14/05/2016
GLOMACX WORLD OF TECH
DJI The Market Leader In The Latest Drone Boom Launches Drone Flagship Store in Seoul, South Korea
This store is the second official store following the one in OCT Harbour that opened last December in Shenzhen, DJI’s headquarter. The Korean flagship store covers 10,000 sqft of merchandise space on five levels, featuring the latest products, including Phantom 4, Phantom 3, as well as the popular Inspire 1, SpreadWing Series, Matrice 100 and Ronin Handheld Gimbal Camera. The newest 4K handheld camera, Osmo, is also be on display for sale.
The underground space, named Hall of Inspire, serves as a lounge area offering interactive experiences with the most captivating visual experiences captured with DJI’s products. The showcase area on the first and second floors lay out the full range of gadgets from DJI, and also include demo zones. Third and fourth floors serve as customer service and office space.
Taehyun Moon, president of DJI Korea commented that “the consumption trend of visual contents through mobile devices has been skyrocketing, and South Korea is the hottest market with the most potential on these demands.” He added that “DJI has put in a lot of effort to present a whole new experience to everyone who visits the flagship store, and will try to capture many of those who have seen or experienced drones for the very first time.”
DJI Korea has also announced that it will offer customer service even for products purchased outside of Korea. Firmware updates as well as site maintenance will be available for all DJI customers.
On the day of the store launch, expert drone pilots demonstrated flights in the in-store flight zone for the crowd, and offering interactive experiences with the latest Osmo Cameras.
WHAT GLOMACX HAS TO SAY
Drone enthusiasts know that there’s big potential for drones to bring value to a wide range of industries.
The unmanned aerial vehicles also know as Drones, have no human pilot onboard, and instead are either controlled by a person on the ground or autonomously via a computer program. These stealth craft are becoming increasingly popular, not just for war and military purposes, but also for everything from wildlife and atmospheric research to disaster relief and sports photography.
DJI makes drones that are used by 70 percent of the global commercial market , and it has a software developer platform that’s the closest thing to an industry standard for drones.
They have put in a lot of effort to present a whole new experience to everyone who visits the flagship store in Seoul, South Korea.
The Phantom model is DJI best-selling line of drones and companies are increasingly interested in using drones for their business, especially delivery.