Effectiveness of lawn signs

DrRaid

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Hello evryone just wondering if anyone has decent success with the lawn sign advertising and your experience with this method thinking of making some signs myself and flyers as well. Any ideas or suggestions on what type of information or how much is good to put on the sign....
 
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The main city I work out of has an ordinance that prohibits businesses from using lawn signs for advertising.

Every now and again you will suddenly see a bunch pop up and then saturday rolls around and enforcement picks them all up and fines the business $25 per sign or so.

We did have a problem a year ago where a locksmith got upset at one of his competitors and had a bunch of cheap signs made up then around midnight before Saturday morning went and dropped in front of Walmart / bunch of yards. Enforcement picked it up and sent the notice of fines to the business on the sign and it wound up going to court until surveillance video came out showing who actually did it.

Anywho, just a tangent to say: check your local ordinances.
 
You have to keep a couple things in mind. First off, there is advertising which you expect an immediate return on, then there is marketing or branding which takes time to bear fruit. Sometimes they are one in the same. With advertising like fliers, you hope to see returns immediately or within a short period of time. With branding and marketing, the idea is to get your name and your branding (colors, logos, tag line anything that separates you from the rest) recognized and remembered. You basically want your business to become a household name. This takes time and it takes more than just one form of marketing. For instance, if you have a bill board, yard signs, TV commercial, etc that is consistently seen, then eventually people will remember your business and hopefully remember you when they need something done. Whereas with advertising you are hoping they need something done right then and there or that they hang on to your advertising. In many cases, the right type of marketing will make your business seem more established and give you creditably. Its the type of thing that if done right, makes people go "oh yeah, I have heard (or I know them), I heard they were good (or they are good)" and they will say these things even if they have never used your services.

Point is this, do not expect to get any business from the yard signs, but hopefully if people start seeing them, your business name, logos and colors consistently around town or online, then they will remember you in the future. You will appear to them to be more established in many cases. These types of advertising are the types you can't really track. If you were to ask someone how they found out about you, they probably would not say a yard sign.
 
Another thing to keep in mind, is if the sign stays the same and in the same place, people will "get used to it" and not really notice it after a while.


I have had better luck with the sandwhich board signs. I take it in an out every day. I can change the lettering, it also conveys to the customer that "I am open"
 
I tend to think many types of advertising mediums make more money for the sign maker than they do for the person using them, yard signs fall in that category for our industry. I experimented with these last year, and we didn't see a return and most of them got stolen/thrown away even though we collected them at the close of business to put them up in slightly different locations the next day.

We got 30 of them, and they were something like $10 or $15 each, so it was a quite a bit of change. Combine this with placemats and the newspaper, its probably more beneficial to set that money on fire.

Our big successes are usually anything dealing with the Chamber of Commerce, and the phone books.
 
I tend to think many types of advertising mediums make more money for the sign maker than they do for the person using them, yard signs fall in that category for our industry. I experimented with these last year, and we didn't see a return and most of them got stolen/thrown away even though we collected them at the close of business to put them up in slightly different locations the next day.

We got 30 of them, and they were something like $10 or $15 each, so it was a quite a bit of change. Combine this with placemats and the newspaper, its probably more beneficial to set that money on fire.

Our big successes are usually anything dealing with the Chamber of Commerce, and the phone books.

Just goes to show how different the market is. For us, we put out yard signs in front of the shop when we first started. They got stolen a lot, but we also got business from it. Also, the phone book here is worthless.
 
One idea is getting a sign made up for when you go to a customers location. Leave it out while you are onsite and take it with you when you leave.
 
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