Outdoor advertising

(Redirected from Out-of-home advertising)

Outdoor advertising or out-of-home (OOH) advertising includes public billboards, wallscapes, and posters seen while "on the go". OOH advertising formats fall into four main categories: billboards, street furniture, transit, and alternative.[1]

The Osborne bull was originally placed as an outdoor advertisement for the Osborne Group [es] to promote their Brandy de Jerez. The bull has become a national symbol of Spain.

Advertisements are commonly placed by large companies like JCDecaux and Clear Channel Outdoor.

Digital

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Digital outdoor advertisement display placed by JCDecaux, displaying an ad for the Provincial council election in the Netherlands [nl]

Digital out-of-home (DOOH) refers to dynamic media distributed across place-based networks in venues including.

Programmatic

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Within the DOOH industry, advertisements might be purchased through programmatic platforms. Programmatic platforms ask marketers to specify desired audience characteristics and automatically locate the media vehicles to deliver that audience. These platforms may allow buyers (the demand side) to plan, execute and monitor campaigns across multiple media platforms (the supply side) using a familiar workflow.[2][3] A major difference between programmatic digital out-of-home (pDOOH) and traditional OOH or DOOH is that programmatic automates the process of buying, selling and delivering inventory across multiple screens with enhanced capabilities. These enhanced capabilities include the creation of measurable, highly targeted campaigns by utilizing geolocation data to activate the best DOOH screens in real-time based on consumer behaviour and audience movement patterns.[4] Additionally, programmatic allows buyers to set specific parameters or conditions (also known as triggers) for a campaign or inventory and unleash the potential to power campaigns with unlimited data sets from a myriad of data sources. Only when the selected conditions are met will an ad or content be served onto the screen.[5]

Printed

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Printed out of home refers to static media distributed across physical spaces.[6] Examples include:

  • Aerial advertising: Aerial advertising includes towing banners via a fixed-wing aircraft as well as airships like blimps and other airborne inflatables above beaches, events and gridlock traffic.[7]
  • Billboard bicycle: is a new type of mobile advertising in which a bike tows a billboard with an advertising message. This method is a cost-efficient, targeted, and environmentally-friendly form of advertising.[according to whom?]
  • Brochure Distribution: Information displays in public gathering spaces such as transportation centers, lodging facilities, visitor centers, attractions, and retail environments are targeted methods to distribute effective messaging to a targeted audience. This method is slightly different from traditional OOH as the consumer self-selects the messaging material, and can take that message with them.[citation needed]
  • Billboards: (or Bulletins) are usually located in highly visible,[8] heavy traffic areas such as expressways, primary arterials, and major intersections. In the US bulletins are usually illuminated. The ad artwork, commonly digitally printed on large vinyl-coated fabric membranes, is often "rotated" by the outdoor plant operator amongst several locations in a metropolitan area to achieve the desired reach of the population as defined in the sales contract. With extended periods of high visibility, billboard advertisements provide advertisers with significant impact on commuters. This is the largest standard out of home advertising format, usually measuring at 14ftx48ft in overall size.[citation needed]
  • Bus advertising: Firmly establish brand awareness and generate quick recall with high-profile exposure near point of purchase locations.[according to whom?]
  • Commuter rail display: Reaches a captive audience of upscale suburban commuters. Additionally, reaches lunch-time patrons, shoppers and business professionals.[according to whom?]
  • ComPark advertising: ComPark is a device used for car park advertising, which is placed onto the parallel lines of a bay and is able to gain instant exposure from motorists that have parked their vehicle. The ComPark also serves as a guide to assist motorist in adhering to the parking bay size.[citation needed]
  • Gas Station Pump Top Advertising: Printed Signage is inserted into sign holder frames above the Pumps. These are called Pump Top advertising and are generally eye-level height.[citation needed] Average dwell time for customers to refuel their vehicle is 3–5 minutes which make this form of advertising very effective to reach automobile drivers.[according to whom?]
  • Inflatable billboard: similar to regular 2D billboard, but imposed on 3D object.[citation needed]
  • Lamppost banner advertising: Lamp columns are sited everywhere, allowing advertisers and events to use banners to target precise geographical locations and create promotional awareness.[citation needed]
  • Mobile billboard: Mobile billboards offer a great degree of flexibility to advertisers. These advertisements can target specific routes, venue or events, or can be used to achieve market saturation. A special version is the inflatable billboard which can stand free nearly everywhere. This product can also be used for outdoor movie nights.[citation needed]
  • Poster: Target local audiences with these billboards, which are visible to vehicular traffic, and are ideal for the introduction of new products/services. Marketers use posters to achieve advertising objectives and increase brand awareness by placing multiple units in strategic locations while lowering the cost per thousand impressions. This is a standardized poster format, typically measuring 12'3" x 24'6"; formally known as a 30-Sheet Poster.[citation needed]
  • Premier panel: Premiere panels combine the frequency and reach of a poster campaign with the creative impact of a bulletin.[according to whom?]
  • Premier square: Bright top and bottom illumination on a premiere panel provide extra impact after dark.[according to whom?]
  • Street advertising: The use of pavements and street furniture to create media space for brands to get their message onto the street in a cost-effective approach.[according to whom?]
  • Taxi advertising: Taxi advertising allows advertisers to highlight their products, whether brand awareness, or a targeted message, directly to areas where people work, shop, and play.[citation needed]
  • Wallscape: Wallscapes are attached to buildings and are able to accommodate a wide variety of unusual shapes and sizes. These billboard advertisements are visible from a distance and provide impact in major metro areas.[citation needed]
  • Aircraft Advertising: Aircraft advertising includes product or service branding inside and outside the aircraft. This includes wrapping the aircraft with printed SAVs, baggage tag branding, boarding pass branding, tray table branding and more.[citation needed]
  • Walking Billboards: These billboards are strapped on to the human shoulder and are carried along the targeted geographic area.[clarification needed] These billboard advertisements are also visible during night.[citation needed] It helps the local advertisers as it is very cost effective and can be geographically targeted to a particular area.[according to whom?]

