMC devices is like equipping your car with new wheels, that simple!

It has been fantastic to see the level of acceptance among guests across different age groups.

About AMC Theatres 

AMC Theatres is the customer experience leader. They run the most productive theatres in the country’s top markets. AMC operates eight of the top 10 highest grossing theatres in the US and has the No. 1 market share in the top three markets (NY, LA, Chicago). Headquartered in the Kansas City metropolitan area, AMC has interests in 344 theatres with 4,959 screens across the US, serving approximately 200 million.

Related Information

Pyramid Computer Kiosk — Kiosk Kiosks All Things Kiosks

pyramid kiosk Pyramid Computer Kiosk

Welcome to Pyramid as our newest Gold Sponsor of the kiosk association.

Pyramid kiosk is a 30 year old, mid sized (120 head count/40m revenue) systems manufacturer with factories in Germany and Taiwan and sales offices in UK and USA. In opposite to most kiosk manufacturers, Pyramid builds its own PC technology and touch screens. This high level of component manufacturing enables the company to create very slim and elegant highly integrated designs, still remaining extremely flexible and easy to maintain. Pyramid screen focus sizes are 24” and 32”, but also 55” table modules are built. Pyramid “Polytouch” named kiosk designs are successful in Europe in retail (Marks&Spencer, Edeka) and QSR hospitality (McDonalds, Vapiano and more).

As an example in the US, Pyramid ticket transaction kiosks are in use at AMC theatres. Standard and custom Pyramid polytouch kiosk solutions are sold via OEM or sales partners, as a bespoke work and always UL certified. Unparalleled and unique by design is Pyramid´s Polytouch “Passport” 32” kiosk with integrated Puck Table locator dispenser and extremely low space consumption.

Pyramid Localization System (PLS) is a patented Pyramid technology which allows QSR operators to introduce table service for self-ordering guests. The location of a guest in the restaurant can be determined with 10 inch accuracy.

What does Pyramid look for at Kioskindustry.org?

Pyramid is seeking to build a presence in the US. We try to find collaboration kiosk builders and vendors to share our modular kiosk component architecture, sell them touch screen and PC Box units to other kiosk vendors and look for ISV´s for our localization system in the restaurant order environment. Maybe we can vice versa be a partner for European activities of US kiosk vendors.

Pyramid Kiosk Links:

Overview of Pyramid Kiosk products:

http://www.pyramid-computer.com/retail-interactive/polytouch.html

Flagship product Pyramid Passport 32”:

Overview about PLS Localization System:


Contact

Headquarters

Pyramid Computer GmbH
Bötzinger Straße 60
79111 Freiburg

Tel: +49 761 4514 0
Fax: +49 761 4514 319

Contact us

Erfurt plant

Feldstraße 1
99334 Amt Wachsenburg

Tel: +49 761 4514 541
Fax: +49 3628 916379

Contact us


Sales

Tel: +49 761 4514 792
Fax: +49 761 4514 70

Contact us

Service & Support

Service Hotline
Tel: +49 761 4514 870

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Self Checkout Kiosk by Francie Mendelsohn

self-checkout kiosk

Self Checkout Kiosks – a Look at Two

Editors Note : Article for Kiosk Industry by Francie Mendelsohn of Summit Research Associates.  Francie is highly respected industry consultant with many years of experience and we are pleased to publish a new article by her. Thanks to Richard Slawsky for serving as editor.

When Summit Research Associates began testing kiosks more than 20 years ago, many of the usability issues we encountered were attributable to the hardware available at the time. Kiosks allowing customers to create their own greeting cards, for example, depended upon pen-plotters to complete the task! (Affordable color laser printers had not yet been invented.) No wonder people got tired of waiting for their custom designs to be completed only to be exasperated by the quality of the finished card because the ink colors ran out unevenly.

self-checkout kiosk

Click for full size

Today, many of those deterrents are long gone. The power of the microprocessors running the kiosks have increased exponentially, the Internet is robust and reliable, people are no longer intimidated by keyboards and—because of the widespread use of smartphones and tablets—touchscreens are second nature to almost everyone.

Self-checkout kiosks in retail POS have been a long-established segment of the kiosk industry. First deployed at grocery stores, they are now a common sight at stores like Home Depot and Lowe’s.

Not all installations have been successful, though. IKEA pulled their units from all US-based stores several years ago because of constant failures, especially in the use of the hand-held scanner. This peripheral is a requirement when checking out the huge boxes containing many of the install-it-yourself products at the home furnishings chain. The tethered scanner was used to read the bar code but it was very fussy; customers either held the device too close to the bar code or too far away. The result: the item was not scanned successfully.

As a result, it was common to observe frustrated customers loading everything back into their shopping cart and finding another kiosk to use. The instructions on the touchscreen never provided even a hint as to where to place the scanner for successful “reading.”

In addition, IKEA did not give customers any choice; you either had to use the kiosks or walk away empty-handed. All the checkout lines consisted of a kiosk, with none staffed by a human being. They also had few store employees nearby to help confused customers complete their purchase.

Unfortunately, a number of kiosks deployed today continue to disappoint and frustrate users. What may look like hardware issues are actually software deficiencies. In this article we will look at two Self-Checkout kiosk deployments, illustrating one that is highly successful and one that is anything but. Because we have long seen that would-be kiosk providers and users will remember the failures far more often than the successes, we will devote the bulk of the discussion to that less-than-successful deployment.

Johns Hopkins University self-checkout vending kiosk.

self-checkout kiosk

Bistro self-order – click for full size image

The Rockville, Md., campus of Johns Hopkins University consists of three buildings and shares space and parking with the National Institute of Health’s National Cancer Institute. A snack bar providing food such as hot and cold sandwiches, soups and beverages, chips, candy bars and other desserts was in operation for many years, but because much of the traffic flow was dependent upon the school schedule, it increasingly became a money-losing proposition and closed for good in Spring 2017.

Students and faculty were not pleased by this turn of events, complained frequently and resulted in management finally providing a solution.

Bistro self-checkout kiosk

Click for full size

In October, Baltimore-based Black Tie Services installed a series of refrigerated units and shelving in an alcove just off the communal dining area in the main building (Gilchrist Hall) to provide much of the food previously available at the snack bar. Called Bistro to Go!, it allows people to select (mostly) snack food and beverages and pay at the kiosk located near the middle of the space.   Black Tie Services is part of Accent Food Services, a national organization that primarily deploys “Micro Markets” and sells hot beverages.

The food and beverages are attractively displayed but there are no prices shown. Accent offers an App, USConnectMe™ at many of their locations that allows customers to pay for their purchases, earn points and add value with a special enrolled card similar to the popular Starbucks card. This is indicated by a square red button near the lower right corner of the touchscreen.

The developers expect customers to scan the products they are buying to determine the price. The entire success (and failure) of the kiosk depends on that scanner. Unfortunately, until customers “get the hang of it,” the scanner either does not recognize the UPC or it scans the same item repeatedly. There are no helpful hints on the large touchscreen showing customers how close they need to be to allow the scanner to read the bar code. The scenario is very similar to what prompted IKEA to remove its kiosks. Because of these scanner issues, it is common to see people waiting in line to pay for their food during busy periods.

checkout screen

Click for full size Checkout

There is a closed-circuit camera that (hopefully) keeps customers honest. Still, the struggle customers experience trying to get the scanner to recognize the items they are purchasing is likely to promote dishonesty–unless other people are waiting to pay and offer to help.

customer instructions

Click to expand

The kiosk sports a large (approximately 11×16-inch) vertically-mounted touchscreen. Yet it does not include How-To instructions. Instead, the developers have placed a rugged plastic sign on the counter listing all the instructions. This is foolish. What if someone were to (deliberately or inadvertently) remove the sign? Then customers would have no idea how to proceed Furthermore, the sign is too low to the ground, making it difficult to read for anyone not in a wheelchair.

Most people will try (repeatedly) to pay for the food they have selected. They will scan their food, which then appears on the screen as a running total, just as a grocery store kiosk works. A very loud voice informs the purchaser (and everyone else nearby) the items that are being purchased. They are then asked to “Select a pay method.” This is unnecessary because the only payment method is via credit card

The customer is shown an illustration of how to insert their credit card. Now look at the photo of the credit card reader itself. Is it any wonder that people are confused?  There is an icon on the reader itself but it is low to the ground and black-on-black is hard to read.

Click to expand

That aforementioned red USConnectMe button is also the cause of much customer frustration at this location. It doesn’t work but people touch it anyway. (In fairness to the customer: how do they know it doesn’t work?) Instead, a screenful of information about loading value on to the card appears which serves to further confuse students. And it dramatically adds to the time it takes for a student to complete his transaction; it is not at all easy to return to the previous screen. I personally witnessed longer (than usual) lines to pay when someone touched this button. The designers should adhere to our long-held rule: if a button is not relevant, REMOVE IT!

Click for full size CC

Finally, the customer is asked if he/she would like a receipt with large square buttons indicating Yes (green button) or No (red button). When I used the kiosk, I selected Yes, but never received the receipt. There was no way of knowing if the printer was out of paper or was simply malfunctioning.

Receipt – click for full size

Because of the many deficiencies listed, the kiosk leaves the user with an unpleasant taste (no pun intended) but if a student is hungry and has no alternative, they will put up with it and keep on trying until they are successful.

These micro-markets have the potential to resolve several problems in food services. None of the current usability issues are deal-breakers. Some common-sense software modifications should be made and will go a long way towards ensuring a successful deployment. Once the units are fine-tuned and made more user-friendly, they will achieve the desired results.

Harris-Teeter Self-Checkout Kiosks

Click to expand

The self-checkout kiosks at Harris-Teeter supermarkets generally work well and shoppers frequently wait in line to use them, even when manned checkout lines are lacking any customers. The 245-store chain is a subsidiary of Kroger and has been making significant inroads in the Greater Washington, D.C. area. Even though there are no signs alerting shoppers to their presence, people enjoy the convenience and generally acceptable functionality of the devices and happily wait their turn to use one. The store features six units, with two banks of three facing each other. A full-time employee is stationed in front of one bank of units.  

click to expand

These types of kiosks will be familiar to anyone who has visited a grocery store over the past few years. They are fast, quite easy to use and do not require much in the way of instructions. The software interface is mostly self-explanatory. The scanner works exceptionally well and is infinitely more reliable than the small unit found on Bistro to Go!

Click to expand

The only problem? Sometimes the prices are incorrect, sale prices have not been updated into the system, and keying in the 4-digit code for produce can sometimes result in errors.   These problems are almost always quickly resolved, thanks to the proximity of the store employee.

Click to expand

Payments are made at a separate unit located a few inches from the touchscreen and the well-designed images show how to scan or insert a credit card or pay with cash. The units are outfitted with several expensive peripherals, including the high quality/super-sensitive Toledo-Mettler scales embedded in the bagging area.

The importance of using high-end components can’t be stressed enough. These types of kiosks receive a tremendous amount of use and shoddy peripherals will result in inoperable units which quickly leads to unhappy customers. Whole Foods tried self-checkout units a few years ago but they failed so frequently that frustrated customers avoided them and the project was cancelled. It remains to be seen whether new owner Amazon will try deploying them again.

History has shown that the kiosk costs are more than offset by the number of employees the retailer no longer has to employ. Furthermore, customers love them and are convinced that the process is faster than if they had used a human checker. That is not true, but to quote an adage: perception is reality.

The past few years have shown just how popular self-checkout kiosks can be. Just make sure that they work consistently and do not cause customer unhappiness or frustration. Harris-Teeter has the winning formula. Bistro to Go! at Johns Hopkins could enjoy the same results with some fairly easy modifications.

 

More Self Checkout Links

Retail Kiosk 2017 – What’s in-Store for Retail

2017 Recap – What’s in-Store for Retail

Retail kiosk At this time last year, we sat down with our colleagues to discuss what 2017 had on the horizon for retail and how that would translate to in-store merchandising programs and displays.  Their thoughts were captured for our blog post ‘What’s In-Store for 2017.’  Were their predictions spot on?  Let’s review…

Prediction #1: Retailers and brands are asking how they can shrink footprints within brick and mortar establishments and still focus on a targeted product mix for the consumer.

Valuable floor space in brick and mortar stores means displays have to adapt to the needs of retailers and possess a smaller footprint.  

Red Robin is an example of a brand that implemented this plan while not forfeiting important marketing initiatives. The restaurant group’s branded gift card merchandiser offers gift cards, menus and brochures on an unobtrusive display that requires little restaurant real estate.

Prediction #2: In the New Year, retailers and consumers will be expecting more personalized experiences through today’s technology that will enable a truly personalized offering.

It’s no surprise that personalization is key to enriching a person’s interaction with a brand.  After all, customizing an experience can help brands better meet a consumer’s needs.  Nike’s Digital Retail Experience is an exceptional example of seamlessly blending the retail experience with a shopper’s desires.

