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ABOUT MOBILE BILLBOARDS
"What's Up With TruckSide"
Sign Business
April, 2001
TruckSide advertising represents a huge market
opportunity for sign and graphics companies, and the
surface has barely been scratched.
TruckSide
advertising has been around for years, but a new twist
aims to take advantage of the potentially hundreds
of thousands of blank TruckSides roaming the roads of America.
The
old twist was simply an extension of a companys
on-premise advertising
Furniture trucks hauling chairs
and tables across town with a photo of their goods emblazoned
on the side, or the local television station cruising for
photo ops with their logo plastered on the side.
Of course
truckers have always had a hankering for highly stylized
and personal graphics on the doors of their cabs,
usually lettered by a unique breed of extremely talented
artists.
Thats old school. Theres nothing wrong
with old school, but the new school envisions big bucks selling
graphics on the sides of trucks that dont have direct
affiliation with the companies who advertise on the side
of them.
These days, XYZ Trucking Co. hauling lobsters, or whatever
the catch of the day might be, from Cape Cod to Boston, could
advertise been.
"People see TruckSide advertising as an additional
revenue source, especially when freight hauling is down because
the economy is down overall", says Doug Scott, news
production editor of Transport Topics. A trucking publication
that recently ran an article about TruckSide advertising. "It
is growing in importance, you will see a lot more of the
owner/operators, - the small guys or small fleets - doing
it".
The parties that benefit from TruckSide advertising include
the trucking companies, advertising agencies, media companies
that rent the sides of the trucks, the advertiser and , last
but not least, sign and graphic companies.
"One tractor-trailer company could have 30,000 vehicles
- you add that up and the amount of square footage across
the country is phenomenal." Says Jack Berry, founder
of PrintCom, a grand format digital printer based in Raleigh,
N.C. "If they qualify it, quantify it and get some leaders
to adopt it, I will retire soon."
MEASURING TRUCKSIDES
Qualifications and quantification of the effectiveness of
TruckSide advertising is showing hopeful early results. The
Traffic Audit Bureau (TAB),which audits and authenticates
the circulation, or number of impressions, for out-of-home
advertising, like billboards, has devised a system known
as MARG for tracking TruckSide advertising effectiveness.
The MARG System basically marries information from a Global
Positioning System (GPS) that tracks a trucks movements
every 2 minutes with traffic data from the federal governments
Highway Performance Monitoring System (HPMS) to audit the
circulation of a particular moving ad.
"The system was in development for over 2 years and
we introduced it in December of 1999, so the system is out
there right now and people are in the process of getting
the GPS leads in," says Larry Hennessy Vice President
and General Manager of the TAB.
Hennessy, says that initial test results from Chicago showed
about 40,000-50,000 impressions per day for a McDonalds
ad that ran for 12 weeks on 3 trucks, either on the interstate
near the city or closer to the center of town, which averaged
more impressions.
"I dont know if it is a direct comparison (to
billboards) because the media is very different, says Hennessy,. "It
is real easy to count how many people see a billboard. With
trucks in motion its much more complicated, but the
numbers generated in Chicago are relatively equivalent what
outdoor advertising is doing there".
Tests in other major metropolitan markets, like Atlanta
and San Francisco, have shown similar results. Things are
definitely looking up for the inner metro markets, where
delivery trucks and such make their rounds within the city
limits.
"One of the phenomena weve seen in the last couple
of years is outdoor media mixes, or optimization, where instead
of buying just posters and bulletins, advertisers are seeing
the opportunity of reaching consumers in micro or niche markets
where they can reach consumers during part of their daily
life cycle," says Steven Freitas, Chief Marketing Officer
of the Outdoor Advertising Assoc. of America (OAAA), "Theyre
seeing opportunities to reach them in various places, and
one of the products theyre definitely considering and
using is TruckSide advertising".
Freitas adds that the OAAA hopes to start compiling national
circulation figures, with numbers of the top 25 metro markets
within a year.
This niche marketing is not restricted to urban areas -
the Texas Lottery has had success on the open road, but so
far, excluding the Texas Lottery, its the only tracked
example of TruckSide advertising.
"We do it a little differently for the Texas Lottery
program - we lease the trailers ourselves and sublease them
to the company so that we can control the vehicle",
says George Gearner, Chairman/CEO of Minneapolis -based Fleet
Advertising Media Group (FAMG), which sells TruckSide media
packages to advertisers. Gearner is also first chairman of
the TruckSide Advertising Council (TACA), an advocacy group
for TruckSide advertising.
"All of the trucks have LED digits on the sides of
them that display the current jackpot of the Texas Lottery.
We can access those trailers from the Internet and change
the digits using GPS", says Gearner.
Initial results from the Texas Lottery campaign have also
been positive. Though the trucks arent blazing the
coveted inner urban trails (however, they travel within 50
miles of the central business district), theyre traveling
to and stopping at the places people buy lottery tickets.
This speaks to the targeted niche marketing that the advertising
industry has been moving toward for some time with alternative
media forms, like TruckSide advertising.
"About a year ago, Tide wanted to reach people whey
they might be spilling food on their clothes, so they put
Tide ads on paper napkins in diners and restaurants. It didnt
matter what the CPM was, what mattered was that they wanted
to reach diners eating. In many regards, TruckSide is the
same way, " says OAAA"s Freitas.
TRUCKSIDE HURDLES
TruckSide advertising is not without its roadblocks as a
number of factors need to be overcome in order to fully explain
the possibilities. As mentioned earlier, quantification and
qualification of the numbers is one, while the specter of
regulation is another.
"There are not a lot of regulations pertaining to TruckSide
advertising, per se, but because it is becoming more prevalent
very quickly, a lot of cities are starting to take a look
at TruckSide advertising. There are some cities - specifically
New York, San Francisco and Boston - which have taken that
step and are aggressively looking at regulatory controls.
There is some litigation in those cities, because there are
aspects within the city laws where they are questioning whether
its legal to carry signs on trucks. Theyre talking
about a significant reduction or elimination with those cities,
so some of the companies involved in those cities are already
in court dealing with those types of legal issues and free
speech."
However, regulation thus far applies mostly to mobile billboards,
trucks that are designed to be moving billboards - particularly
for special events like conventions - and they usually dont
carry deliveries.
"Any time that the government sees an opportunity to
get involved in business, they do. However, we have been
very careful nopt to violate any of the federal or state
department of transportation regulations. The trucking company
knows what the rules and regulations are, and we rely on
the", says Gearner.
There already has been a precedent of sorts set by the fact
that metro busses have been carrying ads on them for years.
It would be difficult to override that precedent and not
allow trucking companies to sell ads on the sides of their
vehicles.
For the time being and for the most part, regulation is
a non-issue and the time is ripe for sign and graphics companies
to put together advertising packages for trucking companies.
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