Marketing

From static to stand-out

“It was difficult to promote retail events and price sensitive messaging, as by the time you printed the skins and installed them, the sale would be over and the information out of date.”

After top roles at a number of industry heavyweight brands, John O’Neill was promoted from chief sales officer to Australian CEO at QMS earlier this year. After 23 years in the industry, he comments on the new developments and opportunities presented by the digitisation of out-of-home (OOH) media, and its effect on creativity, execution and results.

Marketing: How has digitisation changed the way marketers are approaching out-of-home advertising?

Traditionally, marketers were looking at out-of-home as a static medium; it was more a continuity medium to support television and radio because of its impact and cost efficiency. Moving into the digital age, we now have a much more dynamic and more flexible opportunity to communicate the messages to market.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Marketing

Marketing5 min read
Good Choices, Bad Choices
Milk and sugar? Soy or almond milk? Lift or stairs? By the time we get to the office, we’ve often had to make several choices. Some choices in life are often done on autopilot, some may seem small but turn out to be significant and some are big and d
Marketing1 min readGender Studies
The Brands Leading With Twitter Way Videos
The bank’s 20-year association with the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras has provided countless opportunities for ANZ to showcase itself as a leader in culture, inclusion and pride. Its in-flight safety videos have been a worldwide favourite for qu
Marketing4 min readBusiness
A Fix For Broken Customer Research
There is often a gap between what we say and what we do. You, for example, may say you are going to take up dancing lessons and find that six months have miraculously passed and you still haven’t Googled ‘tap dancing for adults’. This is nothing new

Related Books & Audiobooks