PPG Pittsburgh Paint’s Voice of Color program also brings a level of activation to the buying process with its PPG Color Work Station. Featuring a 42-inch touch screen mounted between paint chip display panels, customers can visit the interactive unit to browse paint choices by color, style and personality as well as find coordinating palette inspiration, view color-tip videos and product information, and paint a virtual room.

Prediction #3: With an increasing number of millennials becoming primary household consumers, self-help retail will likely be expanding, making an effective point-of-purchase program essential for brick and mortar stores in 2017.

Imagine running into the grocery store for a few essentials and skipping the wait in line.  Currently, Kroger is testing its ‘Scan, Bag, Go’ shopping experience to address this longstanding consumer pain point.  Customers use electronic devices found on kiosks at the front of the store to scan items and bag them before paying electronically and heading home.  

The program is already available at select Cincinnati area stores, with the plan to be in 400 stores nationwide by next year.

Prediction #4: The industrial internet of things will come into its own in 2017 because of the strategic benefits that IoT affords, such as cost efficiencies, convenience and consumer personalization experiences.

The internet of things buzz phrase has gained traction, with HubSpot’s marketing blog devoting an entire post on “why we should care – a lot.”

From smart refrigerators to in-home puppy cams, 2017 has seen people embrace the convenience of being connected at all times.  But how does this continue to influence the POP industry?

retail kiosk As brands focus energy on ensuring their products create accessibility for customers, point-of-purchase manufacturers will be trusted to envision ways to highlight those features to intended audiences through in-store merchandising.

“We are the last three feet of marketing,” says Ron Bowers, Senior Vice President of Business Development at Frank Mayer and Associates, Inc. “It’s the point where consumers make the decision to purchase.  And because smart home technology is still new and constantly evolving, it’s our responsibility to create awareness and educate customers through displays that showcase product benefits, convenience and more.”

As the internet of things flourishes, the POP industry will remain an essential component to brands looking to inform customers on how their products can make life simpler.

The overall consensus?  We think we did pretty well anticipating what 2017 would bring.  Did any big trends miss our radar?  We’d love to hear your thoughts.

And of course, stay tuned for the ‘What’s in Store for 2018’ post next month!

For more information visit one of our sponsors:

Innovative Travel Solutions celebrates 2017 as leading global provider of border kiosks

Innovative Travel Solutions celebrates 2017 as leading global provider of border kiosks

More than 1,300 BorderXpress kiosks in use at 39 airport and seaport locations

YVR’s BorderXpress Automated Passport Control (APC) system allows eligible travelers to clear US Customs and Border Protection formalities quickly, securely and without preregistration. Our solution reduces wait times by up to 50% and significantly improves the international arrival experience.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The value of automated border control processing is quickly becoming realized around the globe. Vancouver Airport Authority’s Innovative Travel Solutions (ITS) celebrated a major milestone in 2017 – they have now processed more than 160 million passengers at more than 1,300 BorderXpress kiosks in use at 39 airport and seaport locations worldwide – more than any other provider.

BorderXpress is the world’s first self-service border solution that accepts all passports and reduces passenger wait times by more than 50%.

2017 highlights:

  • 374 kiosks sold (40% increase over 2016)
  • Contracts with airports in Europe, United States, the Caribbean and the Pacific
  • First ever installation of a border control kiosk onboard a passenger ship
  • Successful implementation of next-generation Primary Inspection Kiosks (PIK) in Canada

 

For further information, please find the full media release below.

Richmond, B.C. December 21, 2017: Vancouver Airport Authority’s Innovative Travel Solutions continues to build on its position as the leading provider of border control kiosks, ending 2017 having processed more than 160 million passengers at more than 1,300 BorderXpress kiosks in use at 39 airport and seaport locations. The year also saw the successful implementation of next-generation Primary Inspection Kiosks (PIK) in Canada, as well as the first installation of a border control kiosk onboard a passenger ship.

BorderXpress is the world’s first self-service border control solution that accepts all passports and doesn’t require pre-registration or fees – and it reduces passenger wait times by more than 50 per cent. It was developed by Innovative Travel Solutions (ITS), an independent business unit within Vancouver Airport Authority (YVR) with more than 10 years of experience in kiosk design, user experience, layout and flow analysis.

“Innovative Travel Solutions had a remarkable year in 2017, as we continue to experience robust growth and increased sales of our BorderXpress kiosks to customers around the world,” said Chris Gilliland, Director of ITS, Vancouver Airport Authority. “We’re especially proud to have expanded our customer base globally as well as providing our kiosk solution onboard a passenger vessel for the first time.”

2017 Highlights

  • 2017 marked another successful year of strong BorderXpress sales for ITS. An additional 374 kiosks were sold, a 40 per cent increase from the number of kiosks sold in 2016. ITS also grew its customer base by securing contracts with airports in Europe, United States, the Caribbean and the Pacific.
  • In Canada, BorderXpress was also expanded to meet the requirements of Canada Border Service Agency’s (CBSA) new PIK program. Under this program, CBSA expanded its use of border kiosks at Canadian airports, and now offers self-service options that is now available to the majority of incoming international travellers. Innovative Travel Solutions delivered PIK kiosks at Vancouver International Airport (YVR) in April and has since helped Halifax Stanfield International Airport (YHZ), Quebec City Jean Lesage International Airport (YQB) and Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport (YUL) successfully implement BorderXpress PIK kiosks.
  • 2017 also saw the first ever installation of BorderXpress kiosks on a passenger ship as part of a successful two-month pilot with America Cruise Ferries.
  • ITS also experienced growth of its own, adding four team members for a total of 25, including a new Innovation Manager position to focus on developing other new technology innovations.

The Year Ahead

Though US and Canadian airports remain the primary hub for the rollout of border control kiosks, ITS recognizes that markets such as Europe and Asia have tremendous potential to utilize kiosk technology given their growth in population and air travel frequency amid new routes regularly added by major airlines.

In addition, international seaports are another relatively untapped market for kiosk technology. ITS has already made headway here. In 2015, 10 BorderXpress kiosks were installed at Canada Place cruise ship terminal at Port Metro Vancouver, becoming the world’s first self-service border control solution available at a seaport. In 2016, two kiosks were installed at Port Everglades in Florida.

“Airports and seaports across the globe need processing support as passenger numbers continue to rise at a rapid pace,” added Gilliland. “At the same time, they are being asked to reduce costs, improve operational efficiencies, manage new and more stringent regulations, and most importantly, enhance the safety and security of the travelling public. We are confident in our ability to grow the ITS business with innovative technology solutions that reduce border line-ups and improve the safety, security and integrity of their borders.”

The value of automated border control processing is becoming more realized and ITS is looking ahead to 2018 to continue its position as the leader of efficient, secure and user-friendly travel solutions with biometric-based technology.

-YVR-

About Vancouver Airport Authority

Vancouver Airport Authority is a community-based, not-for-profit organization that manages Vancouver International Airport (YVR). Canada’s second busiest airport, YVR served 22.3 million passengers in 2016. Fifty-seven airlines serve YVR, connecting people and businesses to more than 127 non-stop destinations worldwide. In 2016, YVR received CAPA Centre for Aviation’s prestigious Airport of the Year Award and was voted Best Airport in North America for the eighth consecutive year in the Skytrax World Airport Awards in 2017. Vancouver Airport Authority is a dedicated community partner and in 2016 donated more than $1,000,000 to local organizations. We are committed to creating an airport that British Columbia can be proud of: a premier global gateway, local economic generator and community contributor. For more information, please visit www.yvr.ca.

For further information:     

YVR Media Relations

604.880.9815; [email protected]            Twitter: @yvrairport

Innovative Travel Solutions

www.yvr.ca/inv  

[email protected]

Customs Duty Payment Kiosks Now EMV Kiosks

Customs Duty Payment Kiosks Upgraded to EMV While Passing Ten-Year Milestone

November 14, 2017 – YORK, PA.  Bermudians love to travel and shop, in fact Bermuda residents are among the most traveled populations in the world.  In 2006, Bermuda’s H.M. Customs authority recognized the need to help speed travelers through the arduous task of completing a declarations form and paying duty tax.  HSBC, the world’s largest bank, and their Bermuda branch saw the opportunity to help the local government and commissioned Livewire Digital to create new self-service terminals to electronically calculate and pay for the duty tax assessed on purchases made abroad.

Since going live in May of 2007, over 100,000 travelers have used the kiosks annually to complete the declarations process and pay their duty tax via credit card.  The kiosks have undergone several minor hardware and software upgrades throughout the past ten years, although the most significant upgrade for security purposes has just been completed.  When EMV payment technology became readily available for the self-service market in 2016, HSBC and Livewire began the planning process to update the outdated card swipe equipment with new EMV-based processing that offers point-to-point encryption of card data and secure chip-and-pin security to card holders.  The duty payment kiosks now feature Ingenico smart terminals to allow payment via card swipe with signature, chip and pin entry, and NFC/contactless reading.  Livewire’s payment gateway partner, FreedomPay, provides the PCI certified process that ensures complete security of HSBC’s customers’ payment card information from the point of data entry to the card processor’s servers.

“It’s great to see systems such as this evolve to continually improve security and the customer experience” said David McCracken, Livewire Digital’s President and CEO.  “It’s hard to imagine that these kiosks have been in place for over ten years now and required very little TLC throughout that time span.  I believe that points back to the robustness of the original process that HSBC and Livewire designed together, as well as the self-service hardware and software expertise that Livewire has built over the past twenty years.”

About Livewire Digital

livewire digital Livewire is a leading provider of transactional self-service payment kiosks. Livewire’s many turnkey solutions increase revenue and productivity for its customers, while lowering overhead and providing seamless integration. Livewire provides cutting-edge software, hardware, and system integration, bringing the necessary puzzle pieces together to increase customer engagement and create a better end-user experience. LivewireDigital.com

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Executing Tablet Deployments – Step 1

Editors note: This is excerpt from white paper series on Executing Tablet Deployments – Step 1

Deploying Tablets Step 1 — Establishing Project Goals

The use of self-service kiosks continues to expand in nearly every part of our society. A March 2017 report issued by research firm Stratistics MRC predicted that the global kiosk market will reach $88.3 billion by 2022, up from $46 billion predicted in 2015.

tablet deployment

Click for Full Size Image

1. What do you want to achieve?
If you’re a restaurant operator, do you plan to add self-order kiosks to speed throughput and improve the guest experience?

For a retailer, maybe the plan is to expand a store’s offering by incorporating an “endless aisle” kiosk where customers can order items not in the physical inventory and have them shipped to their home—increasing sales in the process.

2. How will you measure ROI?
Although it may seem simple on the surface, measuring the
return on investment from a kiosk deployment can be a
complicated affair. Having a way to calculate ROI can help a
business determine whether a kiosk is worthwhile or if that
investment is best left in the bank.

Factors to consider when calculating a kiosk’s costs should
include the initial equipment and setup costs, staff training,
software development and infrastructure support. For a
self-order or transactional kiosk, those figures would be
compared with the additional profits from increased sales
and lowered labor costs.

3. What is your definition of success?
Once a method for calculating ROI is determined, establishing goals for metrics such as increased sales, reductions in labor costs and improvements in guest satisfaction scores is critical for determining if a kiosk deployment is a success.

Full Article PDF

For more information contact Lilitab

Meet Birdcall – A Futuristic Chicken Sandwich Shop Open Now in Five Points

Self-Order Kiosk by Birdcall

Denver’s newest fried chicken sandwich spot opened in Five Points last night. Birdcall is the latest from the Park Burger team, led by Jean-Phillipe Failyau and Peter Newlin. It is the first …

Source: 303magazine.com

New Birdcall restaurant opening up

Excerpt: Birdcall, a contemporary take on a retro chicken restaurant is the third restaurant concept and venture for the group that is lead by chef Jean-Philippe Failyau along with his partner Peter Newlin. The first location opened its doors in August at 800 E. 26th Avenue in Denver. Known by Failyau and Newlin and the staff as smart hospitality, their goal is to revolutionize the way restaurants take care of their guests. Starting immediately, customers witness the birdcall experience by ordering from custom designed kiosks. Built from the ground up, Newlin and his team have developed their very own user-friendly, customer facing, POS system that allows the guest to feel completely immersed in the brand experience from start to finish.

When Birdcall opens in the spring, a manager who plays much more Apple Store genius than restaurant maitre d’ will oversee the staff-free dining room set where Tom’s Home Cookin’ operated for 17 years. The team behind the upcoming fried chicken sandwich spot, who also owns the Park Burger mini chain and two locations of Homegrown Tap & Dough, has a modern goal in mind: Using technology to be able to serve quality food at an affordable price.

Birdcall will be a modern fast-casual restaurant where design and a high-quality food program will aim to be the core of the new age restaurant experience. There will be affordable (think $5) all-natural Colorado-raised chicken sandwiches, a variety of them that includes Cordon Bleu, Nashville Hot, Kimchi, plus all sorts of flavors of hash browns, and plenty of beverages, alcoholic and not.

