A new Advertising media is taking the UK by storm
ADMEDIA, a British
company, started a new trend in advertising media that is taking
the UK by storm. ADMEDIA
offers a national poster medium targeting a mass captive
audience across the UK, which they have placed in only the
highest maintained washrooms. A3 frames are impactfully
positioned above urinals, inside cubicles and next to hand
driers and mirrors.
In addition to that, ADMEDIA allows for Direct
Response Tear Off's situated on top of the posters. Direct
Response Tear Off's consist out of 150 slips per frame,
placed at the base of the poster frame - allowing the reader to
tear off one of the slips and walk away with a note of the
advertisers product, website and phone number.
This unique medium allows for a range of benefits to the
advertiser that few other media can deliver:
- Target Men and Women separately - deliver
amore effective message;
- Possible Solus opportunity - total exclusivity
to 1 advertiser - No clutter / no cross messages / no
distraction; display several different posters - spread cost
across different products;
- Convey a more detailed message - long impact time (men
55 seconds / women 105 seconds);
- Have the consumer's undivided attention;
- Allow the reader to take away a reminder of the service,
small enough to fit in a purse / wallet.
Gillette, Unilever, Procter and Gamble, COI and many more have all run
numerous highly successful direct
response campaigns with ADMEDIA. Although they keep
their commercially sensitive results confidential, the fact that
for example, Gillette have
so far re-booked 4 times, suggests that ADMEDIA generates a huge
amount of responses for them. ADMEDIA's extensive
independent Case Studies
further support the strenght of the media
- 98% of people had a positive or neutral reaction to the
ads
- 84% recalled seeing a specific ad
- 92% of the above group could name specific advertisers
without prompting
- 89% of those who recalled a specific ad recalled at
least 4 selling points
- Impressions from washroom ads are 405 times stronger
than from typical print ads
Source: separate studies performed by Babour & Munroe Marketing
Research Arizona State University and Rice University.