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by Denise Culver Getting serious about advertising The idea has been around for years, but it is finally starting to become a reality for PSPs of all sizes hen Dale’s Seasoning, one of the top-selling meat marinade companies in the South, wanted to develop an ad campaign that would ensure its sauces would be the last impression that supermarket shoppers would see before entering the store, company executives had their work cut out for them. After all, traditional advertising — television, radio, newspapers and direct mail — doesn’t allow for last-second impressions to be made as shoppers enter the doors of a grocery store. Therefore, it didn’t take much for National Public Communication Media (NPCM) to sell Dale’s executives on an advertising option they had never before considered: payphones. During October and November, Dale’s will be running enclosure ads on sidewalk payphones outside of grocery stores throughout the Birmingham, Ala. area, which also happens to be the headquarters for Dale’s. The ads feature a large picture of the famous marinade, along with a juicy steak, chicken or fish, and the slogan, “Don’t forget your Dale’s,” says NPCM principal Jess Bullock. “The point of putting the ads on these types of payphones is that Dale’s wanted to be the last impression that a person saw before walking into the grocery store, where they’re going to be inundated by 35,000 other impressions,” he says. “The value of having that last impression imprinted upon your mind is invaluable. “What better way is there to have it placed there than by putting it on the side of a payphone that’s right on the sidewalk as you walk into the store?” W 18 PERSPECTIVES ■ November 2000 A new way of thinking This type of mindset is propelling payphone service providers (PSPs) into the world of payphone advertising, once thought to be an elusive, if not outright ridiculous venture, says Mason Harris, a PSP who is also the owner of AdsOnPhones. “I looked at trying to sell ads on payphones about four years ago on a local basis, and I got absolutely nowhere,” he says. “I thought it was a lousy idea, and I just put it on the shelf. “Then two years ago, the idea started circulating again, and I decided to try it again. But this time, I decided to get educated.” Harris spent about nine months working closely with advertising agencies to better understand the various market strategies, demographics and other factors he felt would be necessary to successfully advertise on payphones. He then decided to leverage his existing knowledge of the payphone industry with his newfound knowledge of the advertising industry and create AdsOnPhones. The company essentially acts as a “supply channel” for both PSPs and advertisers. PSPs that are interested in offering their phones as potential sites for advertisement provide their database information to AdsOnPhones, which in turn works with advertising agencies to secure contracts for advertisers that are looking for payphones across the country. “The reason that this type of setup works so well is that advertisers are looking for payphones in all types of markets, whether it be in Brooklyn or Wichita, because to them, it’s just branding,” he says. “So even smaller PSPs have an opportunity to make revenue from advertising in this type of scenario.” In contrast to Harris, Bullock’s background is in the advertising arena, where he is a 30-year veteran of the industry. He has teamed with Barry Selvidge, a long-time payphone industry veteran, and Tom Childers, a systems and data veteran, to form NPCM. Their claim to fame is a proprietary software product known as telAware, which incorporates all database information provided by their PSP members with a complex demographic and mapping component that pinpoints specific information that advertisers are demanding, Bullock says. “Our program provides qualified, targeted, defined information that advertisers must have before they are willing to place their product information on a payphone,” he says. “If an advertiser asks us about the phones that we have available in south Chicago, we’re able to tell him within a matter of seconds how many phones there are, the types of enclosures they are, the location of the phones in terms of retail accounts, and when the space will be available. “We can also let him know the number of impressions he’s going to get, the demographics of the people that live in the area and other information he demands to have before placing an ad. “We’re not in the sign or enclosure business; we’re incubating a new media.” A new kind of billboard While Harris tends to think of his advertising strategy as “mini billboard advertising,” Selvidge and Bullock stress that they’re in the business of selling “alternative media in a billboard format.” What it all boils down to in the long run, however, is that advertisers are ripe for a new form of advertising for a number of reasons, as Selvidge explains. “Traditional billboards have environmental and licensing requirements that make them unattractive,” he says. “Television and radio aren’t as attractive any longer because they have time limitations, and they’re only viewed by one particular audience over and over. “So the key is to find an advertising outlet that provides access to the consumer at the point of purchase or service, and payphones provide both.” Harris agrees. “One of my advertising clients is a financial institution that wanted to reach northern New Jersey customers,” he says. “But the problem with the television and radio stations there is that they’re all New York stations, and the paper is the New York Times. So the solution for them was to place ads on payphones, so when their customers would walk by the payphones, they would see the ads, and the company would have the exposure they wanted.” Keeping a level head The principals of the two companies also agree that while PSPs should be enthused about the new opportunities available via advertising, it shouldn’t be viewed as a get-rich-quick scheme. In fact, Bullock estimates that it takes most PSPs an average of between 60 and 90 days to earn income from advertising revenue. Furthermore, PSPs must take into account the cost of capital involved with advertising, Selvidge says. “When PSPs work with our company, they have the choice of taking a less-expensive route early on by choosing to only advertise on places like the upper instruction card, the handset or stickers, which don’t require heavy investments in panels that are more expensive,” he says. “Later on, after they’ve earned income from the advertising, we encourage them to reinvest and expand into the panels. “But it’s important for them to realize that they are going to have some expenses, and it’s not a get-rich-quick scenario.” And as with any payphone-related scenario, vandalism, theft and other issues are a concern. That’s another one of the reasons that Bullock is glad that Dale’s Seasoning chose Birmingham as its test site, since he has an office in the city. “I want to keep an eye on things and watch peoples’ reactions to the campaign,” he says. “We’re really eager to see how well this does, because Dale’s has already said that if this test does well, they’ll do a regional buy next. “This is just one small indicator of what’s to come.” Denise Culver is a contributing editor for Perspectives and is also a writer and editor for other telecommunications publications. PERSPECTIVES ■ November 2000 19