Instead of sitting down and ordering from a server or going up to a counter to do the same, guests will walk up to a high-tech kiosk developed uniquely for Birdcall and enter what they want. The software will be able to retain customer information so that next time a guest comes a swipe of a card will automatically pull up previous orders, which can be duplicated, or a menu of favorites, which one can choose from skipping the larger menu. Here’s what to expect:

Here is Feb article that shows main area + wireframe of kiosk

Colorado Motor Vehicle Self-Service Kiosks Expanding to Additional Counties

Eleven new counties are receiving easy to use Colorado MV Express kiosks, beginning August 2017.  

Source: www.webwire.com

The Colorado MV Express self-service kiosk program was piloted in Arapahoe County beginning in February of 2017. Arapahoe County residents have processed over 12,000 kiosk transactions since the program began.     , , , , Tremendous customer acceptance in Arapahoe County resulted in the expansion of MV Express Kiosks into the following Colorado counties: , , , , , , • Adams County  

Kiosk Software – KioWare Europe & UK presence.

Kiosk Software Europe

 KioWare Kiosk Software for Android and Windows Now Has UK Office Reading, United Kingdom March 16, 2015 – Analytical Design Solutions Inc. (ADSI) dba KioWare, headquartered in York, Pennsylvania, …

Reading, United Kingdom – Analytical Design Solutions Inc. (ADSI) dba KioWare, headquartered in York, Pennsylvania, has a new office location based just outside of London offering sales and service for current and prospective EMEA clients.

Joining the KioWare team & managing the KioWare Europe branch is long time kiosk industry leader & Netshift founder, Nigel Seed.  According to Seed, “KioWare’s expanding reach provides a local presence for EMEA clients interested in KioWare’s reliable & simple lockdown solution.  Of particular value is KioWare’s Android lockdown product line in the face of the growing market for customer facing Android tablets.”

The integration of Netshift’s customer base also highlights KioWare’s commitment to serving EMEA clients.  KioWare will provide Netshift customers with bridging technology to transition to KioWare Kiosk System Software.

Offering UK-based technical support & expertise will be Sascha Markham.  Markham offers many years of experience in developing & designing custom facing websites & applications specifically intended for self-service deployment.  KioWare President Jim Kruper believes, “with the addition of Nigel Seed & Sascha Markham, and the new Reading UK location, KioWare gains regional expertise and a dedicated local presence, highlighting our commitment to supporting KioWare’s valued EMEA clients.”

Clients may continue to reach out to support at +1 717 843 4790 Monday – Friday from 8 am – 6 pm East Coast time or contact International support at +44 (0) 118 976 6404 during the hours of 9 am and 5 pm London time.

All KioWare products can be used to secure mobile devices such as tablets, desktops, and smartphones running Android or Windows Operating Systems.  KioWare kiosk software products lock down your device into kiosk mode, which secures the overall operating system, home screen and usage of applications.  KioWare offers Lite, Basic, & Full products with such features as external device integration, monitoring of kiosk health, kiosk usage statistics  & remote kiosk management.

Press Release on KioWare website — http://www.sitekiosk.com/news.aspx?nid=235

 


 

All KioWare products are available as a free trial with nag screen here.  Existing clients have the ability to upgrade here.  KioWare has been providing OS, desktop, and browser lockdown security for the kiosk and self-service industry since 2001.

About KioWare:
KioWare kiosk software secures your application or website on Windows or Android devices, restricting user access to approved behaviors and protecting user and network data.  KioWare is fully customizable and offers solutions ranging from browser lockdown to full server-based kiosk management.  From simple out of the box configurations to more complex integrations, KioWare is trusted by developers, IT professionals, marketers, Fortune 100 corporations, and small business owners. The KioWare team is based in York, Pennsylvania, with an office located in Reading, UK.  Choose the best KioWare product for your self-service project and download a fully functioning free trial at KioWare.com.

Contact:
Laura Miller
KioWare Kiosk Software
Analytical Design Solutions, Inc.
+1 717 843-4790 x220
[email protected]
http://www.sitekiosk.com

3D Print Kiosk – How Businesses Are Successfully Using 3D Printing

3D Print Kiosk  News

Article excerpt from Business News Daily on 3D printers 3D Print Kiosk includes quote from Frank Olea of Olea Kiosks

Industrial grade 3D printers are still expensive, and many small business owners are unsure of what the technology can do for them. Most viral videos and articles that depict 3D printing showcase extreme cases that are years away from being realistically accessible for most small companies, such as 3D printing houses and cars.

One of the most common uses for 3D printing is prototyping, so it’s no surprise that many of the entrepreneurs we spoke to use their printers to make prototypes in-house, either for themselves or for external clients.

Frank Olea is the CEO and owner of Olea Kiosks. His company uses 3D printing to help clients visualize the custom kiosks Olea’s company makes. For Olea Kiosks, 3D printing prototypes is a vital part of the sales process and the design process. Olea explained, “Without a doubt, the design phase of a kiosk is the most sensitive. Drawings and other illustrations convey a meaningful representation of a concept for a custom kiosk, but 3D printing gives our clients something they can feel … We love it. Our clients love it.” Without in-house prototyping, Olea’s company would have to contract out the work, and the wait time between contracting and receiving a prototype would likely be too long for his clients. In his business, lost time translates into a lost sale.

Read the complete article on Business News Daily

More Information

Kiosk Software – KioWare announces Europe & UK presence.

 KioWare Kiosk Software for Android and Windows Now Has UK Office

Reading, United Kingdom March 16, 2015 – Analytical Design Solutions Inc. (ADSI) dba KioWare, headquartered in York, Pennsylvania, has a new office location based just outside of London offering sales and service for current and prospective EMEA clients.

Joining the KioWare team & managing the KioWare Europe branch is long time kiosk industry leader & Netshift founder, Nigel Seed.  According to Seed, “KioWare’s expanding reach provides a local presence for EMEA clients interested in KioWare’s reliable & simple lockdown solution.  Of particular value is KioWare’s Android lockdown product line in the face of the growing market for customer facing Android tablets.”

KioWare President Jim Kruper believes, “with the addition of Nigel Seed & Sascha Markham, and the new Reading UK location, KioWare gains regional expertise and a dedicated local presence, highlighting our commitment to supporting KioWare’s valued EMEA clients.”

More Information

All KioWare products are available as a free trial with nag screen here.  Existing clients have the ability to upgrade here.  KioWare has been providing OS, desktop, and browser lockdown security for the kiosk and self-service industry since 2001.

About KioWare:
KioWare kiosk software secures your application or website on Windows or Android devices, restricting user access to approved behaviors and protecting user and network data.  KioWare is fully customizable and offers solutions ranging from browser lockdown to full server-based kiosk management.  From simple out of the box configurations to more complex integrations, KioWare is trusted by developers, IT professionals, marketers, Fortune 100 corporations, and small business owners. The KioWare team is based in York, Pennsylvania, with an office located in Reading, UK.  Choose the best KioWare product for your self-service project and download a fully functioning free trial at KioWare.com.

Contact:
Laura Miller
KioWare Kiosk Software
Analytical Design Solutions, Inc.
+1 717 843-4790 x220
[email protected]
http://www.sitekiosk.com

Kiosk Malware Avanti – PoS malware hits food kiosks, steals payment

 

PoS malware have recently been found in the payment kiosks by US-based vendor Avanti, stealing payment card and biometric information.

Source: www.helpnetsecurity.com

Avanti published an incident report

Krebs did a nice article on it as well.

WHAT HAPPENED?

The technology and back-end platform that we use to facilitate a 24-hour, self-service marketplace for customers is supported by our technical team and it is serviced and maintained by a network of operators around the country. We believe that sometime shortly before July 4, 2017, the workstation of one of the third party vendor’s employees became infected with a sophisticated and malicious malware attack, although our investigation has not enabled us to determine the precise nature of the attack. The malware wound up affecting some kiosks.  Within hours of learning of this incident on July 4, 2017, we worked with our vendor to remove the malicious code associated with the malware attack and preliminary testing indicates these efforts prohibited further persistent activity by the malware.

WAS MY INFORMATION ACCESSED?

We are currently conducting an extensive IT forensic investigation to determine the extent of the attack, including which kiosks were affected. We have determined at this point that the attack was not successful on all kiosks and many kiosks have not been adversely affected. Additionally, based on our investigation at this time, it appears this malware was only active beginning on July 2, 2017.  Accordingly, if you did not utilize a kiosk between July 2, 2017 and July 4, 2017, you were likely not affected by this attack.

WHAT INFORMATION WAS COMPROMISED?

As you know, the kiosks do not collect certain data elements (such as Social Security Number, date of birth, or federal or state identification number) from customers.  Accordingly, those elements of personal information were not subject to compromise.

However, for customers that used a payment card to complete a purchase on an infected kiosk, the malware may have compromised cardholder first and last name, credit/debit card number and expiration date. In an abundance of caution, our original notice advised customers who used their Market Card to make payment that they may have had their names and email addresses compromised, as well as their biometric information if they used the kiosk’s biometric verification functionality.  We are happy to report that we are now able to confirm all kiosk fingerprint readers supplied by Avanti include end-to-end encryption on such biometric data and as such this biometric data would not be subject to this incident as it is encrypted.

WAS BIOMETRIC DATA COMPROMISED?

No.  In an abundance of caution, our original notice advised customers who used their Market Card and the kiosk’s biometric verification functionality may have had their biometric data compromised.   We are happy to report that we are now able to confirm all kiosk fingerprint readers supplied by Avanti include end-to-end encryption on such biometric data and as such this biometric data would not be subject to this incident as it is encrypted.

DID THIS ATTACK AFFECT ALL KIOSKS? 

No. In May 2017, we began working with our operators to roll out an end-to-end encryption solution to all kiosks. At the time of the incident, the solution had been installed in more than 50% of kiosks. The payment card information on these kiosks was not affected.  At this stage, we have determined the attack was not successful on all kiosks and many kiosks have not been adversely affected at all.  We believe approximately 1,900 kiosks have been affected, a fraction of the total kiosks in use.  

HOW DO I KNOW IF THE KIOSK AT MY LOCATION OR THE KIOSK I REGULARLY USE WAS AFFECTED?

As part of our remediation efforts, we have shut down payment card processing at affected kiosk locations.  If your kiosk’s payment card processing has been disabled or “temporarily unavailable” it is likely that your kiosk was affected by this attack. Please note that even if you used an affected kiosk, that does not mean that your personal information was compromised or infiltrated.

WHAT IS BEING DONE TO PROTECT ME?  

We have been working nonstop to address this incident, remediate the attack and mitigate harm.  Immediately upon discovering that our third party vendor was the victim of a malware attack, we worked with our technical team to commence an investigation to determine the scope of this incident and attempt to identify those affected, which included retaining a nationally recognized forensic investigation firm.  We worked with our assembled internal response team and took steps to secure our information systems, including shutting down payment card processing at kiosk locations we believe have been affected.  Within hours of learning of this incident, we worked with our technical team to remove the malicious code associated with the malware attack and preliminary testing indicates these efforts prohibited any further improper access.  We also are continuing to work with our technical team and our operators to purge affected systems of any malware from the attack and taking steps to substantially minimize the risk of a data compromise in the future.

Within only a few days after our discovering the incident, we published detailed information to help affected individuals learn about steps they could take to safeguard their personal information and protect against identity theft. We also developed these FAQs to provide additional information and assist you with gathering information about the incident as well as additional steps you can take to protect yourself.   Finally, we have made available credit monitoring services at no cost to those individuals whose personal information has been compromised. Specifically, we have partnered with Equifax® to provide its Credit WatchTM Silver identity theft protection product for one year at no charge to you. If you choose to take advantage of this product, it will provide you with a notification of any changes to your credit information, up to $25,000 Identity Theft Insurance Coverage and access to your credit report. To enroll, you must first call 800-224-8040 to obtain an authorization code and then follow the enrollment instructions that are located here. You must complete the enrollment process by October 9, 2017. We encourage you to enroll in that service.

WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS ATTACK?

We are working with our IT forensic investigators and law enforcement in an effort to determine those responsible.  At this time, the responsible party or parties have not been identified.

I AM UPSET MY INFORMATION MAY BE SUBJECT TO THIS ATTACK.

We understand.  We apologize for any inconvenience this incident may cause you and assure you were are doing everything we can to help.  We have been working nonstop to address this incident, remediate the attack and mitigate harm.  Immediately upon discovering that our third party vendor was the victim of a malware attack, we commenced an investigation to determine the scope of this incident and attempt to identify those affected, which included retaining a nationally recognized forensic investigation firm.  We worked with our assembled internal response team and took steps to secure our information systems, including shutting down payment card processing at kiosk locations we believe have been affected.  We also are working with our technical team and our operators to purge affected systems of any malware from the attack and taking steps to substantially minimize the risk of a data compromise in the future.

