Kim T. Gordon: Marketing
Inventive Ways to Use Place-Based Media
With place-based media, you can advertise nearly anywhere your customers look. Here's how to choose the right places to get your message out.
By Kim T. Gordon
| April 17, 2006
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/marketing/marketingcolumnistkimtgordon/article159478.html
Editor's Note: The following article is excerpted from
Kim Gordon's latest book, Maximum Marketing, Minimum Dollars, (Kaplan
Publishing).
When was the last time you left home and were in a truly
advertisement-free environment? Think about it. Now advertising
messages go anywhere and everywhere people do. Go to almost any
U.S. beach and you'll be greeted with a plane towing an ad
banner. You may even be exposed to "beach sand
impressions," which are ad messages imprinted into the sand
and regenerated overnight. How about a ball game? Every conceivable
stadium surface is covered with advertising, from signage to food
snack packs, and some stadiums even have video screens built
directly into the seat backs. Feel like going for a bike ride
surrounded by nature? You may find your local biking trails are
named after businesses, thanks to the new availability of naming
rights for everything from nature trails to neighborhood swimming
pools.
The industry calls this alternative out-of-home or placed-based
media, and it's a bonanza for small businesses because
there's literally something for everyone. While there are
virtually limitless places to put your ads, here are just a few
ideas to get you thinking:
- Shopping cart returns--Ads are placed on the roof of
shopping cart return stations located in supermarket parking
lots.
- Valet parking tickets--Messages are imprinted on all the
segments.
- Public telephones--Ads are placed on phone kiosks
located near streetball courts, school yards, playgrounds and urban
parks to reach younger males when they're on the courts. (Of
the 800,000 locations available, 1,500 are less than a block from a
streetball court.)
- Dry-cleaning bags and hangers--Ads are printed on
garment bags, hangers and paper covers.
- Commercial restrooms--Posters are located in public
restrooms, such as in bars and restaurants, on stall doors or above
urinals.
- Vending cart umbrellas--Ads are placed on umbrellas that
cover vending carts in metro markets.
- Golf course hospitality carts--Signage is found on the
sides and backs of hospitality carts on nearly 1,000 golf
courses.
- Dogs--(That's right, dogs) wearing advertising
messages, called K9 Billboards, are available to stroll through
cities nationwide.
- Campus laundry rooms--Acrylic-covered, framed
poster-size ads are available on more than 300 college campuses and
in a total of 3,500 laundry rooms.
- Diaper-changing stations--(Also called "Baby
Boards") carry advertising in public restrooms.
- Health clubs, spas and salons--Ads in a variety of
shapes and sizes are located throughout the facilities.
- Public tennis courts and swimming pools--Ads are found
on scoreboards, walls and even on the bottoms of the pools.
- Stadium and arena food carriers--Logos are imprinted on
snack packs used to carry food and beverages.
With so many place-based media options available, choosing the
right one can be tricky. Last tax season, I received an e-mail with
a question from an accountant trying to build his new practice. He
couldn't understand why his marketing wasn't working, yet
his tactics were poorly chosen--and one in particular was really
out of left field. He said he was advertising on the backs of
supermarket receipts. Now, really, would you choose an unknown
person to handle your finances from an ad on the back of a shopping
receipt? It's a great tactic, but it was absolutely wrong for
him.
Results of Choosing the Right
Place-Based Opportunities
Using the right place-based opportunities should enable you to
accomplish at least one or more of the following five things:
1. Influence a purchase. Ideally you want to find
placed-based media that reach your prospects when they're in a
position to buy what you sell. The last time you visited your
dentist, did you notice the brochures in the waiting room promoting
the tooth-whitening products your dentist applies? These
"informational" brochures are excellent placed-based
selling tools because they prompt patients to ask the dentist for
the product or procedure.
