Interactive Digital Signage Has Crossed From Novelty to Industry Standard

Walk the floor at any major retail trade show this year and one shift is hard to miss. The interactive digital signage kiosk has stopped being a novelty.

At EuroShop 2026, self-service hardware lined nearly every hall. Three years earlier, only a handful of companies were showing it. That tells you where the market has landed.

The Demand Data Behind the Shift

Interactive content drives around six times the engagement of passive screens. Close to 59% of consumers say they’re open to using a touchscreen to customise a product, and roughly a third now use in-store displays to check stock on the spot.

The global retail self-service kiosk market sat at around USD 25.6 billion in 2025 and is tracking toward USD 37.8 billion by 2030. Touchscreen and interactive kiosks are one of the fastest-moving categories in the wider digital signage market.

The shift isn’t limited to retail. Healthcare, education, government, and hospitality operators are all investing in interactive displays. Years of smartphone use have made self-service the default expectation across virtually every public-facing environment.

Why the Screen Was Never the Point

Just Digital Signage has been deploying interactive and standard digital signage across Australian retail, hospitality, and corporate environments for close to two decades. Our view is straightforward: the hardware is the easy part. The value sits in the interactivity layer. A passive screen broadcasts. An interactive one collects.

From Display Budget to Customer Insight Channel

Every touch on an interactive display leaves a trail of intent data, comparable to click behaviour on an e-commerce website. A customer who customises a product, checks availability, or compares options is telling you something measurable about demand.

That reframes the whole investment. Interactive signage isn’t a display line on the capital budget. It’s a customer insight channel sitting on the shop floor, generating data every time someone engages with it.
Most operators haven’t caught up to this yet. Projects are still specced around screen size, resolution, and placement. Those things matter, but they’re the entry point, not the outcome.

If your current signage project is still being specced purely on hardware, speak to one of our digital signage experts about building interaction data into the brief on 1300 339 873.

The Smarter Conversation

What does the interaction actually produce? How does that data feed content and merchandising decisions? Who owns the data afterward, and how does it flow back into the rest of the business? When those questions drive the brief, interactive signage stops being a hardware purchase and starts behaving like part of the customer experience and analytics stack.

Where Australian Operators Are Seeing Results

The technology has matured. Hardware is more reliable, more affordable, and more capable than it was even three years ago. What’s still catching up is the thinking around it.

In council and government environments, Sunshine Coast Council’s interactive wayfinder replaced static maps with a touchscreen system visitors actually use. That kind of project shows what happens when interactivity is designed around a real operational need rather than bolted on as an afterthought.

Hotels and conference venues are another strong fit. Interactive lobby screens let guests check event schedules, explore local dining, and find their way around the building without queuing at reception. In corporate offices across Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, interactive directory boards handle visitor management and room booking in foyers with no receptionist required.

The pattern extends across retail digital signage too. Shopping centres from Westfield to Stockland are rolling out interactive directories and promotional kiosks at key entry points. Customers browse promotions, compare products, and check stock levels on their own terms.

The operators getting real return across all of these verticals treat interactivity as a source of insight, not a more expensive way to show the same content.

Planning Your Interactive Digital Signage Project

If you’re planning interactive digital signage this year, the decision should be driven by more than the screen. Customer experience, operational efficiency, and the data you capture all belong in the conversation from the start.

A few things worth getting right early: screen placement at natural decision points (not just high-traffic spots), integration with your existing POS or CMS, and a clear plan for who reviews the interaction data once it starts flowing.

On the hardware side, capacitive touchscreens rated for commercial use are the minimum for any public-facing deployment. Consumer-grade panels don’t last in high-traffic environments. If the screen sits near a window or semi-outdoor spot, you’ll want a panel rated to at least 700 nits. For fully outdoor positions, 2,500 nits or higher is standard.

Content management matters just as much. Your CMS needs to support scheduling, remote updates, and interaction reporting from a single dashboard. Without that, you’re managing screens manually, and that defeats the purpose of the investment. Understanding how digital signage works at a system level helps you spec the right solution from day one.

JDS designs, supplies, and installs interactive signage solutions across Australia, from single-screen kiosks to multi-site rollouts. Get in touch with our team on 1300 339 873 to talk through your project.

