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Rolling Billboards
Creative marketing gives Boardwalk Builders signage that makes an impression all over town.
Rod Sutton, CGRA
January 2, 2000
Professional Remodeler
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| Rod Sutton's Editorial Archives |
For McDaniel, that new media turned out to be tool trailers.
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| A sign package for use on three trailers cost Boardwalk about $5,600. |
McDaniel realized the opportunity to use the trailers for signage. Boardwalk garners 96 percent of its business from repeat clients and referrals, and McDaniel saw the trailers as a "tremendous way to increase visibility."
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| Boardwalk stores tools and supplies in its trailers, and leaves them on the job site for staging. advertisement
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Using 3M's Scotchprint material, which applies in a manner similar to contact paper, Boardwalk contracted with a sign company to produce and apply the sign. "[We] designed it, sent electronic files to the company, and they produced it," McDaniel says. "You pay by the square foot of material [you use.]" Since there was no local company, Boardwalk also paid expense for the sign maker to travel to Boardwalk for installation.
Three trailers cost about $5,600, McDaniel says, including $1,000 for the design, which she describes as "incredibly cheap." In fact, she's so sold on the concept that she had hitches installed on employees' trucks. Another employee, who decided to purchase his own trailer, has agreed to let Boardwalk put a sign package on it.
Because of the size of the trailers, McDaniel says, "I had the opportunity to say a lot more, so I took it." Whatever I do, people are going to form an opinion of me. I might as well take my best shot and help them form the opinion I want them to have."
Rod Sutton is the Editor-in-Chief for Professional Remodeler. Please email him with any comments or questions regarding his column.
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.









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