Within only a few days after our discovering the incident, we published detailed information to help affected individuals learn about steps they could take to safeguard their personal information and protect against identity theft. We also developed these FAQs to provide additional information and assist you with gathering information about the incident as well as additional steps you can take to protect yourself. Finally, we have made available credit monitoring services at no cost to those individuals whose personal information has been compromised. Specifically, we have partnered with Equifax® to provide its Credit WatchTM Silver identity theft protection product for one year at no charge to you. If you choose to take advantage of this product, it will provide you with a notification of any changes to your credit information, up to $25,000 Identity Theft Insurance Coverage and access to your credit report. To enroll, you must first call 800-224-8040 to obtain an authorization code and then follow the enrollment instructions that are located here. You must complete the enrollment process by October 9, 2017. We encourage you to enroll in that service.

ARE THE PEOPLE WHOSE DATA MAY HAVE BEEN COMPROMISED AT RISK FOR IDENTITY THEFT?

Any person who has personal information compromised does have an increased risk of identity theft.  We are taking a number of steps to help you minimize the chance of identity theft. This includes enrolling in the credit monitoring service as described above.

HOW MANY INDIVIDUALS WERE AFFECTED BY THE DATA INCIDENT?

This incident affected a limited number of kiosks and as such did not affect all customers.  We are working with our IT forensic investigators to determine those who have been affected. At this time, the total number of affected individuals has not been determined.

SHOULD I BE CALLING MY BANK AND CLOSING MY ACCOUNT? SHOULD I BE CANCELING MY CREDIT CARDS?

Of course, you can take these steps if you feel more comfortable.  But, you do not have to close your bank and credit card accounts. Be sure, though, to monitor your bank and credit card statements for accuracy. If you notice any suspicious activity or you believe your information is being misused, please file a report with your local police department and the Federal Trade Commission. You can also enroll in the credit monitoring service as described above.

IS MY SPOUSE/DEPENDENT AFFECTED? 

We have no information at this point to suggest that the information of your spouse/child/dependent has been affected by this incident.   Please note if they also utilized a payment card at a kiosk between July 2, 2017 and July 4, 2017 they also likely were affected by this incident.

WHEN DID THIS EVENT OCCUR?

We discovered the incident on July 4, 2017.  At this stage of our investigation, it appears the malicious malware attack began on July 2, 2017.

WHY DIDN’T YOU TELL ME SOONER?

We believe we acted very quickly to make information available to you following our discovery on July 4, 2017. Our initial website posting was published three (3) days later. These comprehensive FAQs were added a few days after that. However, we have been conducting an extensive internal investigation to understand what happened and what information may have been compromised. This includes coordinating with our technical team, as well our operators. In addition, we needed to retain an IT forensic investigation expert and prepare a process for responding to your follow-up inquiries.

WHAT CAN I DO ON MY OWN TO ADDRESS THIS SITUATION?

There are a number of steps you can take, many of which were detailed in the Customer Notification These include placing a fraud alert with the credit bureaus, reviewing your financial statements, and signing up for credit monitoring.

I RECEIVED AN EMAIL FROM AVANTI REGARDING THIS INCIDENT.  IS THIS LEGITIMATE?

In limited instances, we will endeavor to provide notification to potentially affected individuals via email (if we have a valid email address), as well as responding to emails you may have initiated with us.  However, you should be aware of scam email campaigns related to this incident.  These scams, designed to capture personal information (known as “phishing”) are designed to appear as if they are from Avanti and the emails may include a “click here” link or ask you to “open” an attachment.  These emails are NOT from us.

  • DO NOT click on any links in email.
  • DO NOT reply to the email or reach out to the senders in any way.
  • DO NOT supply any information on the website that may open, If you have clicked on a link in email.
  • DO NOT open any attachments that arrive with email.

Individuals who have provided e-mails to us may receive an e-mail directing them to visit our website for additional information and/or to sign up for credit monitoring.  Any such email will not include attachments, embedded links, or in any way ask for personal information.

I RECEIVED A CALL FROM AVANTI REGARDING THIS INCIDENT AND ASKING FOR MY INFORMATION.  IS THIS LEGITIMATE?

No.  We are NOT calling individuals regarding this incident and are not asking for any of your personal information over the phone.

ORGANIZATION RELATED

HOW CAN I BE SURE THAT MY PERSONAL DATA WON’T BE SUBJECT TO ATTACK AGAIN IN THE FUTURE?

We are doing everything we can to ensure there is no further vulnerability to the kiosks.  In May 2017, before the incident occurred, we began working with our technical team and our operators to roll out an end-to-end encryption solution to all kiosks. At the time of the incident, the solution had been installed in more than 50% of kiosks.

We presently are working with a nationally recognized IT forensic investigation firm to investigate this attack and identify additional safeguards which may be utilized to secure data.  We comply with federal and state privacy laws and work hard to maintain your personal data in a safe and secure environment. This includes redoubling our efforts to expedite the rollout of our end-to-end encryption solution to all kiosks. Additionally, within hours of learning of this incident, we worked with our technical team to remove the malicious code associated with the malware attack and preliminary testing indicates these efforts prohibited any further improper access. We also have been updating all Antivirus Protocols and SW patching, and are continually scanning sample kiosks across the network for anomalies with no positive response.  We take data privacy and security very seriously and are continuing to assess and modify our privacy and data security policies and procedures to prevent similar situations from occurring.  However, no set of safeguards is perfect or impenetrable. 

WHY DO KIOSKS HAVE MY INFORMATION?

It is necessary for the kiosks to have certain data from customers as part of the point of sale process. However, we continually work to minimize, to the extent possible, the amount of personal information that needs to be collected and maintained. For instance, in May 2017, before the incident occurred, we began working with our technical team and our operators to roll out an end-to-end encryption solution to all kiosks. At the time of the incident, the solution had been installed in more than 50% of kiosks. This solution would eliminate the storage of payment card data on the kiosks

I AM CONCERNED ABOUT IDENTITY THEFT – WHAT CAN I DO?

There are a variety of steps you can take, many of which are detailed in the Customer Notification and in the FAQs below.  These include placing a fraud alert with the credit bureaus, reviewing your financial statements, and signing up for credit monitoring.

IS AVANTI DOING ANYTHING TO HELP ME?

Avanti has endeavored to provide notice of this attack as soon as possible.  In addition, we

  • are making available to you at no cost a credit monitoring service which is described above in the FAQs below.
  • have taken steps to ensure that our electronic systems continue to be secure,
  • have notified various third party consultants, IT forensic investigators, and legal counsel to mitigate any possible harm to the extent reasonably possible,
  • have notified applicable law enforcement agencies,
  • will continue to assess and modify our privacy and data security policies and procedures to prevent similar situations from occurring, including redoubling our efforts to ensure our third party service providers maintain adequate data security.

WAS MY HOME ADDRESS INCLUDED WITH THE INFORMATION AND AM I IN ANY DANGER OF BEING ROBBED?

Your home address information was not included. For perspective, your address is likely available through many other sources of public records and is not generally considered sensitive personal information by itself.

IF MY IDENTITY IS STOLEN, OR IF I AM SUBJECT TO AN INCIDENT OF PAYMENT CARD FRAUD, WILL YOU NOTIFY ME WHEN IT HAPPENS?

By checking your credit report and ensuring you have placed a fraud alert to the three major credit bureaus you are taking the steps to limit your risk of becoming a victim of identity theft.  By being proactive with receiving timely credit reports, monitoring your bank and credit card statements, you will be able to notice any inaccuracies as they occur.  In addition, the credit monitoring service we will be making available is designed to alert you to irregularities concerning your credit. We will not have access to this information.

IDENTITY THEFT-GENERAL

WHAT IS IDENTITY THEFT?

Identity theft is the taking of the victim’s identity to obtain credit, credit cards from banks and retailers, steal money from existing accounts, apply for loans, rent an apartment, file bankruptcy or obtain medical services.  Often the victim does not become aware of the crime until months or years after the theft occurs.

WHAT DO I DO NOW? WHAT CAN I DO TO PROTECT MYSELF? HOW DO I FILE A FRAUD ALERT AND GET A COPY OF MY CREDIT REPORT? WHAT ABOUT A SECURITY FREEZE?

There are some simple steps you can take to protect yourself against identity theft or other fraudulent misuses of information about you. Notably, watch for any unusual activity on your credit card accounts or suspicious items on your bills. You may wish to contact your credit card issuers and inform them of what has taken place. You may also wish to do the following:

  • Enroll in the credit monitoring service we are making available to you at no cost.
  • Under federal law, you are entitled to one free copy every 12 months of your credit report from each of the three major credit reporting companies. You may obtain a free copy of your credit report by going on the Internet to AnnualCreditReport.com or by calling 1-877-FACTACT (1-877-322-8228). If you would rather write, a request form is available on www.AnnualCreditReport.com. You may want to obtain copies of your credit reports to ensure the accuracy of the report information.
  • When you receive your credit reports, look them over carefully. Look for accounts that you did not open or inquiries from creditors that you did not initiate. Look for personal information that is not accurate. Even if you do not find suspicious activity on your initial credit reports, it is recommended that you check your credit reports every three months for the next year. Checking your reports periodically can help you spot problems and address them.
  • To further protect yourself, you may contact the fraud departments of the three major credit reporting companies. They will discuss your options with you. You have the right to ask that these companies place ”fraud alerts” in your file. A fraud alert can make it more difficult for someone to get credit in your name because it tells creditors to follow certain procedures to protect you. It also may delay your ability to obtain credit. You may place a fraud alert in your file by calling just one of the three nationwide credit reporting companies. As soon as that company processes your fraud alert, it will notify the other two credit reporting companies, which must then also place fraud alerts in your file. Contact information for the three major credit reporting companies is provided in the Customer Notification. 
  • Remove your name from mailing lists of pre-approved offers of credit for approximately six months by visiting www.optoutprescreen.com.;
  • Review all of your bank account statements frequently for checks, purchases or deductions not made by you;
  • If you suspect or know that you are the victim of identity theft, you should contact local police and you also can report this to the Fraud Department of the FTC;
  • To place a security freeze on your credit report, you will need to call all three credit bureaus (information listed below). Charges to place and/or remove a security freeze vary by state and credit agency.  To place a security freeze, contact:
  • Equifax 1-800-685-1111

https://www.freeze.equifax.com/Freeze/jsp/SFF_PersonalIDInfo.jsp

  • Experian 1-888-397-3742

http://www.experian.com/consumer/security_freeze.html

  • TransUnion 1-800-680-7289

http://www.transunion.com/personal-credit/credit-disputes/credit-freezes.page

WHAT SHOULD I DO IF I NOTICE ANY SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY ON MY CREDIT REPORT OR MY BANK/CREDIT CARD STATEMENTS?

There are a few steps you must take. Call one of the 3 credit bureaus to:

  • Declare yourself an identity theft victim
  • Request a free credit report
  • Ask that a fraud alert be placed on your credit file
  • And, ask that bureau to contact the remaining 2 credit bureaus to request fraud alerts on your file.
  • Contact for the three major credit reporting companies is provided in the Customer Notification. 

While you may experience wait times of similar difficulties when contacting the credit bureaus, be persistent and begin monitoring your financial statements and contacting the institutions with suspected fraudulent activities.  You may want to visit each of the credit bureau’s websites to place fraud alerts on your accounts, but we recommend calling the toll-free number.

Second, filing a complaint with the police is required by many institutions to prove that your identity was stolen.  After filing the complaint, you should ask for a copy of the police report because you will need to attach this report to all written correspondence sent in your effort to resolve any fraudulent activities. Be polite, but persistent with the police because in many areas they are understaffed to deal efficiently with your identity theft.

WHAT SHOULD I DO IF THE LOCAL POLICE WILL NOT TAKE A REPORT FROM ME?

There are efforts at the federal, state and local level to ensure that local law enforcement agencies understand identity theft, its impact on victims, and the importance of taking a police report. However, we still hear that some departments are not taking reports. The following tips may help you to get a report if you’re having difficulties:

  • Furnish as much documentation as you can to prove your case. Debt collection
    letters, credit reports, and other evidence of fraudulent activity can help demonstrate the seriousness of your case.
  • Be persistent if local authorities tell you that they can’t take a report. Stress the
    importance of a police report; many creditors require one to resolve your dispute.
    Remind them that credit bureaus will automatically block the fraudulent accounts
    and bad debts from appearing on your credit report, but only if you can give them
    a copy of the police report.
  • If you’re told that identity theft is not a crime under your state law, ask to file a
    Miscellaneous Incident Report instead.
  • If you can’t get the local police to take a report, try your county police. If that
    doesn’t work, try your state police.
  • Some states require the police to take reports for identity theft. Check with the
    office of your State Attorney General to find out if your state has this law.LINK TO ALL STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL OFFICES:

http://www.privacycouncil.com/id_theft_resources.php

WHAT ARE TYPICAL THINGS THAT AN IDENTITY THIEF WOULD DO?