Interactive Digital Signage Has Crossed From Novelty to Industry Standard

Walk the floor at any major retail trade show this year and one shift is hard to miss. The interactive digital signage kiosk has stopped being a novelty.

At EuroShop 2026, self-service hardware lined nearly every hall. Three years earlier, only a handful of companies were showing it. That tells you where the market has landed.

The Demand Data Behind the Shift

Interactive content drives around six times the engagement of passive screens. Close to 59% of consumers say they’re open to using a touchscreen to customise a product, and roughly a third now use in-store displays to check stock on the spot.

The global retail self-service kiosk market sat at around USD 25.6 billion in 2025 and is tracking toward USD 37.8 billion by 2030. Touchscreen and interactive kiosks are one of the fastest-moving categories in the wider digital signage market.

The shift isn’t limited to retail. Healthcare, education, government, and hospitality operators are all investing in interactive displays. Years of smartphone use have made self-service the default expectation across virtually every public-facing environment.

Why the Screen Was Never the Point

Just Digital Signage has been deploying interactive and standard digital signage across Australian retail, hospitality, and corporate environments for close to two decades. Our view is straightforward: the hardware is the easy part. The value sits in the interactivity layer. A passive screen broadcasts. An interactive one collects.

From Display Budget to Customer Insight Channel

Every touch on an interactive display leaves a trail of intent data, comparable to click behaviour on an e-commerce website. A customer who customises a product, checks availability, or compares options is telling you something measurable about demand.

That reframes the whole investment. Interactive signage isn’t a display line on the capital budget. It’s a customer insight channel sitting on the shop floor, generating data every time someone engages with it.
Most operators haven’t caught up to this yet. Projects are still specced around screen size, resolution, and placement. Those things matter, but they’re the entry point, not the outcome.

If your current signage project is still being specced purely on hardware, speak to one of our digital signage experts about building interaction data into the brief on 1300 339 873.

The Smarter Conversation

What does the interaction actually produce? How does that data feed content and merchandising decisions? Who owns the data afterward, and how does it flow back into the rest of the business? When those questions drive the brief, interactive signage stops being a hardware purchase and starts behaving like part of the customer experience and analytics stack.

Where Australian Operators Are Seeing Results

The technology has matured. Hardware is more reliable, more affordable, and more capable than it was even three years ago. What’s still catching up is the thinking around it.

In council and government environments, Sunshine Coast Council’s interactive wayfinder replaced static maps with a touchscreen system visitors actually use. That kind of project shows what happens when interactivity is designed around a real operational need rather than bolted on as an afterthought.

Hotels and conference venues are another strong fit. Interactive lobby screens let guests check event schedules, explore local dining, and find their way around the building without queuing at reception. In corporate offices across Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, interactive directory boards handle visitor management and room booking in foyers with no receptionist required.

The pattern extends across retail digital signage too. Shopping centres from Westfield to Stockland are rolling out interactive directories and promotional kiosks at key entry points. Customers browse promotions, compare products, and check stock levels on their own terms.

The operators getting real return across all of these verticals treat interactivity as a source of insight, not a more expensive way to show the same content.

Planning Your Interactive Digital Signage Project

If you’re planning interactive digital signage this year, the decision should be driven by more than the screen. Customer experience, operational efficiency, and the data you capture all belong in the conversation from the start.

A few things worth getting right early: screen placement at natural decision points (not just high-traffic spots), integration with your existing POS or CMS, and a clear plan for who reviews the interaction data once it starts flowing.

On the hardware side, capacitive touchscreens rated for commercial use are the minimum for any public-facing deployment. Consumer-grade panels don’t last in high-traffic environments. If the screen sits near a window or semi-outdoor spot, you’ll want a panel rated to at least 700 nits. For fully outdoor positions, 2,500 nits or higher is standard.

Content management matters just as much. Your CMS needs to support scheduling, remote updates, and interaction reporting from a single dashboard. Without that, you’re managing screens manually, and that defeats the purpose of the investment. Understanding how digital signage works at a system level helps you spec the right solution from day one.

JDS designs, supplies, and installs interactive signage solutions across Australia, from single-screen kiosks to multi-site rollouts. Get in touch with our team on 1300 339 873 to talk through your project.

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