Volkswagen Smileage: Road Trips with Google

Volkswagen Smileage: Road Trips with Google

With the Volkswagen Smileage app, road trips are never going to be the same again. Smileage is the in-app points system you earn from trip activity and social participation. Powered by Google the app is set to socialise road trips world over.

To start earning Smileage you have to pair the app with your car and sign in with your Google account. Once synced, the app automatically connects each time you go for a ride.

Friends can then watch and comment on your journey in real time while you earn Smileage through shared photos, kilometers, checkins, comments, likes and punches, the app’s name for quick in-app interactions from other nearby Volkswagens.

The car becomes a social object

The concept here is not just “tracking”. It is making the trip legible and interactive for people who are not in the car. Because spectators can react and contribute in real time, the drive becomes more shareable and more repeatable than a private commute.

  • Automatic connection. Pair once, then the app connects when you drive.
  • Live participation. Friends can watch and comment in real time.
  • Gamified reward loop. Points are earned through trip activity and social interactions.

Why the Google sign-in matters

In global automotive and mobility brands, the growth lever is turning driving time into something other people can see and join in.

The real question is whether your product turns real-world activity into something other people can participate in, not just something you can track.

Signing in with a Google account signals that this is more than a standalone app. It is built to plug into existing identity, location, and potentially mapping behavior. That is what enables a smoother experience and a more connected ecosystem around the trip. This is the right trade when you want engagement to extend beyond the driver.

Gamification that is tied to behavior

The points system is not abstract. It is linked directly to what happens on a trip. Photos, kilometers, check-ins, comments, likes, and even “punches” from nearby Volkswagens. The incentives are designed to encourage both movement and sharing.

Extractable takeaway: When rewards map to real-world actions and make those actions socially visible, the loop feels earned and keeps paying out after the trip ends.

  1. Drive. Kilometers and check-ins create baseline progress.
  2. Share. Photos create moments worth reacting to.
  3. Engage. Comments and likes add social energy.
  4. Connect. Nearby Volkswagens add community and surprise.

In connected consumer products, engagement grows fastest when real-world activity, identity, and social participation are designed as one loop.

What to take from this if you build connected experiences

  1. Reduce setup friction. Pair once. Auto-connect later.
  2. Design for spectators. The audience is part of the experience, not just the driver.
  3. Reward real activity. Gamification works best when points map to meaningful behavior.
  4. Use social to extend usage. Trips become more memorable when others can join in.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Volkswagen Smileage?

It is an app that pairs with your Volkswagen and Google account to make road trips social, letting friends follow and comment live while you earn points for trip activity and engagement.

How do you start earning Smileage?

You pair the app with your car and sign in with your Google account. Once synced, it connects automatically each time you go for a ride.

How do you earn points in the app?

Through shared photos, kilometers, check-ins, comments, likes, and “punches” from other nearby Volkswagens.

What is the main experience benefit for users?

Road trips become shareable in real time, turning the drive into a live story that friends can react to and participate in.

What is the transferable lesson for connected products?

If you combine automatic sensing with social participation and rewards tied to real behavior, you can turn routine usage into a repeatable engagement loop.

fiftyfifty: Frozen Cinema

fiftyfifty: Frozen Cinema

A cinema in Germany is set to a brutal 8°C. The audience starts to shiver, then notices blankets placed on the seats. A short film begins, and homeless people on screen comment on the “cold cinema experience”. For them, 8°C is described as cozy.

That contrast is the reality check. It turns “winter hardship” from an abstract idea into a physical sensation you cannot ignore, even if only for a few minutes.

How the donation loop is built

The mechanism is tightly engineered. Lower the temperature. Hand out blankets. Add QR codes to the blankets so the audience can donate instantly while the emotional context is still fresh. Here, the donation loop means a felt trigger, an instant prompt, and a friction-light way to give before the moment fades. The cold primes empathy. The QR code removes friction. That sequence works because the physical cue creates urgency and the QR code captures intent before it cools.

In European urban environments where most people only glimpse homelessness in passing, empathy campaigns land harder when they translate a daily reality into a shared, felt moment.

The real question is how to turn sympathy into immediate action before comfort returns and attention drifts.

Why it lands

This works because it is not just a message. It is a sensory demo. The audience experiences discomfort, then immediately hears the perspective of people who live with worse, for longer, with no quick “rewarm” button.