Identity thieves have been known to take a victim’s identity to obtain credit, credit cards from banks and retailers, steal money from existing accounts, apply for loans, rent an apartment, file bankruptcy or obtain medical services.

WHAT IS A FRAUD ALERT AND HOW LONG DOES IT LAST?

A Fraud Alert is a flag that the credit reporting agencies put in your file to instruct creditors to take extra precautions, such as additional verification of your identity when opening accounts or issuing credit.  An initial fraud alert lasts 90 days.   An extended alert lasts for 7 years.

 WHY SHOULD I SET A FRAUD ALERT WITH THE CREDIT BUREAUS?

This will prevent someone from opening new accounts in your name. As soon as one credit bureau confirms your fraud alert, the others are notified to place fraud alerts as well. All three bureaus will place a message on your report that tells creditors to call you before opening any new accounts.

You will not be charged for this service. Please note, placing a fraud alert may delay your ability to open new lines of credit quickly. You should notify any new creditors with whom you have applied that you have a fraud alert placed.

WHEN A FRAUD ALERT HAS BEEN SET, WILL IT TRIGGER AN AUTOMATIC MAILING OF A CREDIT REPORT?

It is recommended that you request your free credit reports before setting a fraud alert.  If you do not, about one week after setting the fraud alert, you will receive confirmation letters from the credit bureaus. These letters will explain that you have to call each bureau and order your free report. They will provide the phone numbers you need to call.  Once you call and order, your report should arrive within 2 weeks in a plain, unmarked envelope. Be sure to examine it carefully.  You are entitled to one free copy for every 90 day alert period.

I ALREADY PLACED FRAUD ALERTS. CAN I PLACE THEM AGAIN?

The fraud alerts last 90 days and the system will let you know the alerts are already in place if you try to place them again before they expire. There is no penalty for doing this. You will NOT be notified when fraud alerts expire, so note the date and you can place them every 90 days for as long as you wish.

CREDIT REPORTS

HOW DO I GET A FREE COPY OF MY CREDIT REPORT?

Under federal law, you are entitled to one free copy of your credit report every twelve months from each of the three major credit reporting companies. You may obtain a free copy of your credit report by going on the internet to www.AnnualCreditReport.com or by calling 1-877-FACTACT (1-877-322-8228). If you would rather write, a request form is available on www.AnnualCreditReport.com. You may want to obtain copies of your credit reports to ensure the accuracy of the report information.

 WHAT DO I DO IF THERE IS INFORMATION ON MY CREDIT REPORT THAT IS OLD/INACCURATE?

Very often, a credit report will contain information that is a result of human error (typos, reporting errors or inaccuracies, outdated information). Sometimes, even social security number variations can appear. This is usually not identity theft, and it is up to the individual to dispute the incorrect information with the credit bureaus. Call the number provided on your report.

However, if you discover this information along with other evidence of fraud (new accounts, collections accounts that aren’t yours, etc.), you may be a victim of identity theft. It is best to begin by contacting the bureau to find out why/how the information is being reported. You can begin disputes with them. (See other FAQs below to get answers about disputing fraudulent accounts)

WHAT SHOULD I LOOK FOR ON A CREDIT REPORT TO INDICATE IDENTITY THEFT?

Accounts

Look for accounts you didn’t open and unexplained debts or authorized users that you didn’t authorize on your legitimate accounts.

Personal Information

Check to see if your personal information (your SSN; address(es); name and any
variations, including initials, Jr., Sr., etc.; telephone number(s); and employers) are correct. Inaccuracies in this information may also be due to typographical errors. If you believe that the inaccuracies are due to error, you should notify the credit bureaus by telephone and/or in writing to dispute the information.

Inquiries

Inquiries on credit reports from potential credit card issuers do not always mean that someone has tried to get credit in your name. Banks and credit card companies often inquire about a consumer’s creditworthiness to help them target their marketing efforts.

These inquiries will be identified in a designated section of the report and are described as “Inquiries that are viewed by others and don’t affect your credit score.” If you would not like your information to be used in this way, you can call 1-800-5 OPT OUT (1-800- 567-8688). You are automatically opted-out of data sharing when you place fraud alerts.

Inquiries that are described as displaying to others and affecting your credit score are the ones you need to be concerned with—these appear when someone has applied for credit in your name.

GENERAL CREDIT MONITORING QUESTIONS 

I KEEP SEEING “CREDIT MONITORING” OFFERED ON THE BUREAU’S WEBSITES. WHAT IS CREDIT MONITORING?

Monitoring your credit reports regularly is a helpful way to detect and prevent fraud. Credit monitoring assists you with this process. Each of the bureaus offers some kind of credit monitoring service that you can purchase. Remember, we will be making credit monitoring available to you at no cost. The enrollment process in described in the Customer Notification on the website.  The options are usually to monitor only one of your reports or all three. Some other Internet companies and financial institutions offer a monitoring service as well. We suggest you research the service and the company very well before purchasing the monitoring to ensure it is a reliable product.

The way monitoring works is that every week, you are informed of any changes to your credit report. You’ll be alerted to what’s happening with your credit by knowing about the following changes (all of which could indicate fraud):

  • New inquiries
  • New accounts opened in your name
  • Late payments
  • Improvements in your report
  • Bankruptcies and other public records
  • New addresses
  • New employers

SHOULD I BUY CREDIT MONITORING?

That is a decision that we recommend each person make for herself/himself. Please note, however, Avanti is making available a monitoring service for you at no cost. The enrollment process in described in the Customer Notification on the website.

CAN YOU ENROLL ME IN CREDIT MONITORING?

No, we cannot. This is something you will have to do individually.

IF I CHOOSE TO PURCHASE CREDIT MONITORING AND REPAIR SERVICES, WILL YOU REIMBURSE ME?

No.  We will be contracting with a trusted vendor to provide monitoring services at no cost to you and will not reimburse for services that may have been independently purchased.

Kiosk Software – KioCall video conference software

KioCall

KioCall Video conference kiosk software

KioWare has added a new video conference kiosk product called KioCall that works with KioWare for Windows to add video conferencing to a kiosk.

Video conferencing (via externally run applications) has been available in the past but never has it been so simple to implement and cost effective to run.

KioCall

Example KioCall video call window. Click for full size

KioWare has also released a new version of KioWare for Windows (version 8.9) with support for KioCall, and the addition of a few new supported devices.

From Jim Kruper President of KioWare, “KioCall is a game changer for adding video conferencing capabilities to your kiosk. With KioCall, video conferencing is reliable and robust while also extremely inexpensive and requires trivial effort to add to your device.”

About KioWare:

KioWare kiosk software secures your application or website on Windows or Android devices, restricting user access to approved behaviors and protecting user and network data.

KioWare is fully customizable and offers solutions ranging from browser lockdown to full server-based kiosk management. From simple out of the box configurations to more complex integrations, KioWare is trusted by developers, IT professionals, marketers, Fortune 100 corporations, and small business owners. The KioWare team is based in York, Pennsylvania, with an office located in Reading, UK. Choose the best KioWare product for your self-service project and download a fully functioning free trial at KioWare.com.

Contact:

Laura Miller

KioWare Kiosk Software

Analytical Design Solutions, Inc.

+1 717 843-4790 x220

[email protected]

http://www.sitekiosk.com

Press Release PDF — PR KioWare Windows 8.9 – KioCall

Customer Survey Kiosks – Take a Survey and Win

Customer Survey Kiosks – Take a Survey!

“Take a Survey”  by Olea Kiosks (and Joseph Grove of Olea).  Also quotes and comments from DynaTouch!

Maybe Americans can blame Ed Koch.

Whether by online pop-up form, a receipt with a URL, or a strategically placed kiosk with a few questions on its mind, U.S. consumers are increasingly asked for their feedback when they conduct certain transactions.

Buy a taco? Please take a survey for a chance to win. Order a new bedspread online? Follow this link and tell us how it went. Nowadays, appeals for a review from your hotel are more common than mints on pillows. Even trips to the doctor, DMV and providers of other day-to-day services are chased by pleas that customers give them a thumbs-up or a thumbs-down.

Consumer Survey Kiosks Help Consumers Give Feedback

Consumer Survey Kiosks Help Consumers Give Feedback

As the former New York Mayor was fond of asking his citizens, “How am I doin’?”

Sure, it’s a good thing, this search by leaders for understanding of how their enterprise is performing in the minds of the people who matter most. Well conceived and executed consumer surveys can help executives not only identify and address immediate issues—a customer found something icky in a sandwich—but sniff out long-term trends or bigger-picture issues that may otherwise spell doom for the organization.

Fortunately, technology has enabled this understanding to come at a far lower cost than in the olden days, when surveys required expensive mail pieces, phone calls or face-to-face encounters to get results. Now, through the web, apps and kiosks, it’s more efficient than ever to get into the mind of customers, collect the data and proceed to make the indicated changes to the operation.

Terri McClelland, CEO of DynaTouch Interactive Technologies, puts it best: “If you can measure something, you can improve it.”


Inquiring Minds
A number of factors can influence the success of a project to collect and evaluate consumer opinions of recent transactions. Some include the number of questions, whether there are incentives to take the survey, and whether questions are leading respondents to one type of answer or another.

Just as important, however, is the means of conducting the survey itself. As mentioned, phone calls, mail and face-to-face can be prohibitively expensive. Comment cards are hard to track and can be tampered with by people with vested interests.

Even modern tools have drawbacks. Consider the most popular online option today, the receipt-website-code combination.

 

  • Will the employee delivering the receipt remember to point out the survey instructions?
  • Will the employee selectively choose whom to encourage? Happy, congenial customers may be directed more consistently than curmudgeonly ones, for example.
  • What is the likelihood that the customer will remember to take the survey? That the receipt will still be in his possession when he’s in front of his device?  That he’ll remember the experience accurately?

Those are just some of the reasons Vincent Brown, a self-service expert with DynaTouch, prefers kiosks for this application.

“In our experience, the advantage of a survey kiosk versus a web-based or online platform is convenience,” Brown said from his  San Antonio, Texas, office. “You are presenting the customer with a platform to give her feedback right there at the point of service.

Brown said that in his experience, after he leaves a business, he’s on to the rest of the day with little likelihood he’ll want to revisit that experience while sitting in front of his computer or using his tablet.

But do customers want to take the time when leaving a business to interact with a kiosk? Brown understands the skepticism but points to one of his clients to support the notion that yes, kiosks will collect more survey responses than other means.

A particular U.S. Government department had been using web-based and paper-based surveys to gather customer satisfaction scores, which had become increasingly important to higher-ups in D.C. In fact, department heads were graded by the number of surveys that were completed.  Wanting to improve their scores, officials turned to DynaTouch to provide survey kiosks.

Before the deployment, responses numbered in the hundreds a month. After the survey kiosks were installed, they numbered in the thousands.

Word is Catching On
Brown says DynaTouch is seeing significant growth in healthcare and government use of survey kiosks because those areas are under more pressure than ever to demonstrate quality service. One of the tenets of the Affordable Care Act ties Medicare reimbursement to higher patient satisfaction scores, and perhaps no customer-service debacle in recent memory has wrought more outrage than that experienced by Veterans at Veterans Administration medical facilities.

To improve matters, government agencies decided several years ago to model themselves more closely on traditional service organizations. Leaders determined to take better care of soldiers and veterans, on and off the post. Once they began evaluating their success, however, they saw great room for improvement.

“The genie was out of the bottle,” Brown said, “and the services to their soldiers and families really came under the spotlight. They began to clamor for how they could improve things and really wanted feedback from the soldiers.  So that’s when the military surveys really exploded.”

Brown pointed to another benefit of survey kiosks: immediacy. One retailer that closely monitored kiosk input registered a complaint from a customer. It was able to respond immediately, reaching out to the customer by email before she left the store in order to correct the problem.

Kiosk-based Consumer Survey
Olea Kiosks, which manufactures hardware for survey kiosks, offers several points and tips for potential deployers.

  1. While the initial capital outlay may be much higher than rolling out a web-based survey, the ROI potential is much higher, especially for organizations with multiple locations.
  2. A key metric can be found in the cost-to-complete ratio. While a web-based survey may offer a lower barrier to entry, eventually the cost-per-completed-survey advantage will begin to tighten toward survey kiosks.
  3. Also mitigating the disparity in costs is that survey kiosks require no paper, and time associates might spend entreating customers to take the web-based survey can be applied to upselling.
  4. Because of the immediacy of the feedback, responses are fresher in the customer’s mind.
  5. The ideal number of questions seems to be 10. Customers get bored or begin to feel frustrated if there are too many queries. Ask too few questions, however, and deployers can miss out on key data.

