Want a Great New Marketing Channel? Try Your Floors, Windows, and Walls!
As a brick-and-mortar location, you know how important it is to engage your customers in every way possible. Even if you are already sending direct mail, blasting emails, and advertising on social media, there may be a channel you have overlooked—your location. Your store, office, or café can be the perfect place to advertise and grab attention using wide-format graphics. Let's look at just a few ways wide-format graphics can be used to market and differentiate your business.
Retail: Besides bright, attention-getting signage and displays, consider advertising your next in-store promotion with custom murals or giant window graphics. Use floor graphics to create a trail of leaves that helps customers navigate to the latest fashion arrivals or a path of dollar signs that help them find the clearance section.
Medical offices: Any medical treatment can be scary, especially for kids. Transform your waiting room into a tropical jungle or undersea adventure that will make kids laugh and giggle as they wait. You can also use wide-format graphics for essential communications, such as blood drive announcements, disease prevention and treatment illustrations, floor plans, and evacuation route maps.
Salons and cafés: Say you're a small salon competing with larger retail chains. Imagine having your shop's interior filled with branded graphics and unique artwork. Suddenly, you look like a wildly successful high-end boutique.
Restaurants: What makes a passerby hungrier than a giant window graphic of a mouth-watering sandwich or piece of pizza? Don't just say, "We have great food!" Show it. Get the customers' mouths watering from across the street.
Mobile graphics: Take your advertising on the road. Wrap your company vehicles in branded graphics that tell your story every time you pull your car out of the parking lot. Gain exposure to people who might not have known about you any other way.
Your best customers are current customers, so get your messages in front of them where they are most connected to you — on-site with you.