Profitable Promotions Utilizing Advertising Balloons


Advertising Balloons = Profitable Promotions!

Advertising balloons come in all shapes and sizes, from tiny rubber inflatable advertising ballons to giant zeppelins hanging in the sky over major sporting events. All of them have one thing in common: the use of gases lighter than air to hover, attracting the attention of passersby due to the movement produced by wind. This means that they automatically attract the human eye in the outdoors, wheter the observers be driving or walking by.

advertising balloon

Advertising balloon with vertical banner

The multitude of purposes that the balloons provide is evident: imagine the opening of a new bank. Without some sort of temporary attraction, it would be difficult to otherwise alert potential customers to its presence. In addition to larger advertising balloons outside, perhaps the bank could distribute smaller, uninflated latex ballons inside, also branded with their logo; perhaps they could even hand out water balloons for the kids! With this many applications, the possibilities are limitless with advertising balloons. It’s easy to imagine that larger balloons would have a much more attractive power, due to the increase in size and space. Larger Mylar ballons can be produced in a wide variety of shapes, providing a personal touch, perhaps a company mascot that can endear the customers.

Blimps


advertising blimp

Advertising blimps come in many affordable sizes!

Finally, there is the enormous attractive power of the giant blimps, popularized by tire manufacturer Goodyear. The blimps hang lusciously in the sky, attracting zombified sports fans, who are likely to purchase tires, like horses to hay. With its flashing bright lights and almost ominous hovering omnipresence, it is the ultimate in balloon advertising. Perhaps in the future some sort of stunts should be pulled off using advertising ballons exclusively: a repeat of the floating lawn chair, perhaps, with silk-screened balloons bearing the emblems of a major bank? There is an entire world full of waiting to be advertised to with balloons.


Profitable Promotions Utilizing Advertising Balloons is a post from: Advertising Balloons

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Novelists Can’t Stop Writing About Crappy Foot-Clinic Sign

What is it about the rotating Sunset Foot Clinic podiatry sign on West Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, situated in a no man's land between Silver Lake and Echo Park, that so fascinates people—particularly artists and writers? On one side of the sign is a sad foot on crutches (in "biological turmoil," as LA Weekly once put it); on the other side is a happy foot in sneakers giving a thumbs-up. It's absolute dreck, but perhaps so bad it's good—even inspirational. As Laura Miller points out on Salon.com, Jonathan Lethem wrote about the sign in his 2007 novel You Don't Love Me Yet. The main character, who can see the sign from her apartment window, makes decisions based on which side of it she sees at a glance. Now, the sign has apparently shown up in David Foster Wallace's posthumous novel The Pale King, too. He relocates it to Chicago and gives it similar power over some students, who see it from their dorm room and make decisions based on it. The musician Beck also supposedly has been obsessed with it. Lethem wonderfully calls the sign "a non-Internet meme," locally famous if not exactly loved. "When I was researching my novel," he tells Miller, "I visited L.A., and at one point I was driving down Sunset Boulevard with someone who'd agreed to be a source on the area. I laid eyes on the sign, and asked about it, and that's when the Happy Foot/Sad Foot lore was unfolded for me." Silent fortune-teller or just shitty advertisement, the sign clearly holds some kind of sway. Lethem, for one, thinks other writers need to embrace it in their work, too. "It would be nice to see it become universal," he says.