Technology allows advertising on idle slot machines
A local companyâ??s new technology lets screens show commercials when  machines arenâ??t beingplayed
Saturday, July 3, 2010 | 2:01 a.m.
The  gambling areas of casinos have long been advertisersâ?? Holy Grail.
American  casinos attracted a record 62 million visitors last year â?? 28 percent  of the U.S. adult population â?? despite the worst economy for gambling  on record, according to the  American Gaming Association . Designed to  stimulate the senses and encourage spending, casinos are potential gold  mines for advertisers, but are notoriously protective of their real  estate. Thatâ??s especially true of slot machine areas, the biggest  profit center for most casinos.
And slot machines arenâ??t just the  most popular casino games in the country. Theyâ??ve been designed to  mesmerize.
Enter Reel-TV, a Henderson company that has patented  technology enabling television ads and other marketing messages to  appear on slot machine video screens while not in use. Last month,  frosty bottles of Bud Light began materializing on video poker screens  inside the main entrance of the  Palms , like hallucinations induced by  the desert heat.
The ads represent a potential jackpot for  billion-dollar beverage brands that are lining up to showcase their  wares in this new advertising medium, incorporating one of the most  effective devices ever invented.
Reel-TVâ??s Keith Atkinson says the  medium is a natural for many companies, especially those that make  alcoholic beverages. After all, they count Las Vegas casino patrons  among their best customers.
In recent years, big Las Vegas casinos  have capitalized on their brand image and heavy foot traffic by signing  marketing deals with select companies that get naming rights and ad  placement at special events. The Palms has such arrangements with Miller  and Red Bull, for example.
Still, for many companies looking to get a  piece of the casino action, even paying to hang an ad from the ceiling  or sponsoring a gambling event can involve massive red tape.
â??One  (beverage company) told me they had been trying to get into casinos for  30 years,â?? Atkinson says.
The ads play only when machines are idle,  replaced by the typical gambling menu the moment a customer touches the  screen. At the Palms, entire banks of slot machines are set to play the  ads at specified times, such as every 15 or 30 seconds of inactivity.  With big casinos attracting an average of 25,000 people per day, a  single 15-second ad playing more than 500,000 times per month could be  viewed millions of times. Better yet for advertisers, those who walk  through casinos canâ??t skip or fast forward through the ads, as they  can at home.
Reel-TVâ??s sales pitch has hooked a whoâ??s who of  beverage brands, such as Coca-Cola, Budweiser, Miller, Corona, Dos  Equis, Absolut, Grey Goose and Red Bull, that have either signed on to  advertise on slots at the Palms or are in talks to incorporate their ads  onto slots in Nevada and other states.
Rick Glenn, director of  marketing for  Findlay Toyota , says there is one drawback to Reel-TV:  It doesnâ??t use sound.
Still, Findlay, which spends millions of  dollars each year on advertising and â??likes to be first with new  technology,â?? signed on, Glenn said. The company had to shoot new  television spots that could noiselessly grab peopleâ??s attention â?? a  tough job for a local brand known for its boisterous pitchman John Barr  and his British-accented offer to â??do anything to sell you a car.â??
â??Imagine  if John Barr is on every slot machine in this place,â?? Glenn said.  â??You couldnâ??t help but notice it.â??
Eventually, Findlay wants to  create ads customized to appeal to people who patronize casinos at  particular times â?? the young nightclubbers after hours and the  retirees who are daytime gamblers, for example. Some ads, depending on  which casinos adopt the technology, could be geared toward high-end or  budget-conscious consumers.
Reel-TV, recently approved by Nevada  regulators, is awaiting regulatory approvals in other parts of the  country, such as tribal casinos in California and Connecticut.
Atkinson,  a former long-haul pilot who developed sophisticated mapping technology  that plots how gamblers play machines in casinos, has spent more than a  decade analyzing how slot players gamble. Before slot companies Acres  Gaming and International Game Technology bought his mapping software and  sold it to casinos that use it to capitalize on well-played machines  and remove underperforming ones, universities used it to study the  movement of pests and pollutants, plotting everything from a beetle  infestation in the Sierra Nevada to the spread of chemicals in the  Northern California delta region.
Atkinson knew that companies had  been trying to figure out how to advertise on slot machines for years.  He began working on Reel-TV in 2007, after his noncompete agreement with  IGT, where he had been a systems consultant, expired.
Although the  business opportunity was obvious, the path wound through a minefield of  technical and political complications.
U.S. slot giants have  developed software programs that can incorporate advertising on  â??windowsâ?? that appear, like Internet pop-up ads, as customers played  or between gambling sessions. For casinos, the goal of such programs  isnâ??t to get consumers to buy more beer. Rather, slot companies sell  the technology as a marketing tool to help casinos interact with  customers by reading player membership cards to greet players by name,  offer coupons geared toward their spending habits and hold tournaments.
