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Mobile Billboards

mobile billboardsFind out more about Mobile Billboards

No, we are not talking about a billboard attached to the back of your mobile phone (although they are doing that with credit cards!), we are talking about something stranger, a billboard attached to the back of a human!

That's right, billboards just went mobile!

The traditional way to market in busy city centres and crowded places thriving with potential customers has always been in the form of a fixed, stationary advert, usually out of sight or too far to read.

We think that's not only boring, but totally ineffective, especially today when people ignore 99.9% of the advertising clutter they encounter on a daily basis.

What we believe is if you want something, you need to go out and get it!

So that's exactly what we are offering you today, mobile billboards that can literally walk right up to your potential customers and get them, ensuring that 99.9% of people see it, not ignore it!

Because the mobile billboards are manned by real people, this means that your advertisement can interact with real people too!

How great would it be for a potential customer to walk right up to one of your mobile billboards and be given a leaflet or form to convert them into a new customer?

The opportunities and advantages of using mobile billboards to market are endless.

What could you do with a mobile billboard?

Enquire now to find out more about mobile billboards.

Contact SaniPost Walking Billboards Media Pack

Mobile Billboard Advertising

mobile billboard advertisingFind out more about Mobile Billboard Advertising

When times are hard, it pays to spend (honestly!)

But with so many ways to market, which one will be most effective for you?

Introducing... Mobile Billboard Advertising.

A Mobile Billboard is exactly what it sounds like, a billboard that is... well, MOBILE!

Gone are the days when your billboard advertisement was stuck in the same place, high above and out of site.

With a Mobile Billboard Advertisement, you can take your advert direct to your customers, literally!

As you can see from the picture on the left, your advertisement fits into your mobile billboard which is then carried like a rucksack by your 'human billboard marketeer'.

The mobile billboard is extremely lightweight meaning your marketeers can walk around busy places for hours without problem.

Seeing is believing, so why not get your marketing up to date today and go MOBILE with a walking mobile billboard. Email us today to find out more.

Contact SaniPost Walking Billboards Media Pack

Down in the Train, the Germs' Domain

Occupational health and safety specialist Robyn Gershon, DrPh, gets the train to work at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health in New York City.

Gershon didn't start out looking at germs. She got interested in subways when she heard reports of hearing loss among transit workers. While studying the issue, she decided to look at other subway health issues. What she found was ... not much. It turns out there's very little scientific information on infectious disease in the subways.

"Subway systis are big public-use spaces" Gershon states "There are 14 big U.S. subway systis and millions and millions of riders. For any number of reasons, there are health hazards. But there is this huge volume of people, and we are not studying it."

When Gershon turned her attention to infectious disease spread on subway systis, she found "not one scientific paper at all."

"You can imagine because of all the surfaces, all kinds of organisms can be transmitted from the hand rails, the head rests, the seats" she says. "It is almost inevitable disease transmission has happened, but it is hard to prove."

Meanwhile, Gershon is taking precautions.

"After riding the subway, I never put anything in my mouth without washing my hands" she says. "I don't touch a thing in my office without going to the sink. The rails and everything are loaded with pathogens. Hand washing is a simple thing, and it is the only thing you can do. I have seen a couple of people wearing face masks, but I wouldn't go that far. Clearly data are needed."


Snakes On a Train

Sankes on a trainThat's right, I did say a train NOT a plane!!!

Jan 2011, Melisa Moorehouse lost her 3 foot snake (Penelope) on a train to Boston, USA. Due to this incident, Moorehouse received a cleaning bill of 650 dollars from the Boston Red Line train company. 
 
Snakes have been known to spread salmonella bacteria, hence the train had to be disinfected and sanitized. Passengers on the train raised concern about the health risks and diseases that may have spread from coming in contact with the lost snake.
 
People become ill by contracting salmonella.
 
While incidents like having a lost snake on a train are rare, it’s good that the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority is making sure that their trains are properly disinfected after coming in contact with an animal caring a disease.
 
It’s important to sanitise our hands!! Using SaniPost will kill 99% of germs and since you can’t always know what entered the room and what bacteria might be there as a result, better to be safe!

SaniPost Kills Ecoli

The Health Protection Agency has announced four more cases of E. coli infection in the UK linked to the outbreak in Germany.

It brings the total number of British cases to 11, with all those affected having recently travelled to Germany.

 
The HPA said there was no evidence of it being passed from person to person in the UK.
 
British farmers are concerned that the E. coli outbreak in Europe will drive down prices for local producers.
 
Britain's Health Protection Agency continues to advise that people travelling to Germany should not eat raw cucumber, lettuce or tomatoes and that they should seek medical advice if they have bloody diarrhoea.
 
Three patients in the UK have developed the potentially fatal complication in the blood and kidneys known as haemolytic uraemic syndrome. Eight have bloody diarrhoea.
 
While there have not been any cases of person to person transmission, the HPA said maintaining good hand hygiene was very important.
 
There have been 1,213 cases in Germany of bloody diarrhoea and 520 cases of haemolytic-uraemic syndrome (HUS), which affects the kidneys and can be fatal.
 
Some British supermarkets have already noticed a slight decrease in fruit and vegetable sales.

'Behaving sensibly'

Sarah Pettitt, the National Farmers' Union horticulture and potatoes board chairman, said the NFU had spoken to all of Britain's major retailers to seek assurances that they were backing British growers and paying an appropriate price for their product.

 
"So far, I'm extremely encouraged to hear that the major supermarkets are behaving sensibly when it comes to price, and are not using this unfortunate situation as an excuse to drop prices to British growers.
 
"Cucumbers are a high-cost crop to produce and rising input costs have meant reduced margins for growers in recent years," she said.
 
Derek Hargreaves of Britain's Cucumber Growers' Association told the BBC on Thursday that he feared the outbreak would affect British producers if the source of the E. coli remained unknown.
 
"If this keeps rolling on and the Germans don't find the source of the outbreak, then obviously people are going to say 'well, there's no point in listening to experts, they've all got it wrong,' people will stop buying the salads."
 
Small sales drop

Supermarket chain Morrisons said it had noticed a "small drop in sales of salad items". A spokeswoman said its stores did not stock any fresh salad supplies from Germany.

 
Tesco, Marks and Spencer and Waitrose said their sales of fruit and vegetables had so far been unaffected by the outbreak.
 
The Co-operative Group said it was too early to say if the outbreak had affected sales figures "given the relatively poor weather over the past week compared to the same period last year".
 
A spokesman from Sainsburys said the supermarket chain was unable to give out information on its sales figures.
 
The company was "working closely with the FSA [Food Standards Agency] and following their guidance," he said.
 
Spanish fruit and vegetable exporters estimate they are losing 200m euros ($290m; £177m) a week in sales after Germany's initial claim that the outbreak had probably originated with Spanish cucumbers.
 
No evidence of this has been found and the source of the toxic bacteria is still unknown.
 
Original story taken from BBC News