This issue of the OutdoorBillboard.com Newsletter includes:
  1. OutdoorBillboard.com and features and updates.
     
  2. Featured Company - Watchfire Digital Outdoor
     
  3. OAUniversity - Outdoor Advertising University is set to launch in the next couple of weeks.
     
  4. Better Safe than Sorry on Setbacks, by Frank Rolfe
     

  5. How to Rent the Impossible Billboard that Nobody Wants, by Frank Rolfe
     

  6. Send us your Articles and Press Releases.
     
  7. Tell us what you think!

Visit us at www.outdoorbillboard.com


FREE Q&A Session:

We have just launched our new weekly Q&A show with Frank Rolfe. 

You can call in for FREE on Monday nights at 5:00 Pacific, 6:00 Mountain, 7:00 Central, or 8:00 Eastern and ask any Outdoor Advertising Question you would like. 

The Q&A sessions are 1 hour in length as long as questions are being asked. 

Here is the call in info:

Dial in Number: 620-294-3005

Participant Passcode: 5539#


OutdoorBillboard.com is the place for:

  • Billboards For Rent - Find billboards and other media for rent for your next advertising campaign - also list your available inventory so potential advertisers will find what you have to offer. 
     
  • Billboards Wanted For Rent - Here is where potential advertisers list the locations and types of media they are looking to rent.  A great source of leads for existing outdoor companies.
     
  • Billboards and Outdoor Media For Sale  - Are you looking to sell a single billboard or multiple locations?  Then this is the place to connect with buyers quickly and effectively!
     
  • Land & Property For Outdoor Media - Do you have land or buildings you feel are ideal for potential billboards or other outdoor advertising?  If so, look no further as there are companies out there that are looking to expand!

Outdoor Advertising National Directorythis is our one-of-a-kind directory of Outdoor Advertising Industry Companies and it is FREE to list your company in the directory.  We will also link directly to your website and all we ask is for a reciprocal link back to OutdoorBillboard.com.

 

OutdoorBillboard is committed to the industry and dedicated to helping your company succeed!


Featured Company:

Watchfire Digital Outdoor     866-949-9282

Watchfire Digital Outdoor engineers and manufactures the most durable and dependable digital billboards available anywhere with an industry-leading average uptime of more than 99.9%. Our fully encapsulated LED modules are so well protected they can actually run completely under water for months. Our seamless, extruded aluminum cabinets are far more rugged than sheet metal and pop-rivet assemblies.


Outdoor Advertising University

www.OAUniversity.com has been launched. 

It is an extension of OutdoorBillboard.com and includes books, teleseminars, coaching and mentoring, as well as an annual event for the outdoor advertising industry.  It is the educational side of OutdoorBillboard.com.


BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY ON SETBACKS

By Frank Rolfe, OAUniversity.com

Spending just a few extra minutes on laying out the placement of you new billboard sign can save you thousands of dollars and lots of anguish down the road – maybe even save your whole sign!

There are some common misconceptions out there that can be impossible to fix inexpensively once the billboard sign has been cemented into place.  You must understand these issues to avoid getting off to a terrible start in you outdoor advertising career.

LIGHTS

Most billboards have lights on them.  These huge fixtures stick out several feet from the billboard face.  When calculating your side setback from the property line, be sure and include the additional feet for the lights in you calculation.  You would not believe how many people forget to add in this measurement.  As a result, they build a billboard that overhangs the neighboring property from day one.  Of course, when the neighbor finds out, several awful options all come together at one time: he may require you to pay him rent, or he may require you to remove the lights.  He may also sue you for past rent for the period you have been overhanging his property.  And then there’s the problem that by taking you lights off, you may be in violation of your billboard ad lease as well as you loan agreement.  Now, wouldn’t it be easier to take the time to figure out how many feet to add on for the lights on the front end?

CATWALKS

Just like the light fixtures, most signs have catwalks.  The one that most people forget is the front walk-around catwalk.  Look at you engineered drawing – it’s that walk nearest the street.  You have got to find out how much additional setback this walk requires and load that into you numbers.  Otherwise, you will end up with the same problem shown above, but with one extra terrible wrinkle.  Often the front setback relates to right-of-way, and you cannot just pay them off if you get caught.  Additionally, like we’re going to cover next, the front setback normally includes power lines, and you will have a disaster if you allow a walk too near the lines – someone might get injured and killed and your screw-up could make you responsible. 

POWER LINES

Power lines pose an extra risk for calculating setbacks.  The first problem is that different types of power lines require different kinds of setbacks.  You need to consult with the power company to find out how powerful the lines are and how much setback is needed.  You need to also consult with OSHA to see what their requirements are as they may be more stringent than the electric companies’.  And make sure that the setback they tell you is from the actual lines and not the center of the pole – that’s a huge difference.  I know people who had a worker get electrocuted on their signs, and their businesses were ruined.  Don’t do that to yourself.

PROPERTY LINES

It may be hard for you to accept, but the property owner doesn’t really have a clue as to where their property lines are.  If you don’t want to have a problem later, spend some time to truly find them.  Look for some tangible signs like a steel stake, or a power pole or some other type of item that normally goes on the right-of-way.  Look for a fence line.  Better still, get a copy of the survey and find that property line.  If you don’t have a real handle on it, then it is worth the money for a surveyor to find the line for you.  Spending $250 to find the line is a lot cheaper than $10,000 to move the sign backward.