Ads placed in and around supermarkets, for example, are
effective for products sold there. In addition to ads on shopping
cart returns, advertisers can place their product names or logos on
supermarket clocks, buy shopping cart ads, and a variety of
displays--all to reach consumers just prior to a purchase decision.
Ads on cash register receipts entice customers to come back for
special promotions or discounts on products they may never have
tried. They can also be used to draw shoppers to stores located
adjacent to the supermarket. Where will your customers be when
they're deciding to buy what you sell?
2. Reach your best prospects. The most exciting
characteristic of placed-based media is that they can go wherever
your best prospects do. Trying to reach boaters? Ads and
informational materials placed at marinas may do the trick. Are
your prospects sports enthusiasts? From high school and college
stadiums to professional arenas, there are countless placed-based
opportunities to send your message.
Suppose you were marketing to college students. After all,
15-million college students in the United States spend more than
$100 billion each year for everything from clothing and shoes to
cars and electronics. On-campus advertising includes outdoor
posters and dioramas; indoor posters in laundry rooms, dorms and
student unions; plus a new form of advertising available on about
100 campuses--large plasma screens that alternate ads with
announcements in the lobbies of student unions and in recreational
facilities. If you were a retailer marketing to a nearby campus,
you could run on-screen ads 11 times per hour, sometimes 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week, to promote student discounts, host on-campus
promotions, and recruit employees.
3. Put your message in the right context. Place-based
media often can be used to reach prospects when they're in just
the right state of mind. For the same reason that business
marketers advertise copiers, computers and cellular phones using
outdoor media that reach commuters on their way to work, other less
traditional media can accomplish a similar goal by presenting your
message in the appropriate context. If you're a member of a
major health club, for example, you've probably noticed the
video screens and other advertising featuring products related to
fitness, health, diet and beauty. When would you be more receptive
to an ad for a new diet plan, at dinnertime while eating pizza and
watching TV, or when you were working off those extra calories the
next morning at the gym?
Pet owners stocking up at the neighborhood pet store are in the
right frame of mind to take a brochure for a local pet groomer from
a countertop rack while waiting at the register. And teenage boys
playing basketball on an urban court are likely to take notice of a
nearby poster advertising sports apparel. These placed-based media
work because they reach qualified prospects in the proper
context.
4. Appear in a compatible venue. Most people are familiar
with the small posters that are placed in restaurants and clubs,
generally inside the restrooms or nearby, perhaps in a hallway
where patrons must wait in line. Ever notice the kind of
advertising they carry? The majority is for compatible,
entertainment-oriented products and services that match the
"fun" state of mind of the patrons who view it.
Place-based ads feature local attractions, musical events, gambling
junkets, skydiving and snorkeling trips (in Miami), ghost tours (in
New Orleans) and dating services, just to name a few.
Your place-based advertising should be a synergistic part of
your overall marketing campaign and carry similar themes. So
it's important to choose out-of-home venues that are compatible
with the overall tone and content of your company's message. An
ad for the tax preparer I mentioned earlier, for instance, probably
wouldn't work on a nightclub restroom poster, even if patrons
of the club matched the demographics of his target audience. His
message simply wouldn't be compatible with the tone of the
venue.
5. Earn community goodwill. Other more subtle forms of
place-based media can effectively boost your company image as a
good citizen of the community. One such example is the
Adopt-a-Highway program, which posts signage along major highways
from coast-to-coast in exchange for sponsors' fees to cover
routine maintenance. The Adopt a Highway Maintenance Corporation is
one of the leading providers of the service and signage. Primarily
used for branding purposes, the signage designs are approved by
state highway departments, which typically allow a company name and
logo. You can buy the signage along a major route close to your
office or anywhere you like. In some states, signage is available
every mile and in others its every two miles, and on average, each
sign is seen by drivers and passengers in 5-million cars a month.
It's a great way to show your customers and your entire
community that you care.
As you can see, there are hundreds of options for you to launch
your own place-based media campaign. And with the right placement,
targeting the right customers, it's sure to be a success.
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