Rainbow Kirby
started her career in sports marketing. “I knew little about sports,” she
admits, “and I had to be one of the least athletic people involved in a sports
team, but I loved the energy of the fans.”
Her work for the New York Jets
lasted six seasons, followed by the New York Islanders. She then moved into
publishing, which was just beginning to integrate digital components in 2006. When
she saw where the media dollars were shifting, she immersed herself in learning
digital, and then taught her print team the basics. Now, as Director of Marketing Communications
at Clear Channel Outdoor, her job responsibilities are tightly matched to
everything digital marketing has to offer.
Charlene Weisler: How did you get into Out-of-Home?
Rainbow
Kirby: I had gone back to school in 2012 to get my Masters in Integrated Marketing
at NYU and found myself putting out-of-home media into all my projects. It was
the only medium that still got my attention. I was no longer reading magazines,
I had banner blindness and couldn’t remember the last commercial I had seen. When
an opportunity at Clear Channel appeared in my LinkedIn feed, I jumped on it. OOH
is the only medium that has experienced 24 consecutive quarters of growth.
Messages in OOH are unskippable, always above-the-fold and can’t be blocked.
They’re big, bold and can be interactive. With newer digital capabilities, we can share
content in real-time, and even broadcast emergency messaging to communities.
Charlene: Tell me about your current job.
Rainbow: I
often refer to myself as “Jill of All
Trades.” When you work in sales marketing, everything is interconnected, and
that includes our industry communications and event marketing. I always look for opportunities to share the
Clear Channel Outdoor story with new audiences, whether it’s through executive
speaking appearances, conferences or partnerships. Storytelling is another big
part of my job, from writing recaps and case studies to overall messaging. I
helped launch iHeartBillboards.com as a storytelling vehicle that shares
content with personality, smart writing and tons of beauty shots. Another big
part of what I do is build client relationships with agencies and brands, and industry
partnerships with organizations that include the OAAA, ARF and the IAB, where I’m
co-chair of the Digital Out-of-Home Task force.
Charlene: Do you blend creative with quantitative
analysis?
Rainbow: Yes,
you have to. I was one of those people who used to always go with my gut, but
when I started diving into the metrics, I found my gut was often wrong. Sometimes
I am surprised at which blog posts or case studies have the most
views/downloads. But we now use the data to help fuel our content strategy.
What’s resonating and what’s not? Data insights give my team a way to measure
our own marketing ROI and share it with sales and senior leadership so that
we’re always aligned.
Charlene: Tell me about RADAR.
Rainbow: RADAR
is our data and analytics suite that helps advertisers create their media plans
with more efficiency. It’s about buying media based on desired audience
segments, not solely on location. For example, if I want to reach soccer moms,
I’ll be able to see which boards over-index for that segment. Those could be
boards near schools or playing fields. Or maybe they’re boards near locations you
would never think of, but that’s the beauty of data, I don’t have to go with my
gut, I have the metrics to back up my marketing decisions. The mobile-OOH
connection is constantly evolving and we can now offer planning and attribution
tools that have made online media so compelling.
Charlene: It seems like technology has
impacted your job.
Rainbow:
Definitely. It has given us more insights to make better decisions. We can see
how many downloads we get for a specific case study, or how many opens our
client email received, and then follow a lead through the sales funnel with
SalesForce and HubSpot data. We’ve become better marketers because we can more
easily deliver what clients want.
Charlene: In the three years that you have
been at Clear Channel Outdoor, what has changed?
Rainbow: A
lot of out-of-home inventory was bought by location, and now the thinking has
shifted to buying audiences. Great creative will always reign supreme, and it’s
not all about digital. You can integrate mobile into static printed billboards.
For example, Apple’s Shot on iPhone6 campaign displayed user-generated photos
in their creative, and they were beautiful. This campaign took home the Grand
Prix last year at Cannes Lions – and it was other people’s photos. Snapchat
didn’t exist three years ago, but today, they’re OOH campaigns are so
attention- grabbing because they focus on simple, iconic imagery that connects
directly with their mobile users. And contextual relevance is just becoming
more commonplace with real-time capabilities on digital billboards. A Target
campaign pulled real-time data from the sales floor and updated digital
billboards with the most popular products in that neighborhood. That’s
relevant, localized and just -- really cool. Another newish channel that’s
adding value is Instagram. Our billboards receive so much earned media through
social sharing, Just recently, Zac Efron posted a photo of himself saying “that
dude is staring at me for sure” next to a super-sized image of himself on a
billboard in Times Square, and in a matter of hours that one Instagram post had
half a million likes.
Charlene: Can you give me some tips for
effective blogs and billboards?
Rainbow: Sure,
for blogs :
- The headline needs to be concise and catchy. Make it newsy and always timely.
- When writing, have your target audience in mind. Messaging that you’re sharing with potential buyers is very different that the tone you use with consumers.
- Get ahead of the sales planning cycle. We share back-to-school ideas in June and Christmas in July.
- Readers love visuals. With an average 8-second attention span – an image is often more effective than a paragraph of copy.
- Tag your photo images. This is a common miss for those not familiar with SEO.
- Consistency is key. When you post frequently you build trust with your readers.
For
billboard creative, keep it simple – be bold, be iconic, be cheeky. The cheeky,
mysterious billboards get the most shares on social media.
This article first appeared in www.MediaBizBloggers.com
This article first appeared in www.MediaBizBloggers.com
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