I feel like OOH advertising is a total crap shoot - you just throw your logo on the side of the highway and hope people look up for a few seconds, yet businesses keep on doing it. What are the pros and con’s of billboard advertising? Would love to hear people’s thoughts

  • adamkru@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    “Worth” is relative, but it could be another piece of your overall awareness campaign.

  • upthebrand@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    A billboard is a high visibility low converting form of marketing. It’s akin to an awareness campaign. Is anyone going to get out their phone and call you while driving? Almost certainly no. But they might remember the name.

    These kinds of campaigns are best when you have maxed out the rest of your marketing funnel.

    Does your website get a lot of traffic? Does that traffic convert? Are you ranked well on search? Are you leveraging paid ads like Google and social? Do you remarket to your visitors? Do you have regular emails going out to people? Have you tried yard signs or direct mail? How about advertising in cheaper stationary media like phone books and local magazines.

    To be billboards come right before radio and TV ads. If everything else is crushing it and you have marketing budget to burn? Then sure give it a try and make sure to do call tracking so you can measure it

    But I can promise you any advertising that’s built on “I hope it works” definitely will not work. You want measurements results from a full marketing strategy.

  • dare7878@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    As some other comments mention, billboards can be great for more impulse type businesses. You see it, you need it.

    The main use outside of that is being a piece of brand repetition. You can get your name in front of people through multiple channels to drive it in. This only makes sense if you’re actually using a multi-channel ad strategy.

    Plus, a ton of billboards are horribly designed. They put way too much on there. Consider the average driver seeing them isn’t highly focused on them, can’t immediately look up anything, and that billboards are far away. Keep it simple using only your name, briefly what you do, and where to find you. Anything more than a few words in overdoing it.

  • HiddenCity@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Billboards to me only work if you’re doing a marketing blitz and have millions of dollars to spend putting the same message everywhere.

    Think of it like decorating for a birthday. One decoration is not going to make people realize it’s anyone’s birthday, but a whole room might.

    IMO it’s reserved for large corporations.

  • Bob-Roman@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    The sign should be located as close as possible to the site.

    A good sign location will be expensive. I have one client (carwash operator) who spends $30K annually for a billboard.

    What’s possible?

    I have one client with lower volume store who experienced a 50 percent increase in door swings.

    This was difficult location; divided highway, 55 average travel speed, and midway between military base and college town.

  • Human_Ad_7045@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Imo, billboards are a niche mode of advertising where certain industries may benefit and others hardly at all.

    I think they’re best for major (local or national) brand recognition.

    I’m conflicted by the newer digital billboards that rotate every 5? seconds as to their effectiveness to the advertiser. I think much less effective.

    • cjasonac@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Yep. They suck for frequency. And the billboard companies charge MORE for them. Avoid at all costs.

    • bright1111@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Yeah on the one hand a person is more likely to look at it than a static billboard, but they change too fast before the reader can get the information

  • StandardComposer6760@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I think it’s business-dependent but I’d be cautious. I’ve tried almost everything over the years and billboards did not produce much traffic at all. I owned a health care business in the US.

  • The_Tommy_Knockers@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Billboards should be 7 words or less (ideally).

    Most effective boards are directional: Next Exit, Turn Left.

    Billboards on commute routes have the same audience day after day, so built in repetition & consistency.

    If you have a board near where cars stop you can have a captive audience. Advertise car detailing? Yes! Windshields? Tires? Restaurant? Yes!

    I always say, no one has ever switched banks bc of a billboard. We don’t make life altering decisions bc of them. But we can make impulsive decisions bc of them.

    • bright1111@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      In my city I’ve seen billboards for hospitals advertising their rankings or whatever their competitive advantage is… and it’s like the big 4 hospitals that everyone knows and don’t need to advertise. I find that interesting as to who thought it was necessary

      • ManyThingsLittleTime@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        The same people who pay to place a Google PPC ad for their business brand name. You don’t need to run an ad for Target when I typed in Target.

  • cjasonac@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Advertising is all based on awareness and messaging. The primary thing to keep in mind is that you’re sharing a message. If you’re a well-known brand (e.g. McDonald’s) you only need to show the logo for people to recognize you. So for them, the logo is the message.

    Now… there are two things you’re reaching for in an ad: reach and frequency. These two things are what will ultimately determine your cost and potential ROI. Reach is how many people will potentially see your message. Frequency is how often. Unless you have millions of dollars to spend, you have to play the two against each other like a lever. You can have super-high reach but minimal frequency (like a Super Bowl commercial…millions see it, one time) or you can have amazing frequency, but little reach (like a small-town TV station that plays your commercial to 20,000 people three or four times a day.)

    Your ad needs to have a solid message in either case. (More on that in a bit.)

    Billboards have a very high frequency since people tend to drive the same routes every day. In one month, there may only be a few thousand people who see your message (low reach.) But many of those same people will see it nearly every day (high frequency.) This gives them a chance to understand and absorb your message (assuming it’s clear and concise…more on that in a bit.) More often than not, the purpose of billboard advertising isn’t to cause an immediate sale, but rather to imprint the fact your business exists into the minds of people who will eventually need it. For instance, nobody is going to sell their house just because they saw a real estate agent on a billboard. But in a few years, if you’re that agent whose billboard they saw, there’s a good chance they’ll think of you because they’ve heard of you and have a certain level of familiarity.

    In spite of all of this, your message is the most important part. You need to stand out. If you just place a billboard on a random roadside and only have your business name with a slogan (“For all your blankety-blank needs…”) your ad will fail miserably. But if you have a solid reason for people to come to you (“Two cheeseburgers for $1 through December”) you’re going to do much better.

    Billboard messaging must be concise. With billboards, you MUST keep your message to ten words or less. People need to be able to “see” the offer vs “read” the offer since they’re usually driving past it. They don’t have time to “read” it the same way they’d read a magazine ad. They also need to recognize your brand image so they know who you are. Unless you have an amazing offer that makes people take notice (“free Rolex with every purchase”) then nobody will ever remember your brand.

    So…are billboards worth it? The answer is sometimes. They work best as part of a larger campaign. I’ll never forget passing a billboard for a local jewelry store at the same time their commercial came on the radio. You bet I remember them. They executed a simple campaign very effectively (billboard plus radio) and got a TON of business from it. (Yes. I followed up and asked. I’m now one of their occasional customers for anniversary and birthday gifts.) Their brand was instantly recognizable and very consistent. Their billboards matched their website which matched their mailers which matched their business cards, etc.

    Strong & consistent branding, a concise & powerful message, and make them part of a campaign rather than a thing you buy. Thats how you win with billboards.

    Here’s where people fail with billboards:

    Whatever you do, DO NOT get a single billboard in a remote place for one month. Even if it’s just $1,000, you’ll be wasting your money. If you have the budget, do multiple billboards (six or more) in a concentrated area, for at least three months. You’ll see a greater return closer to the end of that period, but you’ll also see people coming in and insisting they “just saw your billboard the other day,” a year from now. Either way, make damn sure your message resonates in ten words or less.

    If you can couple that three-month campaign with another advertising stream (tv, cable, direct mail, etc.) you’ll have the beginnings of a powerhouse campaign.

    Now…I realize this isn’t cheap. But I’m also speaking from experience. I used to sell radio advertising back when radio was a thing. This is exactly what I used to tell my clients years ago. Many of them are still going strong and barely advertise at all.

    Advertising is like pushing a boulder. It takes a lot of effort (and money) to get started, but once you’re going it takes very a lot less effort and money to keep it going.

    Good luck!