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It’s a bird, It’s a plane, It’s… Super Ad!

Friday, June 13th, 2008 Janelle Laudick

Have you ever been to a sporting event, or on a boat looking up at the sky and seen a small airplane pulling a banner ad across the sky? Did you think to yourself and wonder how many people saw the same thing? As an advertiser and marketer, I often ponder this thought when viewing the Bud Select advertisements, among others, waving across the Lake of the Ozarks on a regular basis.

Plane
Aerial media can be used as a very cost effective advertising effort. Messages can be viewed by your audience at beaches, sporting events – tailgating counts! - concerts, parades, special events, or even during rush hour drive times. Average reading time is about 37 seconds at 1000 feet - Much more effective than billboard or other sorts of outdoor advertising!

There is minimal competition with this targeted circulation, unless those ugly birds or fluffy clouds count. Become more prominent in the ever-growing world of advertising.

Aerial advertising is four times more cost effective than regular print media! Also, GPS technology allows you to track where exactly where your ads have been. To continue, your company’s or product’s name most likely will be read, register, and also recalled quickly later.

You should consider the same objectives with traditional outdoor to be similar with aerial advertising – large letters, short message, quick and to the point. Black, red, yellow, and purple are some of the best colors to contrast against a blue and white sky. When it’s cloudy, simple white is good against the dark background. Always make it striking to demand the audiences’ attention.

Let me continue with some other benefits: your audience won’t flip through the channels or cut to the page in the paper or magazine without noticing your 4×5 placement in the upper, right-hand corner.

Aerial advertising is somewhat of a novelty in the world of product promotion. Most ads are seen during the day, when energy levels are high, positive moods are flourishing (audience is, most of the time, on vacation or enjoying a hobby!) They are most receptive during these times anyway.
blimp
How about the GoodYear blimp across the Royal’s and Chief’s stadiums? This “graceful giant” in the air has been making a presence since 1925 with the first blimp from their company known as the Pilgrim.

The only down-fall to this great exposure – the FAA doesn’t allow you to ride along in the air plane during the paid-for exposure time. You’ll have to leave that to the professionals, I guess.

That’s false advertising and I don’t have to take it

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008 Janelle Laudick

The world of advertising is regulated by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) as a way to alleviate deceptive ways within the infrastructure of commerce.

Deceptive – adjective: causing one to believe what is not true or fail to believe what is true (www.dictionary.com).

These regulatory notions should be taken into effect with political advertising. However, they are not. The FTC only regulates advertising within the commercial realm. Presidential elections are not considered commercial; therefore, the details and ideals shared on a candidate’s behalf might not be all they are packaged up to be.

Take into consideration certain status quo of the products we see commercial advertising for on a day to day basis – price, branding, organizational association, expiration date, net weight, the country of origin, not just country of manufacture. Are these all notions that we consider significant in the advertising that we see for the non-commercial items or ideas as well?

Some presidential candidates will pump themselves full of fillers or display awesome packaging based on what they think the consumer will “buy.” It seems to be no different from commercial advertising efforts for other everyday items consumed by the general public. Except! What we listen for or even buy into during the election year effects how we live our daily lives – even if the surgeon general’s warning discourages it.

Some smoke, most pay sales tax, and all of us should vote. Policy-regulated advertising impacts all of is…

I guess that’s why they call it campaigning.

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_advertising)

Magazine Advertising

Monday, February 25th, 2008 Janelle Laudick

Have you ever flipped through the pages of a magazine and wondered how much of the publication is really created by the employees, staff writers and producers behind the company name? More than half of the reading seems to be from vendors and other commercial companies battling for effective exposure to a targeted public.

At PlattForm, the magazine writers and producers are a small collective group of mostly volunteers and the work sometimes doubles for press releases sent out also. Quite the idea right there in itself!

Magazine advertising ranks among the top mediums recognizable to the general public. According to the Magazine Publisher’s of America web site (www.magazine.org) the following table shows the breakdown of advertising spending per medium in 2006:

Share of Advertising in 2006
Magazines (18%)
Sunday Magazines (1%)
Newspapers (17%)
National Newspapers (3%)
Outdoor (3%)
Network TV (18%)
Spot TV (14%)
Syndicated TV (3%)
Cable TV (13%)
Network Radio (1%)
National Spot Radio (2%)
Internet (7%)
TOTAL (100%)

Who would have guesses that more companies spend money on magazine advertising than they do on television? And so much more than internet and outdoor advertising? However, it does make sense that a targeted public and demographic reads a certain type of magazine on a regular basis more than it would watch a certain television program looking for a specific thing.

