Enter Stage Left: Digital Out of Home Screens

Worldwide, we have digital billboards/screens as “the big thing” in Out of Home (OOH) and this technology, along with its amazing software, has allowed people to place screens, both big and small, in half a gazillion possible locations which consumers frequent.

This means that we currently have screens located in places such as; highways & byways, forecourts, Tuk Tuks, cabs, retail stores, hair salons, washrooms, restaurants, clubs, pubs, hospitals, pharmacies, doctors’ rooms, taxis, train stations, taxi ranks, airports, restaurant menus, elevators, vending machines, malls, and toilet cubicles. Okay, not toilet cubicles. Yet. And believe me, this is not a comprehensive list either.
For my sins, I have been exposed to most of these various digital networks and have made a few observations, and have a few comments regarding digital in general.

Is DOOH a reasonably priced medium?

Media owner statements like, “it only costs R5000pm to advertise on my screen,” make it appear that digital advertising can be very reasonable but, when you do the maths, that definitely is not the case. The reason behind this is that you have to invariably share the screen with a multitude of other advertisers which means that your ad exposure time is drastically reduced. This translates into a digital ad costing, exposure time wise, anything from 10 to 20 times more expensive than a comparable static billboard.

So advertisers, my tip to you, is that if you are interested in using Digital Out of Home (DOOH) as part of your campaign, then please ensure that your creative agency maximises the benefits that DOOH has to offer.

Digital Media Owners, Excel spreadsheets and Revenues ... 

To me, the benefits of digital screen advertising should be skewed in favour of the advertiser; else why advertise there after all? All too often it looks like media owners skew the benefits their way by having 20 advertisers on their screens, as opposed to fewer advertisers. Having many advertisers does nothing to promote the benefits using digital advertising to the industry; it is absolutely to the detriment of clients. 

Don’t pull the wool over our eyes (Part I)

Media owners make claims like, “ads on my screen only cost R1.20 per ad”. OK, so your screen runs 24/7, but we all know that there is no one viewing the screen from late at night to early in the morning, so why do you factor these “useless” ad flightings into your cost calculation? Is this disingenuous, or do you think that we are borderline doff?

Don’t pull the wool over our eyes (Part II)

You have got to love how media owners claim that an advertiser can reach “9-million economically active consumer” via their screen/s. That audience is the total possible audience for all 20 ads flighted on the screen, and not the likely audience that would be able to see my client’s 1 ad. Again I ask, are you guys naive or are you perhaps just trying to pull the wool over gullible people’s eyes? 

Thanks for confusing my little brain ..
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Media owners have so many permutations out there on how you can advertise on a digital screen that I break out into a cold sweat just thinking about them … total ad exclusivity, day-part ad exclusivity, one ad in a 60-second loop, one ad in a 90-second loop, one ad in a loop with 20 advertisers throughout the day/or just in the morning/ or just at night/or just on weekends/or over lunch time. Oh, and ad lengths can vary as well. Oh, my poor, little, confused brain…

This half ...

As the old quote attributed to about 20 different captains of industry goes; “I know that half the money I spend on advertising is wasted. My only problem is that I don’t know which half.”

I firmly believe that when it comes to DOOH advertising, it is quite easy to determine which half of your OOH is wasted. Just like OOH campaigns fail miserably when a client’s copy-heavy print creative has been “cut & pasted” onto a billboard, so too is DOOH going to fail when a client’s TVC has been edited down to 15 seconds for these digital screens.

The potential audience is only exposed to the screen/ad for a few seconds and in that time the product being advertised is not necessarily obvious. Just seeing part of an ad where a car drives through the lush countryside, or a guy is wearing denims and a crisp white shirt is a fail from an advertising point of view. Which product is being advertised? By simply ensuring that your product logo is placed in the “corner” of the screen for the duration of the ad means that I might be in with a chance of identifying the product being advertised.

So, as an advertiser, how do you maximise the benefits of DOOH? That’s easy, send me an email at craig.wallis@mediashop.co.za, and I will try and shed some light on the matter ... 

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