Image copyright AP
Image caption How much does playing games reveal about our personalities?

How often does your boss summon you to play Minecraft, or demand that everyone convene urgently in the boardroom for a game of Monopoly?

Not often, I bet. Yet, as Claire Woodcock, strategy manager at digital agency, Razorfish, says: “Adults are no different to children in that we learn best through play.”

Gamification – using elements of game play to make people engage more with brands, products and company diktats – certainly seems to be thriving.

But is it more than just a gimmick?

‘Educational’

Kingfisher, owner of the B&Q, Brico Depot and Screwfix brands, believes so.

It adopted gamification to raise awareness of pensions and savings among its 36,000 employees.

Communications agency Teamspirit created a gaming app for them called “Bolt To The Finish” involving characters from the fictional Bolt family collecting coins and being chased by a nut (of the metal variety).

Image copyright Kingfisher Pension Trustee Ltd
Image caption Kingfisher’s Bolt to the Finish game saw a big rise in staff paying more into their pensions

As staff play, the game educates them about pensions saving. For instance, the younger you start saving for a pension the better, so the younger character Sanjay has a less challenging time than an older character.

“The game was educational whilst entertaining, and encouraged players to think about pensions in a different way – great for changing behaviour,” says Banafsheh Ghafoori, pensions technical and communication manager at Kingfisher.

“In terms of the game itself, the statistics have been great, with the leaderboard element encouraging replays and reinforcing the messages.”

Image copyright Edward Webb
Image caption B&Q owner Kingfisher believes gamification can help change employee behaviour

As a result, the group saw a 20% increase in the number of staff choosing to save into their pension at the maximum contribution level, says Ms Ghafoori, while 78% said the game had encouraged them to think about saving for the future.

Gamification can generally be considered successful if it gets people doing something in which they previously lacked motivation, argues Lauren Ferro, gamification consultant and doctoral researcher at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia.

But she takes it one step further: “For me, success is when people are changing their behaviour beyond the novelty – they are able to develop lasting changes.”

You are what you like

As well as changing behaviour, gamification is being used to assess behaviour – in recruitment, for example.

When software company SAP wanted to recruit from a wider range of people, it worked with business consultancy The Chemistry Group to create a game combining social media with personality assessments.

Players log in to the game via their Facebook accounts and data on their Facebook “likes” is correlated with their game behaviour, and data from other assessments, to create a personality profile.

Image copyright Thinkstock
Image caption Would playing a game to get a job be more fun than the dreaded interview?

“The gaming tool gives a better experience for applicants by helping to show what it would be like to work for SAP so they can see if it’s right for them and, at the same time, allows us to see if this candidate is right for us,” says Matt Jeffrey, SAP’s vice president head of global sourcing and employment branding.

He says that in future the tool will allow SAP to tap into latent talent by engaging with people who might not have any immediately relevant experience.

“It will tell them where they could fit into SAP and invite them to apply for a job,” he says.

Keys to success

Gamification is also used to incentivise customers to use a product more often.

For example, Romanian app developer, T-Me Studios, launched its Redraw Keyboard in September to replace the standard keyboard on Android devices. The new design aims to enhance productivity through tools such as instant translation and Google Docs integration. Users can also personalise their keyboards with different branded themes and emojis.

Image copyright T-Me Studios
Image caption Mobile app designer T-Me Studios uses gamification to engage its users

But T-Me rewards users for the time they spend using the keyboard app.

“The more they type and the more emojis they use, for example, the more rewards they get,” explains Ioanina Pavel, the firm’s head of content and social media marketing.

The rewards translate into coins that can be used to access more tools, while a leaderboard pits users against each other and encourages competition.

Image copyright T-Me Studios
Image caption T-Me Studios’ Redraw Keyboard enables users to personalise their messaging

Since launch, the keyboard has already amassed more than 1.4 million users, with 300,000 of those using it every day.

“The gamification feature is one of the most popular features of the Redraw Keyboard,” says Ms Pavel.

‘Scattergun’

Gamification has certainly matured, says Brian Burke, analyst at research consultancy Gartner.

“A few years ago it was scattergun – people were trying to apply gamification to everything and clearly that had limited success,” he says.

“Marketers saw it as a shiny new object and they all wanted some, but that has really slowed down.”

Image copyright Razorfish
Image caption Razorfish’s Claire Woodcock says “we learn best through play”

Ms Woodcock agrees that businesses are starting to see past “gimmicky campaigns” and understand why gamification is useful.

“We’re starting to see companies apply gamification to hard problems, particularly to help people with their finances,” she says.

“From start-ups like Cleo AI, which gives you a running breakdown of your finances, to traditional business like Aviva, who have just launched a pensions calculator which uses gamification principles, companies old and new are embracing game design techniques.”

Nurses have even been using a board game – The Drug Round Game – to help sharpen up their skills.

‘Save the Duck’

A general rule of marketing is that the more engaging advertising content is, the more successful it will be. And games can certainly make ads more fun.

Aflac, one of the largest insurance companies in the US, worked with video platform Innovid to develop its “Save the Duck” game involving clicking on leaks as fast you can to earn points.

Image copyright Aflac
Image caption Want to make your website more exciting? Try introducing a simple game

The engagement rate was 67% higher than Innovid’s industry benchmarks for interactive video, and 431% higher than traditional pre-roll ads, the company says. Viewers spent 75 seconds engaging with the content, on top of watching the 30-second video.

“One of the keys to getting it right is to make sure the gaming element is not at the expense of the message the advert is trying to convey,” says Tal Chalozin, Innovid’s chief technology officer.

In other words, identify clear objectives and then work out whether Monopoly or Minecraft will float your audience’s boat. Or even their duck.


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Read more: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-37676808

Commuter rail operator launches campaign during morning rush hour after 46 passengers taken ill with low blood sugar in recent months

A Portuguese commuter rail operator has launched a campaign urging its passengers to eat breakfast to try to reduce train delays caused by passengers fainting during the morning rush hour.

Fertagus, which operates trains linking Lisbon to Setubal 50kms (30 miles) to the south, put up posters at its stations that read: Travelling without eating breakfast can affect everyones trip!

Forty-six passengers fainted on the companys trains during the first half of the year, causing delays to 51 trains totalling 209 minutes, Fertagus marketing manager Raquel Santos told news radio TSF.

We realised that many of these cases are due to episodes of low blood sugar in people who have not eaten for several hours. Normally during the morning rush hour, she said.

Portuguese
Portuguese train company Fertagus has launched a campaign to encourage commuters to eat breakfast before travelling, saying trains have been delayed due to passengers fainting. Photograph: www.fertagus.pt

Many times it is not possible to immediately remove the passenger from the train and this causes delays. Often the alarm is pulled and this causes circulation on the whole network to be delayed.

In addition to eating breakfast, Fertagus recommends passengers carry a bottle of water and advises that, if they start to feel ill, they should get off at the next stop and seek help instead of remaining on the train.

The company, which transports around 70,000 passengers a day, plans to give out apples and yogurts to passengers at its stations next week as part of its campaign to promote breakfast eating.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/18/eat-breakfast-portugese-rail-firm-blames-train-delays-on-passengers-fainting