The news: At this year’s OOH Media Conference, speakers like Nick Brien (interim CEO, Outfront Media), Carrie Drinkwater (chief investment officer, Carat) Pat LaCroix (EVP media & growth, MissionOne Media), and even actor Charlie Day made the case for treating out-of-home (OOH) not as a fringe buy, but as a powerful vehicle for presence, trust, and relevance.
- OOH advertising is experiencing a renewed sense of purpose as marketers reevaluate their media priorities and question if being performance-obsessed is the best strategy.
- According to Brien, the industry is correcting from years of over-reliance on short-term, hyper-targeted digital campaigns. He cited data showing a loss of long-term brand value—up to $200 million in missed potential—due to underinvestment in brand-focused efforts.
Why it matters: Over the past decade, marketers have focused heavily on clicks and conversions, often sidelining memorability and emotional impact. According to speakers like Drinkwater, performance media may be reaching a point of diminishing returns—even as budgets continue to favor it. As a result, there’s a renewed push to re-engage audiences through branding that’s both lasting and visible.
- Modern consumers—especially Gen Z—are increasingly tuning out digital clutter, Brien noted. OOH, as a physical medium, offers a way to cut through and deliver credibility in real-world moments.
- Several speakers pointed out that OOH is uniquely suited to amplifying messages across channels. When paired with TV, social, or creator content, its cultural impact multiplies. Examples like Kraft’s Grammy-timed execution or campaigns synced with social trends show how OOH can create moments that people not only see, but share.
Our take: Marketers are facing the limits of short-term tactics, and rebuilding brand equity has become a business necessity—not a nice-to-have.
- As attention fragments and budgets come under pressure, channels like OOH are being reappraised for what they uniquely offer: visibility, trust, and cultural relevance.