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Put Your Message Where It Matters 

By: Kim T. Gordon

    Right now, marketing messages go everywhere and anywhere there are consumers. Whether we’re at home or at work, radio and television, Web sites and e-mail, newspapers, magazines, and other advertising media continually deliver messaging and marketing content. And today when we step outside our homes and offices, we can also expect to find messages – from the traditional out-of-home venues including billboards, bus shelters, subway and taxi-top signage, to the newest forms of "place-based" ads.

    There are advertising opportunities literally everywhere you look. Out-of-home media have the advantage of reaching prospects when they are in the most receptive frame of mind for certain types of products and services. In New York and other major cities, truck-mounted billboards rove through designated neighborhoods during morning rush hour prompting commuters to pick up the advertised products on their way to work. In Atlanta, billboard ads featuring computers, printers and mobile phones are designed to influence office-bound commuters. And in Key West, signs on the backs of Pedicabs direct tourists to popular restaurants.

    Finding the right "context" is a vital component of marketing strategy. For example, ads on movie screens prior to the features are a great way to reach adults 18-49, but they’re most effective for advertisers whose messages are entertainment related, such as neighborhood restaurants, music or soft drinks. Ads for financial or business services, for instance, would be out of context there and quite likely fall flat.

    Think about your own prospects. What types of places do they frequent? Where will they be when they’re most receptive to learning about your products or services? Suppose your small business marketed all natural, low-fat energy bars. Advertising your bars on video screens or with signs and posters in local gyms – particularly if you sold your energy bars there – would produce better results than newspaper ads because you’d reach the segment of your target demographic that was most actively pursuing better health and fitness. By exposing them to your ads while at the gym, they would also be in the right frame of mind to receive your message.

Four Fresh Ideas

From ads on diaper changing stations to naming rights for community tennis courts, there are place-based marketing opportunities to fit every need and budget. Here are a few of the newest ideas to get you thinking:

1. Reach College Students

    The more than 15 million students in colleges nationwide spend $200 billion on products and services each year, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Now there’s a down and dirty way to reach them – with ads posted in laundry rooms on college campuses. Printed in full color in movie poster style, they’re encased in acrylic covers with metal frames and bolted to the walls. Available on more than 300 campuses and in a total of 3500 laundry rooms, you can advertise by market or region, or by individual college. For information, contact Washboard Media (encompassmediagroup.com) and OnPoint Marketing (onpointmarketing.com).

2. Hit the Links

    If golfers are your target, trying advertising on the sides and backs of hospitality carts -- mobile units selling beverages and golfing supplies that stop once every hour at each group of golfers. Sports Cart Media (sportscartmedia.com) offers hospitality cart signage on nearly 1000 golf courses, with seven advertising spaces available on each cart.

3. Pump Them Up

    Local small business owners in select markets have a new form of advertising available to them via the nearest gas pump. Direct Cast Network (directcastnetwork.com) has embedded computer chips in gasoline pump handles that play a mix of advertisements, information and entertainment when a nozzle is placed in a fuel tank. Local advertisers can offer special promotions that change monthly, and it’s a chance to get your name in front of hundreds of "captive" consumers a day.

4. Get In the Swim

    Now you take corporate sponsorship of sports facilities one step further with logos and ads in around public swimming pools. You can place signage on scoreboards, timing clocks, starting blocks, walls and supporting pillars – and even on the bottom of the pools. In some cases, sponsorships can include the opportunity to distribute information and product samples at swimming events. Contact your local community pools and aquatic centers as well as universities concerning sponsorship.

    Of course, if the perfect place-based media opportunity doesn’t already exist, you can always create one. Just take a cue from big businesses. At the most recent annual Fashion Week in New York, Motorola placed its message on the runway with $500 Baby Phat special edition phones. It’s all a matter of figuring out where and when your audience will be receptive, then placing your product in the right location at the right time.

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Kim T. Gordon's columns and articles are read by nearly 3 million small and home-based business owners each month.  She is the author of two books, including Bringing Home the Business: The 30 Truths Every Home Business Owner Must Know.

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