Other types of non-digital OOH advertising include airport displays, transit and bus-shelter displays, headrest displays, double-sided panels, junior posters and mall displays.

Space advertising, by use of an array of small satellites that reflect sunlight, has been evaluated by researchers at the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology.[9]

Regulations

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United States

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  • The states of Vermont, Hawaii, Maine, and Alaska prohibit all billboards.[citation needed]
  • The other 46 states permit multiple forms of OOH advertising.[citation needed]
  • Billboards are regulated by all levels of government. The regulatory framework, created by the federal Highway Beautification Act (HBA), calls for billboards to be located in commercial and industrial areas. Billboard permits are issued by state and local authorities. Under the Highway Beautification Act, states have strong regulatory powers including the authority to ban billboards.[citation needed]
  • Most states have taken steps to regulate digital (electronic) billboards, which feature static images that change (typically) every six or eight seconds. In 2007, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) issued Guidance to the states regarding regulation of digital billboards. Scenic America challenged the federal Guidance in federal court on procedural grounds. On June 20, 2014, US District Court Judge James E. Boasberg dismissed this case, with prejudice.[citation needed]
  • Regulations governing digital billboards prohibit animation and scrolling. Digital billboards are equipped with light sensors to adjust billboard lighting to surrounding light conditions to avoid glare, per the industry code.[citation needed]

Brazil

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São Paulo, Brazil, established an almost total outdoor advertising ban in 2006. The ban required that all billboard and banner advertisements be removed and that store signs be greatly reduced in size and prominence.[10]

Switzerland

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The Swiss municipality of Vernier banned outdoor advertising.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Outdoor Media Formats". oaaa.org. Archived from the original on 2009-06-21. Retrieved 2009-07-17.
  2. ^ "What is Programmatic Advertising? | CAASie.co Blog". caasie.co. Retrieved 2021-07-23.
  3. ^ "What is programmatic DOOH?". Broadsign. 27 May 2020. Retrieved 2021-07-23.
  4. ^ "Vol. 1 - What yOOH need to know: DOOH vs pDOOH". www.hivestack.com. Retrieved 2021-07-27.
  5. ^ "Learn the pDOOH basics with Hivestack". www.hivestack.com. Retrieved 2021-07-27.
  6. ^ Hans-Jürgen Tast: Immer mit einem Lächeln auf den Lippen! Die bunte Fotoflut im Straßenbild., Kulleraugen Vis.Komm. Nr. 43, Schellerten 2013, ISBN 978-3-88842-043-6.
  7. ^ Inc., Outdoor Advertising Association of America. "Outdoor Advertising Association of America, Inc. > About OOH > OOH Basics > OOH Media Formats > Airborne". www.oaaa.org. Archived from the original on 2016-08-12. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  8. ^ Chmielewski, Sz., Tompalski, P. (2017). Estimating outdoor advertising media visibility with voxel - based approach. Applied Geography, 87:1-13 (https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2017.07.007). Preprint download: "Estimating outdoor advertising media visibility with voxel-based approach (PDF Download Available)". Archived from the original on 2017-10-02. Retrieved 2017-10-02.
  9. ^ Berger, Eric (2022-10-05). "Who is ready for a fleet of cubesats flying over cities, displaying ads?". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2022-10-05.
  10. ^ "Sao Paulo: The City With No Outdoor Advertisements". www.amusingplanet.com. Archived from the original on 11 May 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  11. ^ "A Swiss Town Banned Billboards. Zurich, Bern May Soon Follow". Bloomberg.com. 2024-07-26. Retrieved 2024-10-16.
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