Frank Olea, CEO of Olea Kiosks, added that survey kiosks, like any public-facing kiosk, need to be built to take a fair amount of punishment. He recommends potential deployers take advantage of a free consultation with Olea Kiosks to gauge what a perfect hardware configuration might look like. QSRs and retailers, for example, might need more robust hardware than hospitals or government offices.
“Every business—even our own—lives or dies by what the customer thinks of us. Survey kiosks, when built properly and equipped with the right software, can offer a timely, critical peek into those critical minds,” Olea said.

Contact Olea Kiosks Today
If you are interested in finding out how Olea’s award-winning kiosks can benefit your business, contact Olea Kiosks today by email or by phone at 800-927-8063. Consultations and quotes are always fast and free, with no follow-up commitment expected.

 

 

Sneaker Kiosk Vending Contest

MALVERN, Pa.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–USA Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ:USAT) (“USAT”), a payment technology provider of cashless and mobile transactions in self-serve retail, today announced that Sneaker Syndicate, a high-end athletic shoe boutique in Orlando, Florida, has launched a series of self-serve amusement kiosks that allow consumers to win sneakers, which leverage USAT’s ePort Connect® cashless payment systems.

According to AnythingResearch, the amusement arcades market is approaching being a $2 billion industry, and cashless payments represent a huge growth opportunity for the still largely cash-based market. With what we believe to be a low barrier to entry, this is an industry ripe with opportunity. Sneaker Syndicate has deployed USAT’s cashless payment technology on an amusement “Crane Game” as part of a marketing strategy for its retail location. For five dollars, shoppers could test their luck at winning high-end footwear such as Adidas Yeezy Boosts or Nike Air Jordans – sneakers that range in value between $300 and $2,000.

[Here is separate writeup on game site with pictures]

One month after installing USAT’s state-of-the-art ePort Connect cashless payment systems onto a small number of the store’s amusement machines, sales nearly doubled, with cashless transactions accounting for about 45 percent of the machines’ intake. Given the positive results, the company now plans to expand its business over the next two years with additional machines at a variety of East Coast locations.

“Because of USA Technologies, we are developing franchise agreements with companies across the East Coast for our popular high-end shoe amusement machines,” said Stewart Bryant, owner, Sneaker Syndicate. “The ability to easily accept payments using the ePort platform has made a critical difference for us. This technology has opened the door to a new world of amusement and vending games.”

Implementing ePort Connect on its kiosks has given Sneaker Syndicate the ability to track the acceptance of cash, credit/debit cards, NFC and mobile wallet payments such as Apple, Android and Samsung Pay. The connected nature of the devices also gives the growing company critical remote access to sales and payout data for all of its machine locations.

“The opportunity for the unattended retail market is greater than ever. In the amusement and gaming industry, going cashless not only enables more payment options, and increased revenue potential, but also allows for the sale of game credits. Additionally, the MORE loyalty program facilitates repeated sales of games,” says Maeve Duska, senior vice president of Sales and Marketing, USA Technologies. “More and more consumers are also going cashless simply recognizing that the convenience of paying with their mobile wallet is as simple as tap and go.”

Useful Links:
USA Technologies:
USA Technologies: https://usatech.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/usa_tech
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/USATechnologies
Resource Center: https://usatech.com/resource-center/the-benefits

Sneaker Syndicate:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sneakersyndicate

Sales and Partnership Inquiries:
Please contact USA Technologies, Inc. at +1 800.633.0340 or [email protected].

 

QikServe food order kiosk solution for hospitality sector

QikServe food order kiosk

Multichannel ordering and payment leader targets growing trend for in-store self-service ordering

Edinburgh, UK – March 22, 2017 QikServe, the multichannel ordering and payment specialist, today announced that has rolled out a new solution for hospitality businesses that are looking to implement kiosk-based ordering and payment systems. The QikServe Kiosk Application is latest addition to QikServe’s suite of ordering and payment solutions, which also includes mobile, tablet and web-based applications.

The QikServe Kiosk Application gives operators a flexible, customizable platform for building their own self-service system. Operators combine brand logos, colors and images with QikServe’s intuitive user interface to deliver a unique self-service kiosk customer experience. Adding and updating product images, food and drink descriptions or relevant up-sell and cross-sell options, can all be easily managed by operators within the app.

In 2016, several restaurant giants made significant commitments to the implementation of self-order digital kiosk initiatives. Many hospitality operators view kiosks as the first step towards full mobile ordering, with no need to download an app or check in via mobile, customers are often more ready to engage via kiosks.

qik serve kiosk ordering The QikServe Kiosk Application allows operators to capture guest data insights to intelligently optimize in-house operations, such as number of visits, most popular locations and kiosk positions, typical order spend, most ordered meals or successful upsells, peak self-service hours by day, week or month and more. This data can help operators optimize menus for greater spend and to provide enhanced experiences and services based on usage data.

“Kiosks offer hospitality operators more than just a new ordering option – they support operational efficiency by helping reduce queues and can provide eye-catching digital signage opportunities,” said Daniel Rodgers, CEO, QikServe. “Adding to our existing applications in mobile and web-based ordering our Kiosk Application provides operators with a fast, cost-effective way to implement self-service ordering using our purpose built screen flows and interface design that are designed to deliver great user experiences.”

QikServe’s Kiosk Application can be installed on any kiosk hardware running the widely used Universal Windows Platform, enabling secure, PCI-compliant payments via an integrated card-reading terminal that can be configured to accept payments types including Android Pay, Apple Pay, Chip and Pin, mag stripe and NFC Contactless.

About QikServe

QikServe’s patented technology allows hospitality operators to provide the ability to order and pay for food and drinks directly from any device. Using QikServe, guests can use mobile devices to order exactly what they want, when they want it. QikServe is available as a standalone, customer-branded app or can be fully integrated into hospitality operators’ existing mobile apps and POS platforms. It makes use of technologies such as in-store beacons or QR codes to alert customers to download and use the app. Once logged into the application, guests can open their check, add to their order, customize meals or room-service orders and pay for them from within the app.  With Gold Partner status in Oracle PartnerNetwork (OPN), QikServe is fully integrated into Oracle Hospitality’s Point of Sale (POS) platform; therefore customers who use Oracle’s POS solution can quickly deploy a fully-branded mobile order and payment service for their diners. www.qikserve.com

###

Images and video available at: http://www.qikserve.com/index.php/press/

 Media contact:

Danny Sullivan

+44 772 497 4255

[email protected]

cash recycling kiosk Application – Leftover foreign currency

Sign for LEFTOVER CASH featuring an airplane icon and wing design. This cash recycling kiosk offers foreign currency exchange into gift cards or donations. Lists Euros, British Pounds, Canadian Dollars, Swiss Francs, Japanese Yen. Contact number and website included.

Application Showcase – Leftover Cash and Coin recycling

Anyone who’s ever traveled outside the United States has been in a similar situation. They still have a few Euros, British pounds, Canadian dollars or Japanese yen in their pocket, but nowhere to spend them.

In many cases, the value of the currency would barely cover the exchange fees, so those extra coins and bills usually end up at the bottom of the sock drawer or given to the kids as mementos to show off to their friends.

A new kiosk project is offering another option for that leftover currency. The project, being pilot-tested by Los Angeles-based Leftovercash, allows those world travelers to exchange leftover coins and bills for gift cards and/or donate the equivalent amount in U.S. currency to the company’s charitable partner, The Giving Spirit. The charity assembles and distributes care packages to homeless men women, children, and families living on the streets of Los Angeles.

The project is the brainchild of Canadian-born Ferdinand Poon, who spent time as a CPA, an attorney and a Wall-Street equity analyst before hitting on the idea for the Leftovercash kiosk.

“I didn’t have any experience in the kiosk industry before embarking on the Leftovercash project,” Poon said. “I was looking for something that was a little more personally satisfying, and as someone who travels frequently this idea just struck me.”

Insert bills here

cash recycling kiosk

Click to see full size image

Poon initially worked with a college professor to develop the software, then contracted with Louisville, Colo.-based Kiosk Information Systems to build the prototype unit. The device is currently operating inside the Vicente Foods supermarket in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles.

The Leftovercash kiosk accepts bills in the form of Euros, British pounds, Canadian dollars, Japanese yen and Swiss francs as well as dollar-equivalent coins in those currencies. The unit features separate slots for bills and coins.

“We initially wanted to go with those currencies that were relatively stable, so there wouldn’t be an issue with fluctuating exchange rates,” Poon said. The company is considering adding Mexican pesos at some point in the future.

recycling kiosk

Click for full size image

To begin the exchange process, users enter their email address and zip code and are prompted to insert their bills and coins in the designated slots. Multiple types of currencies can be inserted in a single session. Once that’s done, they are presented with a total in U.S. dollars minus a $3.99 transaction fee. The user has the option of receiving a gift card and/or donating a portion to The Giving Spirit. Gift cards are exchanged in $10 denominations, with the user having the choice of donating the odd currency or inserting a debit or credit card to round up to the next $10 increment.

Donations are tax deductible, although Poon has found that most users don’t take advantage of that feature. At present, the gift cards can be used at the Vicente Foods where the kiosk is located, although it does have the capability to add gift cards and e-gift codes from other retailers such as Staples, Lowes and Overstock com.

Finding the fit

One of the questions Poon frequently fields is, “Why aren’t you locating Leftovercash kiosks in airports to capture those travelers as they come off international flights?” Although the question is a good one, Poon’s response is equally as good.

Anyone who’s ever tried to do business with their local airport authority knows doing so can be a costly affair in terms of rents and other fees. After all, a captive audience isn’t the only reason a cup of coffee at an airport restaurant costs $7 or more. The cost of placing a Leftovercash kiosk at the airport would likely either make it a money-loser or force Poon to raise transaction fees to a point where it simply wouldn’t be worthwhile

In addition, exchanging their currency for gift cards may not be top-of-mind for someone coming off a 6-hour flight and spending another hour going through customs and collecting their luggage.

“When you’re coming off an international flight, you’re probably not really interested in exchanging your currency and going shopping,” Poon said. “You just want to gather your bags and go home.”

On the other hand, nearly everyone would stop at the grocery store in the weeks following their international trip.
“With the grocery store, there’s a bit more immediacy to the process,” Poon said. “You can exchange your currency and use it right there in the store.”

And because locating a Leftovercash kiosk in a grocery store would likely result in additional sales for that store, a deployer would have leverage in negotiating payments for space, utilities and discounts off the face value of the gift cards.

For now, Poon is concentrating on tweaking the kiosk for maximum performance. Further out, his hope is to partner with an established kiosk company, a foreign exchange company, a travel-related company or other strategic investors on additional deployments.

“At the moment, we’re focusing on building a profitable kiosk,” Poon said.

Contact Leftover Cash for more information

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Self Service Group Launches Kiosk Financing and Services

kiosk financing

SSG Kiosk Financing Logo SSG MSA, Inc. removes the barriers to Kiosk Implementation

March 16, 2017

SSG MSA, Inc., also known as the Self Service Group, provides partners with all that is needed to successfully introduce and support self-service solutions for their customers. This includes a comprehensive consultative process based on years of experience in the industry, ensuring that their clients receive fully functional and supported kiosk hardware and software, customized to their needs, with manageable payment options along with specialized support services.

The company’s suite of services includes personalized equipment financing, complete on-site installation and a comprehensive service and maintenance agreement. The Self Service Group was started by three industry veterans, Jim Brinton, CEO of Avanti Markets, Peter te Lintel Hekkert and Michael Masone, President and Vice President of Sales, respectively, at SlabbKiosks. Together, they have over 30 years of experience, having worked on thousands of kiosk projects for various industries; all of which included the design, manufacture and delivery of over 10,000 customized kiosk units, worldwide.

Having run a kiosk business for several years, it became obvious to us that there was a niche in the market that wasn’t being fulfilled,” commented Peter te Lintel Hekkert, one of the investors in the business and President of the well-known kiosk manufacturing company, SlabbKiosks. “Investment in the purchase of equipment might not be the best option for many companies, either due to their business model or because the kiosk solution they require is only needed for a specific period of time. SSG MSA, Inc. was created to provide a financially manageable all-in-one service, from hardware and software design and deployment to financing and maintenance of same.”

Businesses interested in learning more about the company’s services can visit www.selfservicegroup.com. The company provides comprehensive consultation with a fast and easy application process. Clients can choose from an extensive line of kiosk models or get customized solutions at an affordable, all-inclusive, monthly cost.

About SSG MSA, Inc.

SSG MSA, Inc. also know as the Self Service Group provides financing for self service kiosk machine hardware and software, including standard or customized solutions. The company also offers on-site installation as well as comprehensive service and maintenance agreements.

Additional information can be found at: http://www.selfservicegroup.com

DMV Kiosks – Paying cash at Arizona Motor Vehicle Division

Cash kiosk dmv The Republic | azcentral.com  Published 12:10 p.m. MT Feb. 23, 2017 | Updated 12:24 p.m. MT Feb. 23, 2017

“There’s been a noticeable increase in kiosk usage since we implemented the cash option,” said MVD Director Eric Jorgensen in a statement. “Compared to a year ago at this time, the kiosk usage has increased more than 50 percent. Part of that is due to higher overall customer awareness of kiosks, but there’s been a definite uptick in usage since the cash kiosks were put in place.

