Skip to content
SunMatrix Ramble

SunMatrix Ramble

Covering the best of Marketing and Digital Innovation since 2009

  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT

Categories

Tag: smart print

Audi TT: Brochure Hack

Audi TT: Brochure Hack

When print becomes interface, not paper

In European automotive marketing, the best product storytelling often happens before the test drive, when you can turn curiosity into comprehension with a tangible experience.

Transforming classic print surfaces into smart touch based surfaces through special conductive ink and sensors has been around for a while now. But I still thought the below execution from Audi was worth a mention, as it was a step forward for the technology since it surfaced in 2014.

The Audi TT was the first Audi model to feature a revolutionary Virtual Cockpit. So to inspire customers, Razorfish Germany used conductive ink, haptic feedback, Bluetooth and a custom smartphone app to transform the car’s conventional sales brochure into a smart surface which gave viewers an augmented touch based journey through the car’s Virtual Cockpit.

How the brochure hack worked as a connected demo

The mechanism was smart print plus a companion device.

Conductive ink turned parts of the brochure into touch-sensitive zones. The smartphone app acted as the compute layer and controller. Bluetooth linked the physical brochure to digital content, while haptic feedback reinforced the feeling that the brochure itself had become an interface.

Instead of reading about Virtual Cockpit, viewers navigated it through touch, guided by the brochure’s layout.

Why touch and haptics made the feature feel real

Virtual Cockpit is a feature that can sound abstract on a spec sheet.

This approach translated an invisible digital capability into something you could physically explore. Touch reduces cognitive load. Haptics add confirmation. The result feels less like marketing and more like discovery, which is exactly what you want when the goal is to move someone from interest to intent.

The business intent behind turning a brochure into product experience

The intent was to make a new interface feature memorable and easy to understand before a customer ever sat in the car.

It also reframed the brochure from disposable collateral into a premium object that people were more likely to keep, show, and talk about, extending attention time well beyond the first touchpoint.

What to steal from this for your next “smart print” idea

  • Use print to trigger behavior, not just convey information. If the product story is interactive, the media should be too.
  • Make the first interaction obvious. Touch zones should feel discoverable without instructions.
  • Pair physical feedback with digital content. Haptics and responsiveness make the experience feel credible.
  • Choose smart print when it explains something complex. The tech earns its cost when it makes a hard-to-grasp feature instantly understandable.

A few fast answers before you act

What was the Audi TT brochure hack?

A print brochure that behaved like a digital interface, letting people explore the car in a more interactive way than static pages.

What made the mechanism effective?

It kept the familiar brochure format but added an exploration layer. The brochure became the entry point, and the user action created the payoff.

Why does this matter for car marketing?

It reduces uncertainty during consideration by making features and choices easier to visualize and compare without a showroom visit.

What is the practical takeaway?

When the product decision is high-friction, use simple interactivity to turn passive media into guided exploration.

Posted on April 28, 2015February 3, 2026Categories Emerging Technology, Emerging Trends, Marketing Strategies, Mobile, PackagingTags Audi, Audi TT, Audi TT Virtual Cockpit, Automotive marketing, Bluetooth, Brochure, Conductive Ink, connected packaging, Germany, haptic feedback, interactive brochure, print surfaces, Razorfish Germany, sensors, smart print, smart touch based surfaces, Virtual Cockpit
SunMatrix Ramble
The best of Marketing and Digital Innovation since 2009