With Microsoft pulling out of the Consumer Electronics Show and Apple no where to be seen, the show has become a huge opportunity for other companies to have their major on-stage moment. With over 150,000 people in attendance and millions of people watching remotely, itâs the opportunity of the year for a company that isnât known for its press conference prowess.
You know. Like Verizon.
Verizonâs Lowell McAdam has the eyes and ears of millions of people right at this very second, and to keep the attention of so many for 90 minutes there must be a narrative that goes beyond âWe have a really sweet and super speedy network.â
Last night, Qualcommâs opening Keynote focused on a new campaign called âBorn Mobile.â The basic idea behind it is that kids these days use their phones more than desktops and that Qualcomm is ahead of the curve in understanding that and catering to it. This narrative ended up biting Qualcomm in the ass, since it proved just how out of touch Qualcomm is with the younger generation. Ironic.
So what is the narrative tonight, with Verizon?
Verizon is going to save the world.
When the keynote began, we were shown a video of the worldâs toughest and biggest questions. Why is video so much harder than email? Why canât we leverage digital technology in the classroom when it clearly increases student engagement?
And then it gets even more serious.
Why donât first responders and emergency teams have the very best technology available to help save lives? Why do we constantly hear about global warming and never see any action? There was even a guy in the video who was complaining about his 60+-year-old mother needing a ride to the hospital once a week, since the senior citizen community is growing rapidly.
The music in the video was more dramatic than âMy Heart Will Go Onâ at the end of Titanic, and the quick cuts and editing style of the video rivaled the suspense and peril of The Day After Tomorrow.
The tagline read:
The worldâs biggest challenges deserve even bigger solutions.
Verizon: Powerful Answers
This narrative â" the notion that Verizon is saving the world â" is actually a pretty smart one. The questions posed above and in the video are true challenges to the future of our planet. And if anything could serve as a solution, itâs a more connected world.
The only hitch in the plan is the extreme swing from peril, real life danger, and doom to NFLâs Mobile application and Fordâs latest connected car solution.
In an attempt to answer those questions, McAdam started off by introducing a platform called Golden-I. It essentially powers the devices that help fire fighters respond to emergencies, giving them access to building schematics, firefighter biometrics, and infrared sensors to detect movement within a smoky fire. Verizon supports Golden-Iâs connectivity.
The video package for Golden-I ended with the following words: âNow we can save lives.â
Unfortunately, we went straight from saving lives in burning buildings to NFLâs mobile presence. Verizon helps the NFL serve up video to mobile devices. Itâs super important. You might even say itâs a âpowerful answerâ to one of the âworldâs biggest challenges.â
Just like Fordâs connected car plans. McAdam invited Ford Motor Co.âs CTO on stage to discuss new tools to refine the transportation industry. The video package for that included awesome buzzwords like âDriver Dynamics: Refined by the Cloud.â
This bit of the keynote spoke very briefly to EV and decreasing carbon emissions. But itâs all good. When the world implodes from the added weight of our disgusting and unedning polution, youâll be able to tweet about it and maybe even Instagram a picture of it directly from your car.
Oohh. Ahh.
Just as a pendulum swings, we went from saving lives, to watching football in an internet-connected car, back to the healthcare industry. I honestly donât know how to feel.
McAdamâs explained how we now spend $3 trillion per year on healthcare, which should rise more than five percent a year. In fact, healthcare consumes 19 percent of the federal budget, more than any other item, and yet American health declined by 70 percent compared to the 90â²s.
One of the worldâs biggest challenges? Verizon has a powerful answer.
And Iâm not saying that sarcastically. Verizon actually announced a $10 million âPowerful Answersâ Award that will be given to the innovations that best leverage itâs platform to improve healthcare, education and sustainability. Itâs a noble and important announcement to say the very least. If any sectors deserve and require a bit more attention, it would be the above three.
But this isnât about what Verizon is doing. Truth be told, Verizon has the best TV service, the best wireless network, and the list only goes on. Itâs truly a great company.
But if Steve Jobs is the Muhammed Ali of tech presenters, Lowell McAdam is the guy at the gym down the street. With a million eyes on him, he essentially told the world that Verizon is saving the world, both through support for first responders and healthcare innovation, as well as better football video and more Facebook in your car.
Basically, McAdam was trying to have it both ways, as exemplified by his comments that Verizon can both can create âbillions of dollarsâ in social value while also growing the wireless market. And maybe it is possible to do good and to do well at the same time. But he didnât make a convincing case today.
Verizon Communications Inc. delivers broadband and other wireline and wireless communication innovations to mass market, business, government and wholesale customers. Verizon Wireless operates Americaâs largest wireless network that serves nearly 102 million customers nationwide. Verizonâs Wireline operations include Verizon Business and Verizon Telecom, which brings customers converged communications, information and entertainment services over Verizonâs fiber-optic network.
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