“It’s a continuation of our vision to get people out of line and safely on the road.”

Cash kiosks handle all paper U.S. currency and are able to make exact change. The machines also accept personal checks.

Behind the scenes — About the kiosk

More Information

    Airport Kiosk Check-In – TSA and CLEAR and Idemia

    CLEAR Biometric Kiosks St. Louis

    Airport Kiosks for Passenger Check-in

    The battle for TSA and airports seems to have taken a new turn.  Just when we were settling into fast and speedy airline check-in thanks to IRIS biometrics, one of the players is “complicating” the situation.

    A recent post on Biometric Update (thanks Michael!) came up and notes Idemia is lobbying to make ID checks mandatory for CLEAR’s members. That would be an inconvenience for CLEAR members for sure who pay $189 a year for first up.  We also noted on the same day a news story on CBS News and CLEAR. It focused on a couple of employee errors.

    Worth noting air travelers — According to a spokesperson for Clear, TSA has reverified the IDs of 4.7 million Clear travelers in the last six months without citing any issues.

    Excerpt from Biometric Update

    While an ID check doesn’t stop Clear passengers from skipping to the front of the line, some believe it could slow the process enough to hurt the company’s ability to charge $189 each year for the service.

    Clear said that it has been working on a system that would integrate biometric screening with TSA’s machines, which would remove the need for a separate ID check, but there isn’t a set time for when it would be available.

    Excerpt from Politico

    CLEAR is under increasing scrutiny for recent security breaches — including an incident in which a passenger got through security with a boarding pass dug out of the trash. Now its biggest rival — a company called IDEMIA that performs background checks for TSA PreCheck and makes the agency’s ID-scanning machines — is seizing the moment to urge lawmakers to make ID checks mandatory for CLEAR’s members.

    That demand could cut into CLEAR’s business model and potentially gum up security lines that otherwise would be moving faster.

    “We wholeheartedly believe that every passenger should have their identification verified at the checkpoint with a [TSA agent] using a CAT machine,” said Lisa Shoemaker, IDEMIA’s vice president of corporate relations, referring to Idemia’s technology that TSA uses to scan IDs.

    The skirmish is just the latest in a long-running competition between the two companies, who have lobbied to win increasing shares of the lucrative market to speed up airport security. Adding to the tension, CLEAR and another vendor have won contracts to start providing PreCheck background checks, potentially cutting into IDEMIA’s market share.

    Anonymous Data

    According to an industry official, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly about matters before Congress, IDEMIA and American Airlines recently pitched Senate Appropriations Committee aides on language, seen by POLITICO, that would have required all travelers to submit to TSA ID checks. American is not a CLEAR investor.

    From Politico article — IDEMIA was for many years TSA’s sole vendor for PreCheck background vetting — and the company has sought to ensure it stays that way. In 2016, TSA decided to open PreCheck bidding for other companies — and IDEMIA (then known as MorphoTrust) filed a challenge against TSA for it, though the company insisted it wasn’t aimed at jamming the competition.

    More Posts

     

    More News

    CLEAR Airport Kiosk – Update on TSA and Idemia

    CLEAR Airport Kiosks

    CLEAR Airport Kiosk News

    We recently did a writeup on some news from Biometric Update:

    The battle for TSA and airports seems to have taken a new turn.  Just when we were settling into fast and speedy airline check-in thanks to IRIS biometrics, one of the players is “complicating” the situation.

    A recent post on Biometric Update (thanks Michael!) came up and notes Idemia is lobbying to make ID checks mandatory for CLEAR’s members. That would be an inconvenience for CLEAR members for sure who pay $189 a year for first up.  We also noted on the same day a news story on CBS News and CLEAR. It focused on a couple of employee errors.

    We asked CLEAR. Here are our notes summarized by Bard.


    Refer to the Washington Post’s story from the other week reporting that the TSA is not pursuing CBS’s claims.

    • CLEAR takes security very seriously and has a zero-tolerance policy for security breaches.
    • The two security incidents that were mentioned were isolated incidents that did not involve the CLEAR biometric system. They were the result of an ambassador not following the company’s strict protocols. CLEAR took immediate action by terminating the responsible employees, their managers, and retraining all ambassadors at the affected locations.
    • CLEAR has been working with the TSA since 2020 to integrate CLEAR members’ IDs into TSA’s CAT machines. This would allow passengers to skip the ID check at the airport. CLEAR is looking forward to rolling this out in the future to create a more seamless and secure traveler experience.

    .We also asked about CLEAR’s “additional locations/venues” and here is our take:

    • Hotels – CLEAR offers travelers a hotel check-in experience at the Hard Rock Las Vegas. Take a selfie and the head straight to your hotel room without stopping at the front desk. It’s free for all customers at participating hotels.

    • Airports – currently the network is 53 airports nationwide and expanding.

    • Rental Cars – CLEAR partners with Avis to help travelers easily verify their driver’s license ahead of time. 54 eligible Avis airport locations nationwide. This functionality was first tested by Hertz back in 2018.

    • Sports/Entertainment Venues – CLEAR has deployed a series of integrations to enhance the fan experience at sports and entertainment venues across the country. Specifically, CLEAR’s age verification product, which is currently available at select arenas, allows fans to verify their age and purchase age-gated items, like beer —all with just a selfie within the team or stadium’s app.

    • Healthcare – CLEAR is developing the ‘replace the clipboard’ in healthcare by partnering with various health systems, including Wellstar Health System in Georgia and the University of Miami Health System in Florida, to empower consumers to securely access and control their health information, beginning with account management and check-in.

    • LinkedIn – CLEAR is partnering with LinkedIn to expand digital safety and trust by empowering LinkedIn members in the U.S. and Canada to verify their identity with CLEAR for free. 

    VIDEO

    DMV Kiosk – DMV brings kiosk back to Gardnerville

    DMV Kiosk

    See on Scoop.it – Kiosk & Kiosks

    Six months after the last DMV kiosk shut down along with Scolari’s, a new one was set up in the Gardnerville Raley’s on Wednesday afternoon.
    The kiosk increases the methods

     

    Craig Allen Keefner‘s insight:

    Image here is older DMV in a box kiosk from Turnkey?  The Frank Mayer surfboard with a belly isn’t here.

    See on www.recordcourier.com

    Calvin Klein Rolls Out Charging Kiosks to Keep Shoppers Happy

    BOSTON, Nov. 21, 2016 /PRNewswire/ — Consumers at select Calvin Klein stores will get to enjoy a complimentary phone charge during their shopping experience with Veloxity charging kiosks. Calvin Klein is expanding their in-store experience by deploying charging kiosks to over 9 different retail locations

    Source: finance.yahoo.com

    Calvin Klein’s Director of Marketing, Roland Figueredo who was in charge of the project says; “In the fast paced retail environment, we are trying to meet all of our customers’ needs. From the product we sell, to the shopping experience, we want the customer to feel special.”

    He goes on to add: “We are also trying to bring a bit of modern technology and convenience into our stores and these charging kiosks gives us that opportunity.  We are able to give the customer a place to charge their phones, see some branded content and continue to shop…a win/win for the stores and the customer. Working with Veloxity has been a pleasure from day one. They were able to turn this around in a very short time frame and have provided excellent customer service throughout this project. I look forward to working with them in 2017 to expand these into more of our stores in North America.”

    DMV Kiosk Arapahoe installs kiosk for license plate renewals

    Arapahoe DMV kiosk License Plate Renewals

    Getting in and out of the DMV in a matter of minutes sounds impossible, but Arapahoe County just installed new self-service kiosks for people who just need to renew their license plates.

    Source: www.9news.com

    Nice DMV kiosk installed in Colorado. Looks like Frank Mayer unit

    Colorado MVExpress kiosks arrive to seven King Soopers stores

    Renew your license plates where you buy groceries and skip a trip to the DMV

    LITTLETON, CO – Citizens of 24 Colorado counties are now able to renew their license plates at a selfservice kiosk inside select King Soopers stores on the Front Range, and skip a trip to the DMV.

    Colorado MVExpress kiosks are available at seven King Soopers stores along the Front Range, thanks to a partnership between parent company Kroger, County Clerks, and kiosk-maker ITI Technologies. Locations include Arvada, Aurora, Commerce City, Englewood, Fort Collins, Greely and Parker. This brings the total number of DMV kiosks in Colorado to 27. The kiosks in King Soopers stores will be available daily during store hours, generally 5 a.m. until midnight, long after county motor vehicle offices have closed.

    “We are thrilled to bring our motor vehicle services to you,” said Arapahoe County Clerk and Recorder Matt Crane, who led efforts to bring this technology to Colorado. “Now you can renew your license plates any day of the week where you buy groceries, including on nights and  weekends, and skip a trip to the DMV. These new kiosks inside King Soopers stores are a life-changing convenience for citizens.”

    Colorado MVExpress kiosks are large blue and yellow machines that look similar to an ATM. You can renew at a kiosk if you live in any one of 24 participating counties. More counties are expected to join the list. Find your nearest kiosk at www.comvexpress.com.

    To use a kiosk, simply type your license plate number on the touch-screen, or scan your renewal postcard. Pay taxes and fees by check, credit or debit card. (Cash is not accepted at kiosks in King Soopers stores, but is accepted at select other locations.) You’ll receive your tabs and registration on the spot. The transaction is fast and easy. Instructions and voice prompts are available in Spanish and English. Thanks to a recent upgrade, you can now renew at a kiosk even after your registration and grace period have expired, which will help to dramatically reduce lines at county DMVs at the end of each month.

    DMV Kiosk Posts

    dmv kiosk frank mayer

    Click for full size image. Video story follow the link to 9news.

    DMV kiosk – Supermarket

    DMV kiosk – Supermarket

    One of the earlier examples of DMV Kiosks in supermarkets. You can tell my older design and smaller touchscreen.

    DMV kiosk

    The state’s first vehicle-registration self-service kiosk is proving quite a draw at a Westerville grocery store. Merritt Kimball of Worthington recently drove to Marc’s supermarket, 111 Huber Village Blvd., to sample the machine.

    Source: www.dispatch.com

    Kiosk users just swipe their driver’s license and credit card. The machine then provides registration stickers.

    A total of nine self-service kiosks are planned as part of a statewide one-year pilot program allowing motorists to renew vehicle registrations and obtain license-plate stickers without having to stand in line at BMV offices.

    DMV kiosks in supermarkets offer several benefits:

    1. Convenience: They allow customers to complete DMV transactions while shopping, saving time and reducing the need for separate trips to the DMV office.
    2. Extended Hours: Supermarkets often have longer operating hours than DMV offices, providing more flexibility for customers to access services.
    3. Reduced Wait Times: Kiosks can help alleviate long lines at DMV offices by offering an alternative for routine transactions.
    4. Instant Results: Many kiosks can print registration renewals and stickers on the spot, eliminating the wait for mail delivery\.
    5. Accessibility: Kiosks are often equipped with features like language options, headphone jacks, and braille, making them accessible to a wider range of users.

    These benefits make DMV kiosks in supermarkets a convenient and efficient option for completing various DMV transactions.

    More DMV kiosk posts

    Olea Kiosks’ new Monte Carlo big ROI to casinos

    New self-service solution designed to help casinos build loyalty olea kiosk programs, manage comps, increase ROI and more

    Olea Kiosks has released the Monte Carlo Gaming Kiosk, its latest self-service solution for the casino industry.

    plea monte carlo kiosk

    Click for full size image

    The kiosk arrives at a critical time for the gaming industry. While the economy has improved and overall wagering is up, the spread of legalized gaming to new territories has meant more properties vying for the same bets. In addition, new generations of gamers have not followed their forbearers to the slots machines, leaving aging Baby Boomers to provide the lion’s share of revenue.

    To combat those forces, casinos are trying everything from installing new interactive, skill-based games to investing more in entertainment. One of the more successful strategies has been to place significant attention on casino loyalty programs, where frequent players can log their visits, table time and wages and earn “comps” such as free plays, meals and perks at any casino-affiliated resort.

    While loyalty programs have historically been managed by staff, kiosks provide an ideal complement to the team that administers the program. They allow operators to deploy staff to other service needs, they are easily approached and used by patrons, and as is the case with the Monte Carlo, they can serve other marketing functions as well.

    Featuring two large LCD panels and brilliant, programmable LED attract lighting, the Monte Carlo is designed to help operators build their loyalty programs and make the overall casino experience more fun and efficient for players and resort guests.