Some  of these new programs run on proprietary systems that arenâ??t  compatible with machines made by competitors.
By creating software  that operates independently of the gambling action and can be  incorporated onto any type of device, Atkinson sidestepped the need to  cooperate with any single manufacturer. The technology is free for  casinos to install, as it is supported by advertising revenue.
Still,  why would the Palms or any other casino want to risk turning gamblers  off with commercials on their machines? The answer is they can also use  Reel-TV for the casinosâ?? own commercials. Besides highlighting Palms  attractions such as nightclubs and restaurants, the casino expects to  launch more targeted in-house promotions that hype special events and  limited-time offers. One application allows customers to touch an image  of a coupon on the screen and print out the coupon, redeemable for free  play or drinks or other prizes.
Some beverage companies, Atkinson  says, are interested in using the technology to help launch new products  by offering, say, two-for-one drinks.
Might the ads distract people  from the casinoâ??s ultimate goal: getting people to gamble?
Palms  Chief Marketing Officer Jason Gastwirth doesnâ??t think so. He figures  the ads â?? especially a coupon or event information â?? might entice  people to sit down and play.
With three out of four slots idle at any  given time, the ads, played in sync, create a bold backdrop, attracting  the attention of passers-by who otherwise might not take a second look  at a machine, Atkinson says.
â??Most people will walk by a slot  machine without ever sitting down to play,â?? he says, surveying the  Palms casino floor Tuesday. â??We have seen people stop and pay  attention to the machine, saying, â??Hey, look â?? itâ??s like  TV.â??â??â??
If it works as planned, itâ??s TV that might make one in  the mood for a drink, a car, a few hands of video poker or all of the  above.
Comments are moderated by Las Vegas Sun editors. Our goal is  not to limit the discussion, but rather to elevate it. Comments should  be relevant and contain no abusive language. Comments that are  off-topic, vulgar, profane or include personal attacks will be removed.   Full comments policy.
Cool, love that thought. If its2hot some  ice-cold beer commercials, maybe, or my favourite one. That Uma Thurman  commercial ….wow! I still get goose-bumps watching it:
Theyll start  by playing ads on only idle slot machines. Then theyll start putting in  ads between plays.
Oh, good, I am always disappointed when I have a  minute or two where I am not be actively marketed. Why dont they just  allow the annoying time-share people to follow you into the casino and  jabber in your ear while you shoot craps?
The ads play only when  machines are idle, replaced by the typical gambling menu the moment a  customer touches the screen.
Yeah! this is also the time when these  server based slot systems change the odds payouts on the machines as  well…
I certainly hope the slot machine ads have no sound.
Imagine  how irritating it would be to play on your favorite Caveman Keno  machine and hear that loud car commercial pitchman every minute or so on  the machines all around you.
However, knowing how clever Americans  are about promoting things, perhaps this is really a brilliant casino  ploy to get people to sit and play empty slot machines just to shut off  the horrid commercials.
I guess that I am living proof that the  Ontario education system is even worse than Nevadas.
The article  states clearly twice that the slot ads have no sound.
Therefore,  ignore my lament about how irritating loud commercials would be on  nearby empty slot machines.
Just remember also, though, that what  starts out as silent ads will quickly adopt sound if the casinos think  it will somehow generate more revenue.
One application allows  customers to touch an image of a coupon on the screen and print out the  coupon, redeemable for free play or drinks or other prizes. Heres a  challenge to readers out there: Go to a casino, collect as many coupons  as you possibly can, and total them up after a couple of hours. Then let  us know how you made out. Id do it but I cant stand the noise and the  cigarette smoke for more than just a few minutes at a time.
This  sounds like a great idea if youre a moron. When I go to play slots I  dont want to be looking at some car commercial while trying to figure  out if thats the machine I want to play. The whole things sounds wrong. I  hope the idea dies quickly and painfully.
This is beautiful. Next we  will have ads when we have sex. This sex act was brought to u by DR X.  When u have trouble ejaculating see Dr X. Great idea!
Am I alone in  the thought that going to a casino is time away from guerrilla  marketing?
Ah, I remember a time when cable TV was billed commercial  television without the commercials. Now there are more commercials on  cable TV than there ever was on over the air free TV. Next stop,  infomercials on your TV in your room. What makes me laugh is somme  ignorant fool in marketing honestly believes consumers buying habits are  swayed by commercials.
kenodave, I agree. Advertising puts a message  in your brain, but I believe annoying ads put the message DO NOT BUY  THIS PRODUCT in your head as well.
So much for going to a casino to  get away from the obnoxious commercials on TV. Maybe Ill go to a movie  instead. Oh wait! They have commercials too. Whats next? Commercial  breaks during shows on the Strip?
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