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With the help of printed electronics and an Internet of Things smart product platform, beverage giant Diageo is equipping its Johnnie Walker Blue Label whisky with smart bottles.
British
beverage company Diageo is the largest producer of spirits in the world and
owner of some of the world's most storied brands, including Crown Royal,
Smirnoff, Ketel One, Gordon's, Tanqueray, Captain Morgan and Johnnie Walker.
Tradition is a byword at Diageo, but so is innovation.
"A lot
of our brands are 300 or 400 years old, or even older than that," says
Venky Balakrishnan Iyer, global vice president, Digital Innovation, Diageo.
"There's a lot of craft and tradition that goes into creating our
products. What we're trying to do here is take the latest innovations and see
how we can take something that's special already and make it a richer consumer
experience."
Johnnie
Walker is a case in point. Nearly 200 years ago, John "Johnnie"
Walker started selling his Walker's Kilmarnock Whisky in his grocer's shop. And
150 years ago, his son Alexander started selling Walker's Old Highland, the
company first blended Scotch whisky. Johnnie Walker is now the most widely
distributed brand of blended Scotch in the world, with annual sales in excess
of 130 million bottles.
Johnnie
Walk Blue gets smarter
The brand
and its iconic square bottle — first introduced in 1870 — is well-known nearly
everywhere. But it may be time for that bottle, or more specifically its label,
to change with the times. At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this past
March, Diageo and partner Thinfilm Electronics introduced a prototype
"smart bottle" for the flagship Johnnie Walker Blue Label whisky.
The smart
bottle features a printed sensor tag made with Thinfilm's OpenSense technology.
It can detect the sealed and opened state of each bottle. OpenSense uses
smartphones' Near Field Communication (NFC) capabilities, allowing Diageo to
send personalized communications to consumers who read the tags with their
smartphones.
[ Related: CIOs put the Internet of Things in perspective ]
"Although
these are very traditional product categories, there is a huge amount of
digital interaction that is happening with our products," Balakrishnan
says. "These are people standing in stores or bars and wondering whether
they buy the single malt or the blend, highland or lowland."
In fact, he
says, Diageo sees millions of searches about its brands occurring, and more
than 50 percent of those searches happen through mobile within a few feet of
the bottle on the shelf. Communicating with those consumers at the point of
sale is a major push for Diageo, Balakrishnan says. But Thinfilm's technology
goes even further, because it can detect the closed or opened state of the
bottle.
Diageo
wants to continue communicating with the consumer once the bottle has been
opened, but it wants that interaction to be responsive. Once the bottle is
opened, it's not about presenting sales information anymore.
"We
know the bottle opening event has occurred," he says. "Our
communication can change from guiding the consumer on which bottle to buy to
how to best enjoy this product."
Diageo is
primarily focused on the marketing elements of the technology, but it also has
application in the supply chain. Companies with products equipped with Thinfilm
sensor tags can track those products across the supply chain, in-store and to
the point of consumption, with the sensor tags remaining readable even when the
factory seal has been broken. This provides an additional layer of security to
protect the authenticity of the product.
[Related: 10 Hot Internet of Things startups]
Thinfilm's
sensor tags consist of an antenna and an integrated circuit (IC) printed on a
label, says Matthew Bright, director of Product & Technical Marketing at
Thinfilm and chair of the Retail Working Group at the NFC Forum. They have an
engineered weak point that is designed to break when the seal of the container
is broken, changing the information transmitted by the circuit.
Each tag
has a unique identifier encoded by Thinfilm and is 100 percent read-only,
making them very difficult to clone. Bright notes that Thinfilm uses partially
randomized non-sequential identifiers using very large numbers.
"We
can identify a trillion products a year every year for a trillion years without
duplication," he says.
The
technology could help detect counterfeiting, he adds. For instance,
counterfeiting in the cosmetics world is a known problem. The product in a
cosmetics container could be replaced with something that's inferior or even
dangerous, Bright says. With Thinfilm's OpenSense technology, companies can
track their product through the supply chain and detect whether containers have
been opened prior to sale. The technology can also help with diversion, where a
product is intended for sale in one geography, but then diverted to another
location where it can be sold for a higher price.
Smart
labels can even be manufactured with temperature sensors that can detect if a
product, like vaccines, goes beyond a set temperature range, Bright says.
But for
Diageo, it's all about beverages, and the smart label is just the tip of a
larger ice berg. Diageo has been working with EVRYTHNG, a software company
which specializes in an Internet of Things (IoT) smart products platform
intended to connect consumer products to the Web, helping manufacturers manage
real-time data associated with those products to drive applications.
The Web of
Things creates a network of data
EVRYTHNG
helped Diageo build a strategic technology platform called +More that runs on
EVRYTHNG's engine. +More allows digital interaction with retailers and other
supply partners based on how products are made, sold and used. Diageo is using
the platform for a range applications that allow it to track products in the
supply chain and deliver interaction analytics.
Niall
Murphy, co-founder and CEO of EVRYTHNG, says the mission is about more than
IoT, it's about creating the Web of Things.
"The
Internet of Things is about how stuff gets connected," he says. "The
Web of Things is about how things are connected in a broader network. How stuff
is getting connected is the least interesting part of the whole puzzle. The
value arises as a consequence of the data getting connected."
When an
inventory item is connected to the Internet of Things, it becomes a data
generator, Murphy explains.
"From
a CIO's point of view, the operational capability of the business can become
informed by its assets," he says.
That means
consumer products can help you instrument your supply chain and inform you
about the performance of products in the field, or the LED lights in a building
could detect the amount of daylight in a room and dynamically throttle their
output for maximum energy efficiency.
"When
products become smart it's transformative to the enterprise providing those
products," Murphy says. "What is a product? It used to be defined as
being a physical thing. Now it's a combination of physical capability, software
capability and data."
Leveraging
the cloud-based EVERYTHNG Engine, Diageo used APIs and Web services to
integrate its +More marketing platform with internal global ERP and CRM
systems, external agencies, developers and social networks. As a result, it can
manage each OpenSense-equipped smart bottle's unique identity and associated
dynamic data, allowing it to trigger "in-the-moment" marketing
experiences and capture real-time supply chain analytics.
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