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Navori powers campus digital signage network for Santa Clara University

Flexible multi-seat architecture, richer visuals and data integration, and anticipated integration with the campus digital signage and emergency notification system set Navori apart from the competition

LAUSANNE, Switzerland, January 8, 2019

Universities and higher education institutions seek to expand the horizons of their digital signage networks. Consequently, many have discovered the campus-wide communications and media limitations of their first-generation systems. This was the case at Santa Clara University in northern California. They upgraded to Navori’s Navori digital signage software before the Fall 2018 quarter. The upgrade has at once significantly simplified operations and enabled new services and opportunities across the 80-screen network.

Navori is a cloud or on-premise solution. Consequently, Santa Clara opted for centralized cloud deployment. It offers a flexible multi-seat architecture for campus-wide networks. That multi-seat flexibility was a key deciding factor for the 24 content managers contributing to the 80-screen network. They are present in almost every building on campus. The high-quality reproduction of 4K graphics and other visual content, along with general ease of use, competitive pricing, and rich data integration, further set Navori apart from other vendors competing for the project.

“Our previous system was out of date. Thus it couldn’t accommodate the more specialized initiatives we wanted to launch,” said Elwood Mills. He is the manager of SCU digital signage, Santa Clara University. With responsibilities that include network maintenance, Mills grew increasingly frustrated with the previous system’s lack of reliability. “Connectivity issues with the servers continued to escalate, which often meant that random screens would remain blank for hours or days at a time.”

Controlled independently

Mills often handles the editing and dissemination of content contributed by the 24 managers. While much of this content is distributed campus-wide, specialized slides are often created for certain departments, including the School of Engineering. Nicole Morales, director of digital media technologies for the School of Engineering, notes that Navori QL’s ease of use and richer data capabilities have made an enormous difference throughout the department.

“I have seven screens under my control across four buildings. And we do a lot of our own content creation across faculty and student organizations,” said Morales. “With our previous system, it would take up to 15 minutes for screens to refresh when new content was uploaded. Navori has eliminated the problems we were having with reliability in content delivery. Undeniably, it means the information we post about classes and events can go live with short notice. Navori also allows us to securely use outside URLs. And integrate live feeds from our different social media networks through the external Tagboard service. We’ve been able to drive a much higher degree of interaction with our social media feeds through digital signage.

Customer comments

Ali Reimer is the assistant director of marketing and communications for the Leavey School of Business. She manages the digital screens that live within Lucas Hall. She notes that the screens have become a central communications platform to promote events and course information to business students and visitors, and promote faculty members and their research projects among other initiatives.

“We have about 15 screens spread throughout Lucas Hall, and Navori’s multi-user capability means we can focus exactly on the needs of our departments and centers and drive that strategy locally,” said Reimer. “Navori makes it very simple to create different playlists for different audiences throughout the day, which are timed to go live based on when those audiences are in the building. It provides a consistent, reliable, and visually impressive platform to market to both current and prospective students. And otherwise allows us to communicate the specific messages we aim to deliver.”

Reimer adds that Navori has also improved visual quality across the network for both 4K and 1080p content. She has been exploring the many different template options for portrait and landscape displays in her department. Thereupon, Ali Reimer has been gradually incorporating more tickers to develop a more well-rounded experience.

Moving forward, Mills expects to extend the network to new buildings currently being planned or that are already under construction. He also is working with Navori to integrate the campus emergency notification system with the digital signage network. Therefore, he is using the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP). Once live, the integration will provide a digital format to disseminate emergency messages simultaneously over the Navori network and other communications systems around campus.

“Digital signage brings a lot of value to campus life. From general communications and marketing through to campus safety and security,” said Mills. “Navori has made life easier for everyone involved in the network, while also breathing new life into our content and messaging. We no longer have to rotate through three or four screens to manage content. The ease of use of Navori is what really sells. Digital signage is no longer time-consuming. ”