PlattForm’s experience in the magazine industry is focused on the Key Magazine and Career College Central publications. As a whole, about 75% of our sales come from the ads that are sold within the publications. The other 25% accounts the subscriptions and copies sold.

The actual magazine industry standard is a little different than PlattForm’s numbers. According to a proprietary study of 93 representative magazines, in 2005, 55% of revenue came from advertising, and 45% came from circulation.

It makes you think a little bit more about the type of work put behind the favorite magazine you pick up from the grocery store check-out stand. A lot more dollars can be attributed to the pretty models and slogans than once previously thought. And you thought the cover price was outrageous…. Pffh!

I don’t want to look at this … ooh but wait, that’s interesting!

Monday, January 28th, 2008 Janelle Laudick

Did you know the average consumer uses the public bathroom 3.2 times per evening while out on the town? Imagine the product/service retention that a viewer would have after being exposed to the exact same advertising 3.2 times in just a few hours.

According to www.bathroomadvertising.com, this new spin on print advertising is becoming one of the fastest growing audience attention grabbing avenues the industry has seen yet. It’s 100 percent gender specific, catches 100 percent of the readers’ attention, and it’s the only place a person would choose to stand in line to read advertising. It’s also an opportunity to advertise a very personal product – most wouldn’t put a tampon ad on a billboard on Broadway Avenue, but would put it in the women’s restroom at Hooter’s, for example.

Fortune Magazine says, “The ads reach the audience most coveted by advertisers: 21-35 year olds who like to go out and spend money. Restroom ads also allow companies to target a gender with 100 percent accuracy.”

Stickers in the sink … TV’s in the mirrors … LCD screens on the automatic hand dryers … and the reading material hanging on the back of the stall doors and above the urinals. You might even see it on the tampon disposal box, toilet paper roll and soap dispensers.

Automatic flush has led to automatic conversation with a poster, or even a perfume, cologne or air freshener scent automatically dispensed for your pleasure.

One thing to think about is the subconscious psychological association that might occur. Some advertisements might create a negative connotation. Foul smell and dirty bathroom floor while reading about Charlie’s Limo Service? Not really sure how many prospects Charlie will hear from when they associate the smell of urine and dirty paper towels with his company’s logo. However, most of the time, viewers see the ads when out for a good time with friends or family … usually in a good mood and having a pleasant time. It’s a risk that most advertisers are willing to take.

Here are some numbers that really paint the picture for advertisers looking for alternatives to new or current campaigns:

• 84 percent recalled seeing specific advertisements in the washrooms.
• 92 percent were able to name specific advertisers without prompting.
• 88 percent recalled at least FOUR selling points in the ads surveyed.
• 98 percent reacted positively or neutral to seeing ads in restroom facilities

Next time you are out, take a good look at the type of advertising you are exposed to without even knowing it. It’s quite interesting and effective at the same time.

I am an advertiser

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007 Janelle Laudick

I don’t depend on a helmet to protect me. I don’t wear a stethoscope around my neck. There’s never a moment to blow a whistle and look at a clipboard. I don’t get to bang a gavel on a wooden podium. I don’t even get an official badge.

What icon does an advertiser take with them? How are we identified among a society filled with hundreds of thousands of position titles? The work done by an advertiser is viewed everyday, but not many can identify the source. Advertisers push a product or idea. They make the world see what the world can offer. Whether it’s a new car, a laundry detergent, or a trip to the Caribbean, the viewers see and hear it.

When finishing school, some don’t realize what they want to do with their lives until some length of time later. I always knew I wanted to work in advertising: the hustle of the office atmosphere, the catchiness of the campaign headlines, the commercials during the Super Bowl games and the sexiness of the industry portrayed in the romantic comedies everyone has seen. These were the things that caught my interest growing up. However, I never knew what the underlying theme of the industry all entailed; what would define me. It wasn’t until I began working at PlattForm that it all started coming together.

At PlattForm, we offer our viewers opportunity. We offer the chance to see a future or the opportunity to improve a lifestyle. And this is the bottom line for the bulk of our employees’ efforts. The institution of education has begun to be more overlooked than ever, and our citizens are taking it for granted. As the education process evolves, so do those wishing to be educated. Traditional media is holding a smaller and smaller piece of the advertising pie. It’s only normal for the traditional student demographic to do the same. We don’t push a product or experience. It’s more about the big picture. We sell an outcome for the future.

So I don’t carry a ball bag, and I don’t hold a microphone when I am “on the clock.” The thing that defines an advertiser is not as simple as an article of clothing or size of a hard drive. An advertiser’s icon is seen all over the place. One just has to look to realize.

Here at PlattForm, I am one person among many.
I offer opportunity.
I am an advertiser.