A collection of opinions from some of the biggest names in the advertising industry as well as some thoughts on campaigns spotted out and about by OOH lovers
Nicola Barrett , Head of Research, Exterion Media | 2017-09-19
UK adults' media consumption has rocketed 9% compared to 2016, according to the IPA's latest TouchPoints research. This is probably not that surprising considering the fact that there's so much more of it!
Consumers might be consuming more media but, with there being so much of it, how can brands cut through the noise and effectively engage with their target audience?
The trick is to understand your audience and the context in which you are targeting them. Where are they? What mind-set are they in? What are their motivations? Only then can you work out how to reach these consumers effectively.
Take the light TV viewing London Underground audience as an example. Through our award-winning Engagement Zone study, we now know a lot more about how these passengers as they travel through the network, engage with their surroundings and respond to Out-of-Home ads.
The study combined eye tracking, skin conductance response (measuring cognitive activity) and survey data to understand how commuters engage with advertising across the Underground; an important study when you consider that nearly five million passenger journeys are made daily on the network.
According to the IPA TouchPoints research, TV still tops media consumption habits in terms of reach and average hours viewed. However, our study shows that high engagement levels with advertising on the Tube were found to match that of TV advertising (16%) and far surpass that of online video (9%), with the consensus being that advertising on the Underground is far less intrusive than other forms of advertising. In fact, four in five people who said that they did not like ads on social media or TV stated they did, in fact, like ads on the Tube.
With media consumption growing considerably so has multimedia usage, with the IPA TouchPoints research revealing that 26% of adults flit between more than three media in any half hour. Our study supports this, revealing that 58% of people who regularly read or use their phone while travelling on the Underground also regularly look at advertising on the Tube.
However, our study also demonstrates that commuters’ minds are active and alert during the daily commute; attributes that directly translate to engagement with the advertising environment. Even those who choose to occupy themselves by other means while on their journeys were also found to take part in some ad spotting. Of those using a mobile device, a third have used their device to take notes about information they see in ads.
We don’t see multimedia consumption as a negative at Exterion Media. In fact, we see it as a way for consumers to directly respond to Outdoor ads. We have over 130 case studies that prove the effectiveness of Out-of-Home campaigns that you can access here.
"DOOH offers deeper engagement than other media, more of a story and feedback"
"In advertising, we have the power to change minds, change beliefs and change the world"
"Media isn’t about the number of impressions you make. Media is about the power of the impression you make."
"For a brand to live, it needs to appeal not only to the people who buy it, but also to the people who know about it "
"Super premium digital Out of Home is one of the quickest ways to get into the conversation and make your brand famous"
"London is the most valuable city for OOH advertising... and among the most important in the world "
"Using data to plan OOH enhances campaign performance by up to 200%"
"OOH engages hard to reach audiences on the move with inspiring and innovative communications"
"I would advise marketers using OOH not to see a poster as a Wikipedia entry, think of it as a piece of art"
"Posters are the purest and most effective form of communication"
"Reaching people in the right place, at the right time is still Out of Home’s biggest strength"
"Out of Home is an accountable, measurable and effective media for advertisers"
"The combination of classic and DOOH should be an intoxicating mix for any marketing director"
"Immediacy, targeting and excitement are what DOOH can offer that other media can't - its just very very cool.The opportunities are endless"
"Poster sites really are the last true broadcast medium capable of near universal reach"
"Smarter brands are contextualising their ad messaging, reaching a target audience when it matters most and can change behaviour"
"OOH may be the oldest medium, yet it has shown remarkable resilience in reinventing itself"
"OOH remains the flexible canvas for which a guaranteed audience is never too far away"
"It makes sense for the most welcomed and least intrusive media to deliver presence for brands interacting through the media"
"Central London will undergo a transformation and cities like Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds will get even brighter and more connected"
"Digital OOH networks are multi-sensory and with the development of touch technology things are moving fast. Stimulating the senses more creatively generates social shares, great PR and awards."
"London’s very large public transport network carries a great deal of OOH advertising. As a result, London alone has 170,000 advertising sites, more than 40 per cent of the national total. This makes London the most valuable city for OOH advertising in Europe and among the most important in the world."
"Show me any brief, for any client and any campaign and I guarantee that OOH will be able to have a justifiable role to play as part of the media solution. That role maybe big or small; local or national, classic, digital or both, large format, small format or anything in between... but it will be justifiable and worthwhile. There isn’t any other medium that can replicate that claim, or indeed come anywhere near doing so."
"DOOH is a really interesting storytelling medium, beyond advertising. It allows you to touch and feel and interact in a way no other medium does. That's the real beauty of it, and usually overlooked"
"OOH inhabits a wonderful space in which we benefit from a rich heritage of memorable, iconic campaigns and a truly exciting future unfolding before us. A broadcast medium that just keeps getting better."
"By its very nature, Out of Home’s remoteness from the consumer living room, from the office, and from the home computer, has made it a natural bedfellow of mobile marketing."
"As DOOH becomes more “digital,” it becomes more agile, richer, and better able to play its part in a big idea. As a plugged in medium, DOOH can be the active element in a multi-layered campaign. It can create buzz, break news, invite interaction, and help to drive content and discussions online. Great DOOH campaigns are ones that sit comfortably within the wider brand strategy and capture the imagination."
"I love OOH because the diversity of opportunities makes it a realistic option for almost any client. Add to this the ever growing possibilities for new innovation and it’s a media channel that is truly exciting to both agencies and clients alike."
"Speed of change is all around us and no more so than in the rate at which advertising investment in traditional posters is being transitioned to include a far more flexible Out of Home canvas; the digital poster."
"Posters decorate the world "
"Out of Home is booming right now: OOH is the most ubiquitous media – you can’t turn the page, change the channel or switch it off, and Out of Home continues to integrate itself brilliantly with other new and innovative technologies."
"The Out of Home sector has been tremendously resilient throughout the recessionary years, showing consistent growth driven by its fundamental benefits. In an ever-fragmenting media landscape, you can still reach pretty much the entire population, all at the same time."
"Media changes, driven by digitisation, have left consumers facing a tyranny of choice—yet OOH is a channel that can still deliver huge audiences, and can increasingly do so in creative and engaging ways."
"OOH is constantly evolving, and its ability to integrate so brilliantly with new technology is one of its main strengths."
"The beauty of OOH is that it can double as a TV screen, a social feed, a camera, a vending machine, a download site, or a purchase point."
"We've chosen to use digital to make everything more efficient...but we've forgotten how to explore and discover. It's a loss of serendipity and we've lost a lot of the humanity. We're becoming very reliant upon digital and the internet to make us incredibly efficient and we're losing out."
"Out of Home is the oldest medium of all There’s still huge power in the public message – the power of the public comment. It’s a big thing – it’s why people get married in front of an audience of 150; it gives a public sense of commitment."
"And then there’s advertising’s past. The intrusive, inflexibile and mute billboards. They feel like throwbacks to the old way of doing things. A flat image with an unyielding rule that the consumer can take in no more than eight words (unless they’re Economist readers). How boring. How old school. Until you remember 2015's ‘Shot on iPhone 6’ campaign. Simple, traditional and utterly un-missable pieces of art in the urban landscape."
"Advertising isn’t supposed to be private. It’s supposed to be overheard, shared, stumbled across and discovered."
"As an industry, I believe, we have forgotten the power of repetition. Effective communication isn't small. It isn't cheap. It isn't once."