Extractable takeaway: If your cause depends on empathy, build one controlled, temporary experience that lets people feel a fraction of the problem, then put the simplest possible action in their hands while they still care.

What to reuse in empathy activations

  • Use the environment as media. A small physical change can do more than a big headline.
  • Pair feeling with explanation. The “why” must arrive before people rationalize the discomfort away.
  • Make the action immediate. Donations work best when there is no extra search, form, or delay.
  • Keep it respectful. The goal is recognition and support, not spectacle.

A few fast answers before you act

What is “Frozen Cinema”?

It is a charity awareness and donation activation that chills a cinema to 8°C and uses a short film plus QR-coded blankets to trigger immediate donations for homeless support.

What is the core mechanism?

Physical discomfort creates attention. Context from homeless voices creates meaning. QR codes on blankets remove friction so people can donate on the spot.

Why does the temperature change matter?

It turns an intellectual topic into a bodily experience. That shift makes the message harder to dismiss and easier to remember.

Why put the QR code on the blanket?

It places the donation action inside the experience itself, so people do not have to search for the next step after the emotional moment has passed.

What is the most reusable lesson?

When you need action, design a moment that people can feel, then make the response path effortless and immediate.

Coca-Cola: Chok Chok

Coca-Cola: Chok Chok

Mobile and creative thinking can come together to create really compelling marketing campaigns. In this example, Coca-Cola Hong Kong created a “Chok Chok” mobile app that turned the viewer’s smartphone into a remote control for their TV ad.

To collect the Coca-Cola bottle caps that appeared on the TV screen, viewers had to swing their phones when the ad came on. Those who successfully managed to swing and collect were instantly rewarded with prizes that included cars, sports apparel, credit card spend value, travel coupons and movie tickets.

As a result the campaign was seen by 9 million people and the app got over 380,000 downloads.

The real question is whether your second-screen idea creates a one-step action people can do instantly when the media moment appears.

For those wondering, the bottle cap collection was enabled through the audio signal of the ad, which triggered the application and synced the user’s motion with the ad. The accelerometer in the phone was also used to assess the quality of the motion. Together they were used to catch the bottle caps virtually.

However as far as I know, Honda in the UK was the first to pioneer this kind of an interactive TV ad, even though it did not receive results like Coca-Cola.

In mass-reach consumer campaigns where TV attention and smartphone use overlap, audio-synced interactivity can turn a passive spot into a short participation window.

Why this works so well

It works because it gives the viewer control in a way TV usually does not. Here, “viewer control” means one deliberate physical action that directly drives what you get from the ad. Because the ad’s audio triggers the app and the accelerometer judges motion quality, the “catch” feels causally tied to the on-screen moment instead of feeling random.

Extractable takeaway: If you want participation in real time, design a one-second action that maps cleanly to an on-screen event, then make the feedback and reward immediate.

  • Viewer control is the hook. The ad is not just watched. It is “played” through a simple physical action.
  • Timing creates urgency. You have to act when the ad is live, which turns media time into a moment of participation.
  • Feedback is immediate. You swing, you collect, you win. The loop is easy to understand and easy to repeat.

Steal this second-screen loop

Start with a single, unmistakable behavior the viewer can do in one second. Then use a reliable synchronization trigger (here, the ad’s audio) and a sensor input (here, the accelerometer) to connect the phone action to what happens on screen. This is the right level of interactivity for broadcast media: simple action, obvious timing, instant payoff.

  • One-second action. Choose a gesture the viewer can do immediately when the spot starts.
  • Reliable sync trigger. Use a broadcast-carried signal to trigger the experience, such as the ad’s audio.
  • Sensor validation. Use the phone sensor input to assess whether the action quality is good enough to “count”.
  • Immediate feedback. Keep the loop legible: swing, collect, win.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Coca-Cola “Chok Chok”?

It is a Coca-Cola Hong Kong mobile app that synchronizes with a TV ad and lets viewers swing their phones to collect on-screen bottle caps for prizes.

How did the app sync with the TV ad?

The app used the audio signal of the ad as the trigger, then aligned the on-screen moments with the user’s motion so “collection” happened at the right time.

What role did the accelerometer play?

The accelerometer assessed the quality of the swinging motion, helping determine whether the viewer “caught” the bottle caps virtually.

What is the main takeaway for interactive TV and second-screen work?

Make participation effortless, tie it to a tight timing window, and reward the action immediately so the viewer feels impact in the moment.