Ad Invasion: What’s the Next New Media Channel?

At lunch the other day, I picked up a couple of slices of pizza and noticed a Dasani ad actually printed on the pizza box. The company responsible was called Pizza Adz, a division of DoMedia, which specializes in advertising in alternative media channels, an idea I have always been intrigued by. What is the next vehicle for advertising that we haven’t thought of yet?

I first started noticing this trend when ads on movie theater screens started popping up years ago. Then brands and their agencies started getting creative: the top of UPS trucks (targeting office workers in skyscrapers), subway turnstyles, the liners of dry cleaning hangers. Where does it stop? I think this is just the beginning, but I also don’t think it’s a bad thing. While some people get really annoyed by all of these new ways that brands try and get their messages out there, I’m always looking for the next new channel. Maybe part of me just wants to be the one to discover it. …

Creative corporate sponsorships are also on the rise. Professional sports teams have been selling stadium rights for years. Critics say the owners are selling out, but hey, if my favorite team can sign better players due to the extra revenue coming in, I say go for it.

The next wave of corporate sponsorships could be your local subway station. In June, The New York Times reported that the subway stop that connects Atlantic Avenue, Pacific Street and Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn is being sponsored by Barclays. Barclays is based in London, you ask? Sure is, and while it has offices in Manhattan, the Barclays Center is the Brooklyn-based sports arena for the New Jersey Nets that is part of the Atlantic Yards project planned to open in 2011. Seems like a logical fit and we know that the cashed-strapped Metropolitan Transportation Authority needs the money, but as my colleague legitimately asked me the other day, does this mean that the Atlantic Avenue subway station will be cleaner if a corporate name is attached to it?

I don’t see the problem in these type of ads or sponsorships, because they often lead to better products and services for consumers, whether it’s a more competitive baseball team or a more enjoyable subway ride. Like it or hate it, it seems like we are marching to the inevitable future that is portrayed in movies like “The Running Man” where everything you can think of has an ad attached to it.

Think you have the next big alternative media channel? Let us know.

Posted by Corey on July 22nd, 2009 | PermalinkView Comments | Email this article

 
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