Thursday, January 31, 2013

It's Not the Buns...It's the Burger!


    
ITS NOT THE BUNS, IT’S THE BURGER…

How to utilize one of the best tools in your marketing toolbox: The Electronic Message Center

                      By Mark Hackley, Holiday Signs


      This article was written for those employing digital advertising within the retail financial services industry, but uses an example of how to sell a hamburger to illustrate effective advertising with digital signage. (It applies to any industry using electronic messaging.  Don't know a lot about electronic messaging yet? Contact me for guidance anytime.)

     When you first bite into a burger, it’s not the buns that make you want to take another bite, it’s the meat of the sandwich!  If a digital sign was a sandwich, the meat of the sandwich is what drives people to take action.  It’s the well-designed advertising message with meat that sparks curiosity, drives the senses and ultimately leads viewers to come into the branch.
     Using the hamburger example, it makes sense that good advertising relies on well thought-out content if it is to be effective in attracting customers.  Yes, purchasing a digital sign and operating it with at least some form of advertising is a step above a static-type marquee or no marquee at all.  But in order to maximize return on the investment, taking the time to design effective content is much more important.      
     How does the financial marketing staff produce great content for its on-premise digital ads?  They just need to consider what makes a good burger.  It all revolves around what people like and involves some research to see what attracts customers.  Do they like rare, medium or well-done?  Do they prefer thick or thin patties?  Do they go for onions or tomatoes?  If seventy-five percent like their burgers prepared medium-well, then show these types of burgers in tantalizing ways through creative copy and images on most of the ad sequence. If the rest are split between rare and well-done, every now and then throw a screen up for them too.  One of the many beauties of digital signage is having the ability to advertise to specific and multiple market segments. 
     Consider the time of day the ads are running.  What type of general mood will the customers be in at 8:00AM versus 5:00PM?  Consider the collective spending power of the customers as ads are developed so that during a recession period affordability and multi-functional products are promoted, while all the bells and whistles are promoted heavily during the good times.   
     I recently asked one of my digital sign customers how his sign has been working out for him.  He shared with me that every time he runs a “Help Wanted” ad on the sign, he gets dozens of people flooding the place hourly, but has had mediocre response otherwise to his retail ad campaigns.  While I was talking with him I noticed the time and temperature announcement, a “Like us on Facebook” message and a Smiley Face popping up in rotation, so we had a discussion about CONTENT.  I told him all those things are good filler material, but in order for an electronic message center to pull in the 10-20% extra revenue they are easily capable of doing on roadways with good traffic counts, there has to be some juicy meat for the customer to want to take a pleasurable bite.  He is going to work on his marketing message.  What’s in your hamburger? 

Mark Hackley is a Project Manager for Holiday Signs of Chester, Virginia

SIGNAGE-The Most Important Element of Branding


Signage-The Most Important Element of Branding
Making the Difference between Customers Visiting or Just Passing By

In a way it’s like clothing.

Signage is equivalent to clothing. If clothing brands the individual, then signage brands the organization.

Buildings: naked arrangements of architectural elements. But what’s in the building? Enter branding.

What makes up the heart of the organization; or on a larger scale, the chain, or the campus? The branding of the building answers all the questions.  Good signage reflects the overall branding.

Certainly there are many facets of a brand, but it is important for owners, directors and marketing managers to realize the role of signage as the first introduction.  In real-life, brick-and-mortar business platforms, packaging, customer service, management style, community involvement, and similar aspects of a brand all work together to refine the introductory impression left by the company’s signage. 

Whether the branded building functions as a retail business, healthcare complex, institution of higher learning, or corporate headquarters, effective signage is critical to the public’s perception of its characteristics and it helps motivate decisions to visit or pass.

I have heard many times that brand is the most valuable fixed asset of a corporation.  In the retail environment, branding is super important.  The more emphasis a company devotes to the development and maintenance of its brand, the more it stands out from the competitors in the marketplace; all on the same busy street.  It all starts at the main entrance sign and building-mounted branding.  Then, as customers progress through the site and the building, even the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of the organization’s wayfinding signs leaves a warm fuzzy, or cold ugly feeling about the brand.  It all starts with the signs.      

Well-designed signs that attract attention can readily turn traffic into new customers, and lead existing customers to make on-going decisions to stop in.  Calculate the huge numbers of potential customers passing by the store each day, each month, each year, and then compare that level of brand awareness to the awareness gained from other media.  In Charlottesville, Virginia, vehicles representing 95% of the city’s population travel portions of Route 250 daily.  Other sections of the highway generate less attention.  Main thoroughfares through Harrisonburg, Winchester, and Waynesboro to the west have 48-65% vehicle to population ratios. The larger the city, the less the ratio due to segmentation. The larger cities of Northern Virginia to Richmond to Hampton Roads have 12-31% ratios in certain areas.  Roanoke has an average ratio of 18% on Route 11.

Therefore, if you operate a business on an average major highway in Roanoke, with a population of 96,714, chances are you will have a daily traffic count of 17,000 vehicles, or 25,550 individuals passing your signage every day, using an average of 1.5 passengers per car.  Compare the value of a good signage system at your site with any other marketing medium.   

The simple conclusion: Signage is the most important element of branding. 

Like your clothing, choose it well and treat it with honor and respect! 


For more information about signage to promote your brand, contact Mark Hackley, Account Executive at Holiday Signs