Ron Paul Billboards (48 feet by 14 feet) need mockups!

on a road like that with the speeds that you're gonna be traveling on. seriously when's the last time you paid enough attention to read a chart?

skip the chart just show a number, put military donation and ron paul's name. there's a reason why big ads in a place with no traffic are usually one word in huge lettering followed by a few smaller print text.

that one word has to grab the attention first, then you can do whatever you want with their attention. put a face of ron paul on the side, images speak a thousand words.

you can do

53% MORE

I guarantee you everyone who reads that is gonna go "53% more of what???" then they read your sign... "in military donations. Ron Paul" then picture of his face on the far right side.

so many things that can latch into the head of a driver:
53% MORE gas?
53% MORE savings?
53% MORE FAT?
53% MORE to travel?
53% MORE to a taco bell...
etc etc
 
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grabs your attention even if you dont look for it.

zx01sp.jpg


et7ad3.jpg
 
... put military donation and ron paul's name. ... one word in huge lettering ... that one word has to grab the attention first ... put a face of ron paul on the side, images speak a thousand words.

... you can do

53% MORE

I guarantee you everyone who reads that is gonna go "53% more of what???" then they read your sign... "in military donations. Ron Paul" then picture of his face on the far right side.

so many things that can latch into the head of a driver:
53% MORE gas?
53% MORE savings?
53% MORE FAT?
53% MORE to travel?
53% MORE to a taco bell...
etc etc

NO FAIR ! You read the thread and studied Billboard Design Best Practices !

;-)
 
53% MORE MILITARY DONATIONS - MockUp

MO_Billboard_Chainspell-MOC.jpg


I did a reduction straight from the proof, it gives the white text on top of the Green Half-Back a yellow cast ... pops even better that way yeah?

Why put his name at all? People will wonder who the hell he is!
 
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RON PAUL wants 53% MORE MILITARY ! ? ! ? ... uhhh ... oh ... donations ... WHAT ! ?
 
I don't recall seeing any dates for the billboard(s) (OP?), but if this is to coincide with the Veterans Day moneybomb why not keep with the style of supportthemnow.com? Percentages are from Q3. Here's quick and dirty.

In captivity...

moretroopssupport_sm.png


In the wild...

moretroopssupport_mockup.jpg



There's still room for a call to action (for those frequent passerbys) where we could plug the site.

I think this direction could have great results, especially if in a garrison town (anyone know?), but I keep thinking about two things: 1.) "It's the economy, stupid." and 2.) Most people don't know who Ron Paul is.

This one really seems to achieve the right result of catching attention and implanting the message.
 
Developing guidelines for Ron Paul Campaign Billboard design

This one really seems to achieve the right result of catching attention and implanting the message.

dusman, would you please elaborate so that subsequent designs can follow the path of Best Billboard Design practices as they apply to Ron Paul and the campaign as a whole, the longer term. You seem to have a strong and trusted voice and this thread is at the point where guidance is essential. If you could give us some concrete criticism it would help the thread. If you can comment at a technical level that might marshal the energies of this thread to press forward in a cohesive manner.
 
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dusman, would you please elaborate so that subsequent designs can follow the path of Best Billboard Design practices as they apply to Ron Paul and the campaign as a whole, the longer term. You seem to have a strong and trusted voice and this thread is at the point where guidance is essential. If you could give us some concrete criticism it would help the thread. If you can comment at a technical level that might marshal the energies of this thread to press forward in a cohesive manner.

As stated earlier, with billboards, simple is always better.

Without, limiting creative potential, it's important to first set some boundaries on creative projects so we can frame what the message should be and what audience its for. In this case, the audience has to take overwhelming priority, since its as you are driving and visibility will be generally low as has been discussed so far. Considering how high it is, those drivers might also lose line-of-sight some 100 ft. before/after the sign.

At this point, it seems you guys have the two pieces of the puzzle already figured out:

1) Message: military themed, featuring donations, and 2) Audience: highway traffic with limited visibility

Now, set some boundaries:

Messages
- Ron Paul gets more military donations than all the other candidates
- Ron Paul receives 53%, Obama 25%, and Other GOP Candidates 23% (BTW, this is 101%?)
- Many more in the Military agree with Ron Paul's foreign policy over any others
- Maybe there are alternative messages here unrelated to each other, but generally agreed upon.

Considerations
- 4-6 second exposure to highway traffic
- No competing messages in the vicinity, which is a great opportunity that should be aimed at inspiring a call to action
- Ad wording should be short and concise. Avoid sentences and long quotes. Use visual aids in substitution of words

As you proceed, keep adding those small notes for others to review and that will help hone in on design orientation. Someone should mediate those suggestions and update those notes. This person should be objective on what gets added. For example, if someone suggests wording that is too long, the mediator should address why it's not being included based on the prior observations in the main list. This goes a long way to getting really good results.

Designers like working in circles, not boxes, so keep it open and objective. :)

I might have overlooked Liberties"R"Us concept if it weren't for the preview on the actual sign it will be on. Here's what I liked when I saw it:

- The sign itself is more vibrant and brighter than the blue sky. While at the same time I could imagine on an overcast day, that bar graph and wording will stand out even more and sort of "float" on the skyline. It sparks a curiosity of how it would look at night.
- The bar graph in red naturally commands the attention of drivers and seems to be the most eye-catching aspect in the environment.
- It plays well on the visibility increasing as you approach the ad. The first detail that would be noticed is a bar graph with clearly a winning category. Next to come into focus would be "More Troops $upport Paul" which gives frame to the graph, and then finally the details of who he beats (EVERYONE!). Simple and to the point.
- The message is very subtle and creative. As a curious driver, I'd want to know more about what it represents. I might go look that up on Google and be barraged with hundreds of web pages about it. What better place to start people off who might not know.
- My call to action is either I want to see if that is true or I want to prove that wrong. Either way, it works positively in our favor to get people looking it up.

Suggestions for that ad:
- Maybe doing all-caps on the categories of the bar graph. This purely for the sake of readability over a bit longer distance.
 
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This one is really nice as well. However, I think the message could be worked on so that its not necessary to detract attention to specific words.

The plan is to use this one with the words: Veteran * Economist * Patriot * President ... Do you like that dusman?
 
This one looks good. I am checking to see how the billboard owner feels about it. I am not sure that the website address is big enough. Can someone put it up on the billboard and see how it looks up high and from a distance?

I love the bar graphs, but I also love the pictures of Ron Paul on some of the other designs. Is there anyway to have both?
 
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