Advertising Opinion South Africa

[Orchids & Onions] The 'Poster Vigilante' will leave this billboard alone

I have a handy weapon, which I call "The Equaliser", because it dispenses instant community justice to those who will break the law. It is a pair of wire cutters and deals equally well with wire or cable ties. It has enabled me to become a poster vigilante...

So, in my area, if you place an illegal board on a road sign, I will cut it down. It is illegal to erect posters which, in Joburg at least, are not officially approved by the municipality.

It is doubly illegal to attach anything to a road sign. This is blithely ignored by all sorts of creeps in our area, who believe it is okay to tout their businesses on stop signs.

[Orchids & Onions] The 'Poster Vigilante' will leave this billboard alone
© Tracy Fox – 123RF.com

Why am I doing this? Is it because I am anally-retentive and grumpy? Possibly. But I like to think I do it for two reasons: community safety and pollution.

You put a poster up on a stop sign and you run the risk of distracting a driver, with possible fatal consequences. That is why there are rules in the first place.

Secondly, I hate visual pollution, and posters and billboards are a hideous sight when they start cluttering up a suburb.

Let's not even talk about the illegal billboards adjacent to the highways. I am not always a friend of Sanral, but I believe they are in the right when fighting these people in court.

However, I do acknowledge there are times when billboards work.
And the recipe for billboard advertising success is twofold: simplicity and clean striking design; and placement.

As a car fan (and the target market, obviously) I could not help but get smacked right in the mug by Ford's striking billboard at the OR Tambo International Airport.

It's simple: featuring five of Ford's top sporty vehicles against the headline: "Announcing Ford's
Starting Five", under which is the strapline: "Proud sponsor of the NBA" (National Basketball Association).

At first it might seem strange that Ford is using a South African billboard to promote its association with US basketball - but when you realise how big a sport it is in this country, and of how many fans there are here, it starts to make more sense.

The design makes clever use of Ford's signature colour of blue - and it has always been a theory of mine that blue is a colour that works very well over a distance.

We see that when we use photos which are dominantly blue on our newspaper front pages - they stand out. All the cars are in blue, too.

The copy and design are simple but get across the message that Ford is an athletic brand.

So an Orchid to Ford.

There were some teaser ads running on DStv this week, warning us of the arrival of Twisp, whatever that may be - no clue in the teasers, though.

All was revealed towards the end of the week when we discovered that Twisp is an electronic cigarette. The ad is prefaced by a quasi-health warning (à la cigarette packs) to the effect that it has been scientifically proven that electronic fags are 95 percent less harmful than ordinary ones.

At least they didn't try to convince us they are harmless...

What annoyed me about the ad was the choice of sexy models who, frankly, looked ridiculous brandishing the silver twisps like they were some kind of designer label status symbol.

It's been a long time since anybody believed smoking was sexy.

And I'll bet those people - who look very fit and healthy - don't smoke either.

Remember: cigarettes are the only product which, if taken as directed, will kill you.

And, by your own admission, electronic cigarettes might just take 20 times longer to do so. But Twisp gets an Onion because the attempt to make this addiction look sexy falls flat.

*Note that Bizcommunity staff and management do not necessarily share the views of its contributors - the opinions and statements expressed herein are solely those of the author.*

About Brendan Seery

Brendan Seery has been in the news business for most of his life, covering coups, wars, famines - and some funny stories - across Africa. Brendan Seery's Orchids and Onions column ran each week in the Saturday Star in Johannesburg and the Weekend Argus in Cape Town.
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