Monday, 22 June 2015

Norwegian airlines created an emoji-only web address to reach millennials

 
Emoji URLs may be the next big thing. With unique and memorable domain names becoming more and more scarce, some companies and campaigns are turning to out-of-the-box digital methods to reach new audiences. 
Norwegian Air Shuttle did just that with its new emoji-only URL, reports AdWeek, creating a web address that replaces traditional lettering with emojis.
The airline launched this URL for a very specific offer, so it used a very specific string of emojis. It wanted to announce a new direct flight from Copenhagen to Las Vegas, and so the website was Airplane-Slot Machine-Money.ws.
It looks like this: www..ws
The .ws domain represents Western Samoa, which is one of the few countries that allow URLs in non-Latin characters. There are others too, including Tokelau (.tk) which is a small New Zealand territory, according to the Washington Post.
Norwegian Airlines’ emoji URL isn’t the first of its kind. A few months back Coca-Cola launched an ad campaign of single emoji internet addresses. Additionally, an Irish group advocating for gay marriage also launched a web campaign using either two male emojis together or two female emojis together. It redirected to a page talking about the May 22nd vote, which legalized gay marriage in Ireland. 
Still, emoji web addresses have yet to hit the mainstream. This is likely because only younger users on mobile are able to seamlessly use the illustrative characters. Acquiring such domains are also hard due to the politics of top level domains, as some countries only allow certain types of characters.
All the same, Norwegian Airlines told AdWeek that this experiment paid off. It pushed the emoji URL to users on Instagram and saw 1,600 hits on the first day. Given that it was targeted to and released on social networks consisting primarily of Millennials, the airline saw this as a successful covert ad operation.

Ryanair flight FR7322 to Alicante declares emergency and lands in Paris

                                                       The cause of the emergency is not yet known

 
 
Ryanair flight FR3722 from Frankfurt in Germany to Alicante in Spain has landed in Paris after declaring an emergency. 
 
According to AirLive.net, the Boeing 737-8AS turned after being in the air for only a short while. The flight left from Frankfurt-Hahn international airport just under an hour ago and was scheduled to arrive in Alicante at 1.10pm Spanish time.
 
The pilot sent out a squawk 7700, which is one of many emergency codes used on planes. Ryanair confirmed to City A.M. that the diversion was due top a customer becoming ill on board: 
 
"This flight from Frankfurt Hahn to Alicante diverted to Paris Beauvais after a customer became ill on board. The aircraft landed normally and the customer was met by medical personnel, where they disembarked for further treatment and the aircraft is due to depart to Alicante shortly."
 
Shares in Ryanair have remained stable following the announcement, currently up 0.93 per cent at €11.97.