Courses

Video Prototyping


If you have lost your key, you call the KeyLess call centre where you will be guided through a security procedure to identify you. Once you are successfully identified, a replacement key will be dispensed. You can then go to a café or any place of your choice to wait for the courier to arrive with your new key.

We wanted to show the contact between the customer and the service. The main aim of the video was to describe all the procedures of the KeyLess service (identification, data collection, delivery etc) from an insight point of view, to demonstrate how the company gains the customer’s trust. We put a lot of attention on the call centre girl, efficient and well-mannered, and on the delivery boy because we wanted to underline that the KeyLess service is run by people who really care about their customers.

We particularly focussed on the security issue: the delivery boy doesn’t have any access to the keys, just the customer himself who - after fingerprint recognition - can get his keys from the special KeyLess delivery device.

The idea was to communicate a relaxed atmosphere: if the customer loses their keys they won’t have to worry anymore. The KeyLess service looks after everything and will deliver the keys anywhere in town within 30 minutes.

Alice has lost her key but with the KeyLess service she only has to wait maximum 30 minutes to get a replacement key. She does the waiting in a nearby café, drinking a hot cup of tea, reading a book.

The courier from the KeyLess service arrives at the café and finds the customer from a picture on the tracking device.

Alice happily receives a replacement key and can now go home.

The tracking device identifies the customer through a fingerprint scan and dispenses the key if the fingerprint is a match.

The KeyLess logo.

Excerpt from the manuscript for the dialogue. Our movie is based on the conversation between the call center woman and the customer.

The data from Alice's call is being transferred to the all-in-one tracking device and dispenser.

The Interaction Design Programme


The Interaction Design Programme is a collaborative initiative between Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (CIID) and The Danish Design School (DKDS). Our aim is for students, faculty and staff to work together in a multi-cultural, multidisciplinary studio environment to co-create a new kind of education that is relevant for academia and industry.

This site is a gallery of student work. For more information about the Interaction Design Programme please visit the website: http://ciid.dkds.dk/ - or contact us by email: info@ciid.dkds.dk.