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Looking
for a bit of buzz?
Offer free tolls to commuters
Instant
attention for a dot.com entering Boston
By Kathy Prentice
It was a rush
hour surprise for motorists heading in or out of the Boston area one
recent Friday.
On the approach to the toll gates, uniformed and
orange-vested state police officers were waving motorists through without
paying.
As cars slowed to navigate the bottleneck, signage at
both sides of the booths and on top announced that it was Free Toll Day in
Massachusetts.
The free pass-through was compliments of Utility.com.
Utility who? motorists wondered, and rightly.
Until that day most people had not heard of the
company, a discount online service peddling electricity, gas, telephone
and internet connections that was just then entering the market.
Utility.com, of Albany, Calif., was out to change that
in one swoop, and what better way than to get in people faces as they are
communing to or from work and give them a gift?
It worked. The promotion got tons of notice--including
press attention--and the company succeeded in signing up a slew of new
customers.
One-shot, high-profile promotions work best
for branding or name recognition when the potential customer base is
broad, and that's what inspired Utility.com to sponsor Toll Free Day.
Everyone buys utilities.
(It doesn't necessarily work on all markets, though. A
similar promotion in San Francisco backfired mightily; commuters became
infuriated that someone would dare festoon their bridge with
banners.)
This is the seventh in a Media Life series on how to buy the
new out-of-home venues. They appear on Mondays.
Fast Facts:
What:
-Toll Free Day on the Massachusetts Turnpike for all travelers,
compliments of Utility.com (billed as the world’s first internet utility
company). From 5 a.m. until 9 p.m. on Friday, April 28, drivers traveling
the Massachusetts Turnpike at interchanges 18, 19 and 20 eastbound and
westbound were not charged a toll. Tolls are usually 50 cents per car.
Who:
-The Utility.com promotion was coordinated by Rob Dahlke from
CBS/Infinity Promotions Group in Boston.
How it works:
- Advertising in the Boston area seven days prior to Free Toll Day
included radio, print and web ads placed by CBS/Infinity Promotions for
Utility.com.
- Turnpike officials decided on what day would work best for the promotion
and their staff handled logistical concerns, including hiring off-duty
state police to direct traffic and keep it flowing.
- Ads were placed on four top radio stations with 220 60- second spots.
Banner ads were also placed on the radio stations’ web sites.
- Press releases to TV stations brought coverage on promotion day,
including a 10 minute segment by Channel 5 in Boston.
- Utility.com handled the creative while CBS/Infinity Promotions handled
logistics--setting things up with the turnpike authorities and police,
placing the ads, printing banners and other signage.
- Signage included 30-foot by 30-foot displays on toll booths. A
53-foot-long by 3-foot-high sign was displayed above the booths.
Additionally, 14-foot by 6- foot signs were posted by the fast
lanes. The signs were the company’s blue and black logo against a white
background with black lettering announcing "Free Toll Day" and
"Utility.com."
- Dahlke says his agency is ready to handle similar campaigns.
"It’s a way for a company to brand themselves in a unique fashion.
It’s a way to be recognized overnight as a household name. It fits
dot.coms or an established name introducing a new product or
division."
Markets:
- Utility.com is considering similar promotions in other new service
areas. It will soon be in the Pennsylvania utilities market. However, at
this time, it doesn't plan to use a free toll promotion in California.
"In California you have to be a lot more careful," says Robyn
Forman, Utility.com director of marketing communications.
"There are so many more environmentalists and
there are certain things they’re not too happy with," she notes,
referring to the promotion that backfired in San Francisco. A little over
a year ago a dot.com paid tolls on the Golden Gate in exchange for putting
up ads on the bridge that one day and there was a lot of negative radio on
it. People were disgusted with advertising on their bridge."
Numbers:
- While Utility.com isn’t sharing numbers when it comes to number of
customers or cost of the Massachusetts Turnpike promotion, executives will
say traffic on their site on April 28 was 40 percent higher than the
entire previous month and that most of that increase was from the Boston
area.
- Rob Dahlke at CBS/Infinity says Massachusetts Turnpike traffic was up 10
percent to 15 percent (in excess of 100,000 cars) on Free Toll Day.
Making the buy:
- Lead time from Utility.com’s end was about four weeks.
Infinity’s Dahlke said he spent 60 days from conceptualizing the idea to
presenting it and assessing costs.
- Advice from Utility.com’s Forman is to enter the arena ready to
negotiate.
"One thing that’s really important for media
buyers to remember is that everything is negotiable in terms of price.
Push hard to get what you want. They’ll want to throw in things. If they
offer a concert promotion you can say ‘no,’ that you want radio time.
They may offer a jacket and you may want another newspaper ad instead.
Especially with radio, a lot comes with stuff attached, which might be
great for the person setting it up. But this is the company’s money. You
don’t need stuff so ask ‘what can you do for me?’"
What’s unique:
- According to Dahlke, even Massachusetts Governor Paul Cellucci got
involved in planning Free Toll Day.
- The dozens of thank you notes and e-mails that Utility.com received on
Free Toll Day and during the following days.
What they’re saying:
- "Why did we try this over other types of marketing? Radio and
TV last in your mind for a shorter period of time. You have to see a
billboard a couple times before you remember it. This was an impact in one
big day, a day to remember. And the key for any dot.com is having people
remember your name."--Robyn Forman, director of marketing
communications for Utility.com.
- "I drive the pike every day to and from work. Sitting in traffic I
had some down time to reflect, to brainstorm. The client (Utility.com) was
coming into the Massachusetts market from California and I realized: This
is their demographics. What better way to get people than a positive
association? It's a human response thing."--Rob Dahlke of
CBS/Infinity Promotions Group in Boston.
Web site info:
- Utility.com
- CBS Infinity Promotions Group at
www.infinitypromotions.com
-Kathy Prentice writes about outdoor advertising for Media Life, penning
her stories from the resort town of Traverse City, in the upper reaches of
Michigan.

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