Nice job jmatt. Look forward to you posting more. I think you're a good marketer. I missed where you were called a troll, but I have a knack for avoiding threads like that
Somebody speculated as such in a tag which appears at the bottom of the thread. Not sure why, I was answering in earnest throughout.
Anyway, back in February I started marketing the company in two fashions: Valley Computer Service for residential clients and Valley Network Solutions for commercial.
We picked up a handful of decent corporate clients along the way, that's what's paying for the billboard. The plan is to now bombard every house and business in the immediate vicinity of the sign with EDDM mailers. And in a month when the sign moves to a new location, I will redirect the mailers.
I'd like to share with the board just how I was able to do this since I could never afford five grand a month for it (other spots I can get into are $7500). Perhaps you can make a similar arrangement.
I had been playing footsie with this billboard company for awhile, trying to find a way into the "big time", as it were. (it remains to be seen if it will pay off)
They were suggesting much smaller billboards (they call them posters) on secondary roads in the area. Posters are like 20 feet wide and 10 feet tall and on roads with much lower traffic volume.
So one day I showed up at their office and said I noticed that some of these premiere, large billboards stayed blank for periods of time. They said it was usual for there to be some downtime on signs as they waited for the next big client to sign up.
I offered a deal: If they would give me a big discount, I would agree to take whatever spot happened to be empty at the moment in my area. They said $2800 a month, I said how about $2500. Deal signed. This is essentially free money for them, the boards would be blank otherwise.
Some of the particulars I negotiated:
I can get out of the contract at any time with 30 days notice. They can't.
I had them print two signs, one targeted toward commercial clients, one toward residential. A one time fee of $1300 for them to produce both signs.
Whenever I want during a given month, they will send out a crew to swap the signs (they have different verbiage and slightly different graphics). In that way, with one rental I can market to commercial
and residential clients.
No fee to change the sign.
I figure that once the sign has been up in a location for a few weeks, every commercial eyeball in the area will have seen it, so why not entertain bored commuters with a different message and target the other market?
Most of the signs this size (there are no larger) are occupied by billion dollar hospitals, GEICO, malls, etc. This makes me seem much bigger than my company really is.
The billboard has been up for 5 days. It's generated some attention in ways I didn't expect. My first call was from another IT company north of here, said they hate doing workstation builds and would I be interested in building boxes for their military clients.
The second was an email from a salesman at another,
much larger IT company in the area. Said he saw the sign and is interested in breaking away and starting to build a sales team with another "aggressive" company in the area. He's been with them for 8 years and will bring his rolo-dex.
No idea if either opportunity will work out but I'm happy so far.
