How to Make the Best of a Billboard with Poor Visibility Montrose CO

Virtually every billboard owner has one billboard face with poor visibility. Here are some ways that investors can improve a bad sign and maximize its profits.

Illuminating Ideas, marketinf support
(970) 417-2033
16280 6765 Road
Montrose, CO
DISABOOM INC.
720407-6530
7730 E. Belleview Ave. # A306
Greenwood Village, CO
Market Treasury Magazine
(719) 313-7590
PO Box 1207
Monument, CO
Novus Speciality Design, LLC
(303) 255-8558
12615 Home Farm Drive
Westminster, CO
THE VILLAGER NEWSPAPER GROUP
303773-8313
8933 E. Union Ave., #230
Greenwood Village, CO
Vin Marketing Communication S
(970) 385-4248
835 E 2nd Ave Ste 202
Durango, CO
American Solutions for Business
(303) 920-4793
11298 Grove St. Unit A
Westminster, CO
Media Masters
(970) 461-2929
4460 Andorra Dr
Loveland, CO
Fineline Signs & Graphics
(303) 293-9215
601 W 48th Avenue
Denver, CO
Pueblo City Council
(719) 553-2489
1 City Hall Place
Pueblo, CO

How to Make the Best of a Billboard with Poor Visibility

Almost every billboard owner has a billboard face with poor visibility. Maybe you built the sign for the great visibility of the other side, or maybe it was a great read at one time, but there is at least one bad advertising face in every portfolio. So what do you do to maximize that one clunker?

Here are some ideas:

If the problem is blockage, try to fix it

As long as a tree is on private property, you have the right to ask the neighbor if you can trim or remove it. It never hurts to ask. You may offer them cash or some other concession if they will allow you to do so. Even if a tree is on highway right-of-way, it still never hurts to ask. You’d be amazed how many trees and other vegetation obstructions have been removed legally by just asking the proper authority. If the problem is blockage from a man-made obstacle, such as a flag or someone’s business sign—again, it’s the right step to ask if the obstruction can be moved or removed. One of my best billboard deals of all time was buying a vacant sign in downtown Dallas from a big company for next to nothing, because it had a terrible blockage from a parking sign right in the middle of it. Apparently, they had never bothered to ask the parking sign owner if it could be moved. I immediately got the green light from the owner, without a penny of compensation, just to be a good neighbor. I lowered the sign to where it did not block the billboard at all, yet did not damage to the effectiveness of the parking sign either.

If the problem is the angle of the billboard face to the highway, try to increase it.

Many a billboard has gone from a dog sign to a winner by significantly increasing the angle of the “V”—the angle of the sign face in relation to the road. For example, a back-to-back sign , depending on the orientation of the highway, may be virtually unreadable. However, with a sharp angle aimed at the traffic, that same read takes on a new life. If the law allows you to, it is possible to increase the V of the sign without a lot of construction—but be sure it’s legal to do so. In some markets, the ordinance allows such a trick since you are not increasing the size, height, or lighting of the ad face, just the angle (which is normally not even in the ordinance). If you have not built the sign yet, then put a big V on it from day one.

If the problem is the height of the billboard face over an obstruction that cannot be changed, such as a roof line of a neighboring building, see if you can build a smaller sign or a taller sign

Many times, a billboard owner does not realize that he can actually build the sign higher than he thinks. Often, this is due to a lack of understanding as to where the height of the sign is measured from. Sometimes, you are given some extra feet in height if the sign begins on land below the grade of the highway. Another thing to check is if there is a different configuration that eliminate...

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