SOME FINAL THOUGHTS

Since we are talking about setbacks and construction, and I wanted to remind you empathetically to make sure that you are clear of all underground utilities.  If you hit a fiber-optic phone line or a major gas line it can bankrupt you.  Call DIG Test or One Call, or whatever the underground locater is for you area, and even then ask around at the city to see if there are any other utility lines that aren’t on the radar.

Another point I would like to make is that a billboard is a big thing, and an extra 5’ of setback is not going to hurt it one bit.  I always tack on a few feet of setback even after doing all of my homework, just for the heck of it.  This is definitely one time when you are better to be safe than sorry.

About the Author:

Frank Rolfe is the author of the book... Big Bucks From Big Signs and just recently finished a new series on how to succeed and make money in the Billboard Business.  A series of 6 one hour tele-seminars available for instant download.

Rolfe started his billboard empire from his coffee table, as a fresh graduate from Stanford University.  It began as a resume builder for graduate school applications, and ended with a sale to a public company 14 years later.
 
Using unique strategies he developed from desperate competition with much larger adversaries, Rolfe eventually owned more billboard units than any private individual in Dallas/Ft. Worth.  Along the way, he fine-tuned the techniques to find billboard locations, rent advertising space, and sell signs and leases.


HOW TO RENT THE IMPOSSIBLE BILLBOARD THAT NOBODY WANTS

By Frank Rolfe, OAUniversity.com

So you have a billboard that won’t rent.  Maybe you need to change you attitude to get it sold.  Here’s the deal: everyone would take it for free, right?  Sure they would.  Thank God you have a commodity that everyone wants.

So your real problem is not the product, it’s the pricing.  The demand is there.  Your job is to find the advertiser that will pay you more than any other advertiser for that sign.  To accomplish this you have to conquer three objectives; 1) market the space effectively 2) prioritize the potential advertisers 3) work to close the deal and obtain the winning “bid”.

Market the Space Effectively

If you sign is vacant (which I assume it is) you need to get the following message on your sign as big as possible:  “FOR RENT (XXX) XXX-XXXX” This can be in the form of a vinyl or paint job of the entire billboard face, or a 4’ x 8’ plywood panel that you stick in the lower corner nearest the street, or a panel that goes on the skirt (worst choice).  Your sign is seen thousands of times per day (hopefully) and you can use the sign to rent itself. 

Next, you need a mailer to go out to the businesses in your zip code that are most likely to use billboard advertising.  You can buy a prepared list, or you can type it yourself from the yellow pages.  In any event, get it out immediately, and hope that someone gets it that is interested and calls you.

Prioritize Potential Advertisers

Make three lists.  The first list is all of the advertisers who are on another billboard in the area.  These are pre-qualified prospects and you only mission here is to call each one and find out if they would want to move (at lease expiration) from the competitor’s billboard to yours.

The second list is those individuals who call you from either your “for rent” sign or the mailing.  These are pre-qualified users who have an interest.

The third list is those companies that seem most likely to want to advertise on the sign, based on your guessing of who they would be.  For example, if there is a restaurant down the street that is a bit off the beaten path, then it would be on this list.  If there’s a homebuilder forty miles away, they would not be on this list.

Start Getting Bids and Closing the Sale

It is time to now think auctioneer.  Your goal here is to get the highest price and the longest term on the lease.  Call everyone on all three lists and say “how low would I have to go on this fine billboard for you to rent it from me?”  I always think about a used car dealer I met that always used this sales pitch “what do I have to do to sell this car to you today?”  You can also use this sales pitch, “I’ve got a billboard that I know would work for your business, and I know you’d take it if it was free.  I can’t rent it for free, but what price would you give me for it?”  Go in with the firm resolve that someone is going to rent this billboard in ___ days, and the high bidder wins.

Once you get a bid, immediately set up a meeting to sign it up, as long as it is within reason.  Don’t wait a long period to get back to this person, or they may have changed their mind.  Remember the old adage, “a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush”.

Hopefully, using this technique, you will start to get bids.  Take the best offer and go.  Once a sign has sat empty for a while, it gets a cloud hanging over it that will scare off  advertisers.

Some Final Thoughts

If you have several billboards, all of the same size, it may serve you well to find a pre-emptible advertiser, who can paint on vinyl and rotate onto empty signs while you try to find a better paying client.  For example, you might sign up a law firm that has a generic ad for personal injury work.  You agree to put them up on your vacancies, at your sole discretion, and in exchange they pay the cost of production for the vinyl and some reasonable amount for every 30 days that it is up on a sign.  The advertiser, obviously, only pays rent when they are up on a sign.

Another option is to join a barter exchange and trade you vacant billboard space for barter “scrip”, which can be used for goods or services you need.  It may sound cheesy, but these things really do work if you are a smart trader who can make use of the scrip.  Just like the pre-emptible sign idea stated above, you can make up a pre-emptible barter billboard to fill in vacant spots between real advertisers.

About the Author:

Frank Rolfe is the author of the book... Big Bucks From Big Signs and just recently finished a new series on how to succeed and make money in the Billboard Business.  A series of 6 one hour tele-seminars available for instant download.

Rolfe started his billboard empire from his coffee table, as a fresh graduate from Stanford University.  It began as a resume builder for graduate school applications, and ended with a sale to a public company 14 years later.
 
Using unique strategies he developed from desperate competition with much larger adversaries, Rolfe eventually owned more billboard units than any private individual in Dallas/Ft. Worth.  Along the way, he fine-tuned the techniques to find billboard locations, rent advertising space, and sell signs and leases.


Send us your Articles and Press Releases!

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OutdoorBillboard.com

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