3 Ways to Know the Company Selling you Virtual Reality for Business is Full of It

3 Ways to Know the Company Selling you Virtual Reality for Business is Full of It

As sure as Mario collects coins, more and more businesses are trying to use virtual reality as a "look, shiny!" way to sell you stuff. VR is a tool, and if used wrong, it'll hurt your brand and even make people sick. I've found at least 3 ways to know the company selling you virtual reality for business is full of it.

Editor's note: At Games Done Legit, we are passionate about gaming, technology, and clients' happiness.

We don't write blog posts to get clicks, we write because we love virtual reality & videogames and want to share knowledge that might help your business. I suggest keeping this open in your browser, read it over a break and coffee, and finish it later! It'll be worth it!

Virtual Reality is really, really amazing stuff. It only takes one try on Good VR, we usually get people evangelizing the tech right along with us!

Anything that can get you rolling around on the floor at a trade show is probably cool.

For every believer we make, there are thousands of companies that think "VR" prints money because it's as trendy as fidget spinners right now, and it's just another line item to include on their pitches to customers and clients.

At almost every trade show, I see the following terrible uses of virtual reality for business.

They not only hurt their brand, but they're hindering the immeasurable positive impact VR is having on education, job training, empathy, healing, and of course, fun.

Plus they might make someone upchuck all over their booth.

1. Flight Simulators

I've shared before about how Bad VR literally makes the human body ill. 

I was at a recent trade show where a company was showcasing an Oculus Touch setup, which was mildly surprising because I'd spent a year trying to demo our VR Zone for them to see how we could work together.

My inkling they probably had no idea how to use virtual reality for business was confirmed when I saw them having a young lady standing up playing a flight simulator.

A lot of DJs try to do everything for a client themselves than hire an expert/specialist, and once again I immediately could hear the Price Is Right "fail horn" in my head when I saw their presentation.

Wrong VR Setup.

Astute reader you are, you probably realize that standing up while piloting a moving aircraft, whether it's real life or VR, would feel really, really not good. Think about that for a second!

*forehead slap*

Wrong VR Experience

The main problem in today's virtual reality applies to flight sims: when you see yourself moving, yet your body is physically stationary, you get sick. It's an inner ear thing that you can learn more about elsewhere from people who study this stuff. I only know how to make sure people avoid it until a VR solution is invented!

Wrong VR Tools

PC flight sticks have been around for decades. The concept of grabbing an imaginary VR joystick & controls when you could just use a real one is comical and ridiculous.

Picture playing a racing game where your hands are just grabbing air to steer instead of just using a real racing wheel. Pretty dumb.

If it ain't broke?

It took me about 2 seconds to process all this and be glad we had our VR Zone on site so people wouldn't walk away thinking that VR A: sucks, and B: makes you queezy.

This is how people are supposed to react to VR, because Good VR is that amazing!

2. Roller Coasters

For the love of God, Montresor, stop using roller coasters in VR.

Hope there's a barf bag off camera!

It doesn't matter if you're using a Google Cardboard or high-end VR like the Vive or Oculus, VR roller coasters throw your innards around and leave you feeling like you spent the day rocking on a boat in the middle of a storm.

Whoever is producing these are to blame in the first place, but companies using them for promo are just as bad.

There's a company I had high hopes to be a partner in sharing ideas regarding virtual reality for business, yet they have roller coaster VR sims prominently featured on their website, like it's the greatest idea since trust falls.

I'm totally sure they get a lot repeat team building business after half the executives loses their lunch on each other. I'm sure the post-event reviews are colorful, though, but I mostly wonder how they get regurgitated steak-and-Labatt stenches out of their upholstery.

Anytime someone pitches Roller Coaster VR anything to you, you immediately know:

  1. They have no idea what they're selling you,
  2. They know nothing about the VR industry,
  3. Most importantly, they care more about your money than your experience.

 A chair that vibrates with motion helps some, but not much, because you still are stationary while your brain is seeing you zoom at 65 mph.

3. Unbranded, Stock Images of VR All Over Their Website

Even seen pictures like these advertising virtual reality for business?


You probably have. That's because someone took the two minutes I just did to Google Image Search "virtual reality".

No Branding = No Events

Any company that's not completely braindead is going to brand their VR headsets (either for themselves or with the client's logo), so if you see headsets all over their website without it, they haven't actually had any events with whatever they're claiming is the greatest thing since sliced bread.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBSls8h8IrM[/youtube]

One company I found with stock images up the wazoo even already started its own VR industry association with a membership costing more than $1,000 per year, while its website features every VR cardinal sin on this page.

Maybe they're using that money to consult with someone who actually knows VR?

Metal Gear Solid 2 raises deep questions about AI and Virtual Reality that grow more relevant by the year

No Pics/Video That Show Normal People Having a Good Time

The weirdest thing to me is all these stock images and staged videos don't even sell virtual reality for business well at all, anyway.

They show everybody either completely stonefaced, or they're agape and slackjaw. Either way it looks like the headset must have just melted their brain, which is not really something I'd like our clients to experience (think of the legal bills).

This is what people trying VR for the first time actually look like, if it's Good VR. It's unreal!

You can't help but feel childlike wonder as you wield a lightsaber like Luke Skywalker, dodge lasers like Neo, or paint an entire world around you.

I hope "3 Ways to Know the Company Selling you Virtual Reality for Business is Full of It" provided a little light on how to avoid getting taken for a ride.

The novelty of VR and AR will eventually wear off, and if you're aren't providing a service people really like, you aren't going to get repeat business if you land a client.

It doesn't matter how you dress up the exterior of your VR area or whatever, the experience people have in it is all that matters, because that's what they'll remember, and that's what they'll tell people about.

We hope a lot of these companies can put in the work to understand virtual reality and how it really can change the world we live in for the better.

Until they do, we'll be writing these for you ;)

I hope this was helpful to you or your business!

If you have any questions or comments about making work and events more fun and engaging, feel free to reach me on LinkedIn or at [email protected] . If you're interested to see what we're cooking up for businesses through gaming, visit https://GamesDoneLegit.com/corporate !

Nancy Jean Lauren

NMLS# 2337494 Helping Middle American families become properly protected, debt free & financial independent

7 年

A phone company I will leave unnameless...sold me a SIM card, telling me that was the solution to my connection problem. I found out how unethical they were. Funny big name, unscrupulous in my book. Went to return it at a different location the same day... they pointed out to me the guy sold me a waterproofing warranty for my phone and the SIM card was free. Asked for a refund and had to come back the next day. Went back the next day a found a

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