    Additional uses include:

    • Helping players join the casino’s loyalty program, update their data and check on their next rewards
    • Queue-busting at onsite quick-serve or fast casual dining
    • Self-checkout at resort retail shops
    • Check-in/check-out at the hotel
    • Enabling guests to make reservations at the spa
    • Purchasing tickets for events and shows
    • Tournament sign-ups

    The second 22” LCD monitor allows deployers to promote products and services, advertise special prices at food venues, encourage participation in drawings and more. Finish options and the customizable lighting schemes ensure the kiosks will stand out on bright, busy casino floors, and their compact footprint helps them fit into virtually any floor plan.

    Olea’s engineers, with years of experience designing for the casino industry, made sure the Monte Carlo was more than rugged enough to withstand the 24/7 operation of casino floors, even in smoking environments.

    “We are fully invested in helping casinos meet the modern challenges facing their business,” said Frank Olea, CEO of Olea Kiosks. “The ability of kiosks to provide great service conveniently, as well as the liberty they provide deployers to move staff to more sensitive roles, are especially critical in environments where competition is high and every customer matters. That describes gaming now perfectly.”

    For additional background on kiosks and the role they can play at casino/resorts, read our white paper, “Increasing the Odds with Kiosks.”

    To learn more about how the Monte Carlo Gaming Kiosk can help casinos build loyalty and increase ROI, call Traci Martin at 800-927-8063 or email [email protected].

    Olea Kiosks in the news

      New Kiosk Website by Kiosk Innovations

      KIosk Innovations

      Editors Note: We have known Neil Nguyen of Kiosk Innovations for over 15 years and his team is one of the most skilled and innovative self-service kiosk & digital signage design firms we know.

      Denver, CO – 09/20/16 — Kiosk Innovations is proud to kiosk innovations announce the launch of our new website! A great deal of time and effort went into the design and layout to ensure a quality user experience when shopping for kiosk solutions.

      Our website has many new features intended to make our visitors experiences positive and memorable. Photos, galleries and graphics are just a few of the new features you will see dispersed throughout the site to create a more visual experience, drawing attention to our niche of unique custom designs and solutions, giving more transparency to our manufacturing capabilities.

      kiosk innovations digital signage

      Click for full size image

      The new modern layout is intended to match our ideals of being innovative, giving insight to the path we hope to set in the coming years, and enabling our visitors to navigate and explore the website with ease. Feel free to take a look around and explore the new website at:

      Kiosk Innovations Social Channels

      Don’t forget to connect with us on our social media platforms as well for more content and updates to keep up to date on our growth, progress and innovations in the coming years.

      • Facebook
      • LinkedIn
      • YouTube

       


      About Kiosk Innovations

      Kiosk Innovations has over 25 years experience in standard and custom kiosk design and manufacturing. Kiosk Innovations is charter member of the Kiosk Industry Association.

      Office Location: 470 E 76th Ave Unit 3B Denver, CO 80229
      Telephone: (303) 287-7004
      Toll Free: (855) 405-4675
      Fax: 303-459-5169

      [email protected]
      [email protected]

      Digital Signage & Ticketing Kiosk – ‘The Field Museum”

      ticketing kiosk digital sign

      What’s more Natural than a Ticketing Kiosk?

      ticketing kiosk digital sign

      Click to see full size image of the ticketing kiosk digital signage project. Enclosures by Kiosk Innovations,

      July 19, 2016 – YORK, PA. The Field Museum in Chicago takes pride in being one of the world’s largest natural history museums in the world. Their diverse array of permanent exhibitions and quality educational programs attract over 2 million visitors annually.

      The Field Museum is constantly looking for ways to enrich their guests’ journeys and engaging them through interactive ways to continuously improve the experience they receive. Field Museum had recently implemented a new ticketing system from Ticket Return, and they soon recognized that they could improve their customer’s experience by investing in self-service ticketing kiosks and digital signage.

      Ticket Return wanted a new engaging kiosk. The kiosk had to provide guests easy and quick navigation through the product purchase process and allow them to view and select show times for various exhibits. The kiosks were also to power a secondary display screen to show advertisements and messages about upcoming events and exhibits to guests.

      Going Live

      The ticketing kiosks were ‘thrown into the fire’ as they were made live during the week between Christmas and New Year’s, historically one of the museum’s busiest periods each year. During the first week of their release the kiosks worked flawlessly while handling roughly 20% of all sales. Having a single-source for support and one management interface to handle all aspects of their digital needs greatly reduces overall maintenance costs and long-term total cost of ownership.”

      Field Museum personnel agree that ‘history was made’ during that first week of operation and beyond. The new kiosks have added to their guests’ journeys, offering an engaging and time-saving start to every new exploration of the museum’s story into life on Earth.

       

      Self-Order Kiosk And Locking Technology

      Self-Order Kiosk

      Click for full size image

      The locking experts at Camlock Systems Ltd are proud of their long-standing relationship with Evoke Creative Ltd. Recently, Evoke has designed and manufactured self-order kiosks for the world’s largest chain of fast food restaurants. Camlock was involved in this project from the early stages. Following careful evaluation, Evoke chose the Series 31 cam lock to secure the kiosks.

      Evoke’s touchscreen kiosks allow customers to browse through the menu, to order and to pay for their food.

      Camlock’s experts investigated where the lock will be used and carefully analysed the security risks the kiosks will be exposed to. Camlock learned that Evoke required two locks for each kiosk; one to protect the door of the ticket printer that gives easy access to the printer roll, and another one to protect the components inside the kiosk.

      During the consultation, different types of locks, security levels and prices were considered. Camlock Systems provided CAD files and samples to enable Evoke to test the lock.

      Eventually, Evoke decided on the Series 31 die-cast 10 disc tumbler cam lock. The strong keys of this lock are ideal for heavy usage and easy to insert due to the double-entry design. Camlock also supplied a master key that opens all locks on the kiosks.

      Since the start of the cooperation between the two companies in 2008, Camlock Systems has provided on-going support to Evoke. Neil Clark, Commercial Director at Evoke, says: “Camlock’s expertise was essential throughout the entire process of finding a suitable locking solution for our kiosks. Camlock understood our requirements, during the development process as well as after the installation.”

      More information about the Series 31 can be found on http://www.camlock.com/en-uk/10-disc-double-entry-die-cast-cam-lock-series-31.

      Ticketing Kiosk Benefits for Customer Self-Service

      Outdoor Ticketing Kiosk by Olea Kiosks

      Outdoor Ticketing Kiosk by Olea Kiosks

      Ticket Kiosk Benefits

      Certain interactions are a natural fit when it comes to pairing the modern consumer with kiosks and other forms of self-service technology. The case has long been made for kiosks at airports and grocery stores, for example. Another obvious marriage is that between the ATM and the person who suddenly finds herself in need of some cash. In fact, those kiosks are so integrated into our daily lives we no longer even think of them as novel. A world deprived of their contribution would seem primitive.

      Download the “5 Ways Kiosks Rock” Whitepaper to read more…

      Benefits of Outdoor Ticketing Kiosk

      Here are five benefits deployers can begin realizing the day they connect their Olea ticketing kiosk. For these reasons and others, Olea Kiosks recommends serious consideration of self-service ticketing kiosks for all venues where operators want to minimize—or even profit from—what tends to be the least favorite part of the customer experience. 5 Ways Kiosks Rock the World of Ticketing

      1. Shorter waits. In a recent article published by Olea Kiosks, the author wrote, “Retail kiosks can greatly alleviate long lines, and waiting in line has been shown to be a major factor that can negatively impact the consumer’s opinion of a retail establishment. One study found that waiting in long lines will cause nearly 50 percent of customers to conclude that the business is run poorly, and over 50 percent of consumers will take their business elsewhere if they feel the line is too long.
      2. Larger sales footprint. Most ticket transactions occur either online or at the venue. What if you could sell tickets to hot events at other locations where potential attendees could be enticed to get in on the game (or play, concert or movie) early? Examples include malls popular with teens who could be attracted to ticketing kiosks for concerts, or restaurants where couples often dine before seeing the latest blockbuster. The deployer could be incentivized with a portion of the sales and perhaps even contribute an offer of its own to drive revenue.
      3. More efficiency. The argument here is the same one responsible for hundreds of thousands of businesses investing in self-service technology: It’s more efficient to have one person helping four or five people transact through kiosks than to have having four or five people conducting the transactions themselves.
      4. Re-deployed staff. In addition to increased efficiency at the event’s POS, the deployer can further reap benefits from the investment by reassigning former ticket agents to other guest services roles—as floaters when seating is occurring or to dispense water bottles for people waiting outdoors for amusement rides, as two quick examples.
      5. Utility. Kiosks can be configured for virtually any kind of transaction and to complete it almost any environment. They can be ruggedized to withstand harsh outdoor conditions and extreme temperatures and outfitted with high-bright screens to be visibly in the harshest of sunlight. Peripherals and software enable them to dispense electronically or by printer; to print maps to seat locations; and accept cash or card for payment

      Related Information

      Coinapult 300 Bitcoin Kiosks Deployed

      Bitcoin provider Coinapult and Punto Pago, a bitcoin kiosk operator, which will see 300 kiosks selling bitcoin to Colombians.

      Source: www.cryptocoinsnews.com

      I am not sure what exact clientele these machines are serving in Colombia. The main bills are mobile, telephone and broadband. Spend your pesos to get bitcoin to pay your bills

      Kiosk Association Announces Advisory Board Members

      DENVER, CO – 6/29/2016 (PRESS RELEASE JET) —Kiosk Industry Group, the Kiosk association and vendor trade

      Kiosk Association

      association, officially announces appointment of five new members to the Strategic Advisory Board.  The new members include Olea Kiosks, KioWare, Kiosk Information Systems, PROVISIO, and Turnkey Kiosks. They join Crane Payment Innovations, OptConnect, CTS (Connected Technology Solutions) and ARCA. Honorary members include Peter B. Snyder.  Together they provide strategic guidance to the Group in direction and focus in all types of transactional and informational self service solutions.

      “These new board members represent the growing excitement and momentum that self-service automation is delivering to customers and employees.” said Craig Keefner, manager for the Kiosk Industry Group.  “Whether for customers or employees, automation is becoming a crucial differentiator for companies looking to expand their customer channels”.

      The new advisory board members are:

      Olea Kiosks, represented by Traci Martin, Director of Sales and Marketing.   Traci has over 20 years in the industry. Frank Olea is CEO. Olea Kiosks is one of North America’s largest kiosk manufacturers providing custom kiosks and standard kiosks. Olea has been in the kiosk business for over 20 years and is known for unparalleled design. Olea has been in business over 40 years.

      KioWare is represented by James Kruper, president and CEO, and Laura Miller Director of Marketing. Jim has over 20 years of experience with kiosk software, remote monitoring and content management/display systems. KioWare is one of largest kiosk software companies in the world and offers a free fully functioning demo of all of their kiosk software products (Windows & Android).

      Kiosk Information Systems, represented by Cheryl Madeson, Director of Marketing. Tom Weaver is CEO and President. KIOSK Information Systems began as KIS over 20 years ago and is the largest kiosk manufacturing company in the world.  Along with custom and standard kiosks, KIOSK designs and manufacturers Locker and Vending systems and has a full software development team with a complete software portfolio suite which includes remote monitoring.  KIS and Rick Malone were aa charter sponsor of the original Kiosk Association in 2001 (aka Bay Hill Bunch which included IBM, Compaq, Crane, Elotouch and Kodak).

      PROVISIO is represented by Heinz Horstmann. The Chief Manager is Christoph Niehus at their headquarters in Germany. Heinz has over 20 years in the internet terminal kiosk software industry.  The industry leading interactive kiosk software product Sitekiosk has more installed terminals than anyone in the world. SK provides lockdown as well as Content Management for Digital Signs (Windows and Android).

      Turnkey Kiosks is represented by Gary Strachan. Gary has 35+ years in the industry having spent many with IBM. Turnkey Kiosks largest focus is cost-effective transactional bill payment kiosk systems along with custom kiosks for a variety of functions. TurnKey offers a complete one-stop shop that has in-house consulting, CAD design and engineering, Custom Sheet Metal, Custom Cables for a variety of functions. TurnKey prides itself in taking a very hands-on approach with our customers to make sure our solutions exceed customer expectations.

      Bitcoin ATM’s, custom POS, Retail and Utility Payments. TurnKey Kiosks is a one-stop shop for consulting, software, hardware, installation, service and maintenance.

      About the Kiosk Industry Group

      The Kiosk Industry Group is based in Denver Colorado and serves as the kiosk association and qualified marketing network for the kiosk industry.  With over 300 participating listed companies Kiosk Industry Group is the largest kiosk-focused association in the world. For more information on these companies and the kiosk association please log onto https://kioskindustry.org/.  For more information contact Craig Keefner at [email protected]

      Full News Story: http://pressreleasejet.com/news/kiosk-association-announces-advisory-board-members.html

      Distributed by Press Release Jet

      Media Contact
      Company Name: CAKCEK
      Contact Person: Craig A Keefner
      Email: [email protected]
      Phone: (303) 261-8836
      Country: United States
      Website: http://catareno.com