This article was in yesterday's Houston Chronicle about how universities in Houston are utilizing billboards and other media to market athletics and academics. It would be nice to see UL doing similar advertising around Lafayette and throughout Acadiana with things like billboards and pre-movie advertising at movie theatres. Imagine going to a movie and seeing a commercial for UL football with our fight song, pictures of the new field turf and IPF, highlights of Desormeaux and Fenroy and seeing billboards all over Lafayette and Acadiana with football action pictures about our coming season. A start to building ties between UL and the community (not just Lafayette but all of Acadiana) and getting fans excited about UL and UL football. With a new President, this is a new beginning for UL and we should have a full marketing campaign to proclaim it.
Texas Southern University unveils a new billboard on Interstate 10 near Uvalde and Market streets. The University of Houston and Rice University also have billboard campaigns.
STEVE CAMPBELL: CHRONICLE
July 6, 2008, 11:09PM
Colleges take battle for students to freeway
Billboards are seen as prime ads in a mobile city
By JEANNIE KEVER
Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle
TOOLS
Email Get section feed
Print Subscribe NOW
Comments Recommend (1)
"Feel The Boom," the billboard urges, touting the University of Houston's economic impact.
A few miles away, another promotes an entertainment degree offered by Texas Southern University.
As colleges here and elsewhere in the state jostle for the same pool of top students, one aspect of the competition has taken on a uniquely Houston look.
Call it the battle of the billboards. UH and TSU have new billboard campaigns, promoting schools that sit just blocks apart. Rice University, the University of Phoenix and other schools are doing it, too.
"In a mobile town like Houston, a good way to reach people is through billboards," said Laura Hubbard, director of marketing at Rice's Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Management. The school has used billboards around town since 2005, she said. In other markets, it advertises primarily online and through other media.
"Houston is still, for good or bad, the billboard capital," said Wendy Adair, vice president of university advancement at TSU. "We all travel by car, and we all get stuck on freeways. It's a great way to get the message out."
Both TSU and UH have new presidents and are beginning new fundraising campaigns. That's considered a good time to launch a billboard campaign, said Ken DeDominicis, a vice president at the University of St. Thomas, which ran its own billboard campaign from 2001 to 2005.
Karen Clarke, vice chancellor for university relations at UH, said the campaign is intended to pique people's curiosity about UH, making them more receptive to more detailed missives later.
UH President Renu Khator will announce more specific plans for the school this fall, and the marketing campaign will change accordingly, Clarke said.
For now, the UH campaign is focused on 12 billboards at rotating locations, highlighting what Clarke calls "pride points." That includes UH's economic impact, pegged at $3.1 billion; campus diversity, with students from 133 countries; and its highly rated entrepreneurship program.
TSU's billboards are aimed primarily at recruiting students and highlights programs including urban planning, aviation and the Ocean of Soul band.
As TSU sheds its open admissions policy, it is trying to recruit better-prepared students. UH is aiming for more top students as part of its push to become a highly regarded research institution.
"We're all in competition for the same students," Adair said.
jeannie.kever@chron.com