Last weekend I flew home for Thanksgiving to see my folks, and while there I caught a Rider game with my dad. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, they are the CFL football team that sports a green jersey. I remember hearing that next to the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Saskatchewan Roughriders sell the most memorabilia of any sports team in Canada. That said, 99.9% of the fans come to the game wearing team jerseys (as well as face paint and carved watermelon helmets), so when sitting in the grandstands, all I could see around me was green: the field, the players, and even the fans.
Fans have a bit more to look at than just the action on the field. From a marketing perspective, sporting events are fantastic opportunities for companies to show all the crazed enthusiasts that they support their passion. From the side lines to the end zones, and even imprinted on the turf; ads are everywhere on game day. When you notice an ad there’s usually a slogan, logo, or brand name to identify the company or product, but before you give any attention to the ad itself you have to actually see it. The predominant medium of advertising in stadiums is large rectangular posters/banners. Throughout the game I began to realize that there were several ads I kept noticing over and over again. I became curious, and started to consider what it was about the particular ads that made them so eye-catching. The three most prominent ads I saw were from Nissan, Rona and Coca Cola. I ruled out that it had anything to do with brand recognition or loyalty as I love Nissan (owned two, still own one), but I have never so much as been inside a Rona (grew up with Home Depot), and I have long since stopped drinking pop (and even when I did I wasn’t much for Coke [or Pepsi]). So with that possible conclusion out, I scanned around the field and compared the three ads with all the others. It didn’t take me long after that to realize that it was the colouring scheme of the ads that made all the difference. Considering the environment was a sea of green, I found it surprising how many green-coloured ads there were as they were completely blurred into their surroundings. Anything coloured predominantly green, or in something like yellow that complimented green, blended in so well with everything that they were nearly invisible; that is, unless you were specifically looking for them.
Everyone in Comm 296 is also taking Comm 290, so I’m sure we all remember Brian going on about why we use the colours we do when formatting our excel documents. Red, yellow, blue and pumpkin. Those colours, with the exception of yellow (and that was only due to the overwhelmingly green environment), were the colours present in the ads that I found most noticeable. After noticing this, I started critiquing the ads, and trying to decide what could have made them even more apparent. The Nissan ad was a white background with “NISSAN” written in red; I thought bolder thicker lettering and some use of black in the border would have done wonders. The Rona ad had a blue background with “RONA” so bold and large that the borders of the poster were indistinguishable from edges of the letters; to improve this I would’ve just shrunk the lettering considerably so that more of the blue background was visible. The most visible by far was the Coca Cola ad, and what I saw done so well in this ad was mainly what I applied when “fixing” the other ads. The ad was for Coke Zero, and it had a completely black background, with “Coca Cola” written medium-sized in it’s classic swirly font with red colouring, and finally a lower-case “zero” in bold-ish white lettering. What I found so effective was the considerable use of the black background to really emphasize the already easy-to-see red, and the contrast with the white letters for the “zero”. The medium sized font was also very readable as it didn’t take up the whole poster like “RONA” did in the Rona ad. There was also a pumpkin coloured ad that I readily noticed while at the game, but it wasn’t a company I was familiar with, so I forgot it… They have their ad scheme down, but I guess they need a little work on getting into my “known brands” haha.
Well, that was my marketing insight for this week. Maybe it was even insightful enough to make up for my lack of insight the week before?? 😉 Maybe I’ll just try and be insightful on a weekly basis from here on out.