One Campus, Many Conversations
The communication challenge at a university is both scale and variety. A first-year student needs to find the right building. A postgraduate researcher needs to know about a seminar change. A member of staff needs the latest HR update. A prospective student visiting on an open day needs to feel the character of the institution. No single printed medium serves all of those needs simultaneously - but a well-planned network of digital displays comes close. Each screen can serve a different audience with different content, all managed centrally and updated in real time from a single dashboard.
Keeping the Campus Moving
A large campus presents genuine wayfinding challenges, particularly for new students, international visitors, and open day guests navigating an unfamiliar environment.
Freestanding digital totems at key junctions, building entrances, and transport drop-off points reduce the number of people stopping to ask for directions, and can be updated instantly when a room changes or a building is temporarily closed.
For universities running open days, digital displays showing welcome messages, timetables, and department locations create a polished, professional first impression that printed floor plans simply can't match.
From Lecture Theatre to Student Union
Digital screens serve different purposes in different campus zones. In academic buildings, wall-mounted displays outside lecture theatres show room schedules, timetable changes, and faculty announcements. This reduces the volume of emails that go unread and the queues that form outside the wrong room.
In the students' union, library, and social spaces, screens promote events, societies, wellbeing resources, and student support services in a format that competes naturally with the phones in students' hands. In campus cafés and retail outlets, digital menu boards and promotional screens drive sales and reduce queue pressure during busy lunchtime periods. Each location, one consistent communication system.
Which Display Suits a University?
University environments need a mix of display formats working across very different spaces...
Wall-mounted screens are ideal for corridors, lecture building lobbies, student services areas, and staff common rooms, where a fixed, professional display delivers consistent messaging without taking up floor space.
For student-facing self-service points (such as careers advice desks, library information points, or welfare and counselling reception areas) a tablet stand provides a discreet, personal touchpoint.
A freestanding totem is the right choice for open-plan spaces such as atriums, entrance halls, outdoor covered walkways, and open days, where displays can be positioned where people actually gather.
High-brightness displays are worth considering for any campus buildings with large glazed facades or outdoor digital signage requirements. They're heat-resistant and stay visible even in direct sunlight
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