Designing for Digital Billboards
If you spend any sort of time on the freeways here in Phoenix, you’ve most certainly come across one of Clear Channel’s digital billboards. Scattered along the I-10 and I-17, these billboards allow advertisers exceptional flexibility with their messages. Whether you want to change up your advertisement throughout the day, purchase multiple spots to increase your number of impressions, or get your specials out at a specific time during the day, digital billboards are gaining steam and emerging as a dominant outdoor medium.
How it works:
Once your digital billboard space has been purchased, you’ll need some eye-catching creative to ensure your message gets out to the target audience. On the Phoenix outdoor network, each billboard has eight rotating advertisements at eight seconds each. As with printed billboards, you’ll want to keep your message short and sweet as viewing time is at a premium. After getting the design aspect squared away, your outdoor ad can be up and running in as little as 24 hours. So not only are printing costs wiped away, but the ability to get your ad displayed is no longer restricted to a monthly basis. Want your ad displayed one day per week? One week per month? Wednesdays at 5pm? A great example is the way various television stations use the medium from around the valley. Got a hot news segment showing on the nightly news, or does Oprah have a special guest on today? As the advertiser, this is about as flexible as it gets, and you can even switch out an ad during the course of the campaign should you feel the results are below targeted expectations.
While some may argue that digital billboards aren’t all I’m cracking them up to be due to exclusivity issues, it all depends on how you approach the situation. Who ever said the advertiser could only buy one eight second spot? With eight spots, each running eight second ads, couldn’t one purchase all eight spots on a billboard? I think so, and with those eight spots, you could display eight different messages that are not only branding your company, but highlighting several important factors of your campaign… And for all my stats people out there, even with 1 spot every 64 seconds, at 17 hours of up time per day, that’s 187,376 spots over the course of a 4 week period. Not too shabby if you ask me.

Digital Billboards in Phoenix, Arizona
All this being said, we recently finished an outdoor digital billboard campaign for London Gold. Being that this is still a somewhat new technology, we were excited to experiment with different color contrasts, and make those diamonds “pop” off the screen as so many clients request. We worked with London Gold to create a variation of ads in order to keep the consumer engaged. Just think, you can hit drivers with variations of the message all while strengthening your brand and gaining exposure. It truly is the new era of outdoor advertising.
I’m just waiting to see when animation will come into play on digital billboards in Phoenix. Is animation something digital billboards can support? If so, are there state and federal laws against motion graphics due to motorist distractions? When I spoke with a rep at Clear Channel, I didn’t really get a definitive answer, and when conducting a search on Google, I came up empty. If you’ve got an answer for me on this one, I’d love to hear it.
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I did find this on youtube.com — but not sure if it was actually used in the environment. Anyone have a connection in Minnesota
Good read I saw this morning on adweek.com discussing how the IOC purchased every piece of Digital OOH media within a 40 mile radius of Vancouver. Exclusivity while protecting sponsor rights, nice… http://bit.ly/6qy8Z0
Another great post from adweek.com about the use of digital billboards by both local and national advertisers. Interactivity coming to life – http://bit.ly/dzaVe7
I’m wondering if they can just reduce the time each individual board is up. That way you can do a small animation of say a 7 frame animated explosion (with each frame lasting 1/7 of a sec) of diamond rings and then hang on the last frame with all the info. All depends on how fast those big screens can refresh. The full motion board posted above runs on a completely different type of system.
Justin – Clear Channel told us their research concluded that about 8 seconds per ad rotation for 8 different advertisers is ideal – both for viewers and revenue models. As of now, I don’t think they’re allowed to have animated or motion graphics. At least not in our market. The only file type accepted is an uncompressed Jpeg. Hopefully that will change soon. If/when that comes, I’m sure there will be restrictions on the movement.