
LA Metro: Promoting Mass Transit
2 years ago
Los Angeles' Metro is doing something that no transit agency in the country has ever done: it's marketing its products and services as if it were a private company bent on turning a profit. But for Metro marketing isn't about increasing the bottom line. It's about reducing traffic, cleaning the air and making people's commutes in this auto-clogged city a bit less stressful.
Matt Raymond, the Chief Communications Officer for Metro, is the brainchild behind Metro's marketing push. During a trip out to Los Angeles I had the chance to talk with Mr. Raymond. "The key to putting together the group," Mr Raymond said, referring to the in-house ad agency known as Creative Services, "was that we wanted to make public transportation cool."
Making buses appear as an attractive alternative to cars is an ambitious goal for any transit agency, but it's especially ambitious in a place like Los Angeles where image and the automobile are everything. Yet, traveling around LA it's hard not to feel the presence of Metro. It's fleet of colorful buses are ubiquitous on every major city street. And unlike standard city buses, these buses aren't dreary and dull. They boast vibrant colors like California poppy from a color palette inspired by the city. Metro also has a number of playful ads on billboards encouraging Angelinos to leave their cars at home and take the bus, rail or carpool.
These ads and the re-brand of Metro seem to be paying off. Earlier this year the Creative Services division of Metro was instrumental in the success of Measure R, a 1/2 cent sales tax that is expected to generate 40 billion dollars over the next 30 years for improving transit services in LA. To get the 2/3 vote required, Metro convinced the vast majority of Angelinos, most of whom commute by private car, that they should pay for transit out of their own pockets.
The most impressive outcome of Metro's marketing is that it has convinced people to start using its services. Following Metro's re-brand, discretionary riders, those people who have the choice to commute by car or transit, have jumped from 24 to 36 percent. That is, Metro's new clean and modern image is actually getting people into transit and helping address this city's notorious traffic problem.
For people involved in advertising and marketing this really shouldn't come as a surprise. The reason why the pharmaceutical industry, for example, spends over 33% of its revenue on marketing is because it works. Otherwise, why would they do it? It's true for every other industry as well, including the automobile industry which spends roughly $21 billion to convince you and me that we cant live without cars. So why aren't more transit agencies following LA's lead and investing in marketing?
The common perception is that money spent on marketing would be better spent on the transit systems themselves. The problem with this line of thinking is that it is short sighted. Over time, a sustained investment in marketing increases the number of people who use transit. Increased ridership leads to increased revenue and, ideally, an increase in service to match the new demand. That's what's happening in LA right with Measure R. It's also what Clayton Lane, a transport expert for EMBARQ, calls "the virtuous cycle."
There's no doubt that LA still has a long way to go to solve its traffic problems. The first day I arrived here was a Wednesday and at 10:30 PM I got snared in a traffic jam on the 101. As a friend who lives here told me, "Traffic just sort of pops up out of nowhere." Fortunately, Metro is set on increasing transit ridership by doing a number of big projects like the orange line expansion, the now complete gold line expansion, and perhaps even the ambitious "subway to the sea." And unlike other cities, LA will likely see a greater than normal increase in ridership thanks to its great marketing.
Matt Raymond, the Chief Communications Officer for Metro, is the brainchild behind Metro's marketing push. During a trip out to Los Angeles I had the chance to talk with Mr. Raymond. "The key to putting together the group," Mr Raymond said, referring to the in-house ad agency known as Creative Services, "was that we wanted to make public transportation cool."
Making buses appear as an attractive alternative to cars is an ambitious goal for any transit agency, but it's especially ambitious in a place like Los Angeles where image and the automobile are everything. Yet, traveling around LA it's hard not to feel the presence of Metro. It's fleet of colorful buses are ubiquitous on every major city street. And unlike standard city buses, these buses aren't dreary and dull. They boast vibrant colors like California poppy from a color palette inspired by the city. Metro also has a number of playful ads on billboards encouraging Angelinos to leave their cars at home and take the bus, rail or carpool.
These ads and the re-brand of Metro seem to be paying off. Earlier this year the Creative Services division of Metro was instrumental in the success of Measure R, a 1/2 cent sales tax that is expected to generate 40 billion dollars over the next 30 years for improving transit services in LA. To get the 2/3 vote required, Metro convinced the vast majority of Angelinos, most of whom commute by private car, that they should pay for transit out of their own pockets.
The most impressive outcome of Metro's marketing is that it has convinced people to start using its services. Following Metro's re-brand, discretionary riders, those people who have the choice to commute by car or transit, have jumped from 24 to 36 percent. That is, Metro's new clean and modern image is actually getting people into transit and helping address this city's notorious traffic problem.
For people involved in advertising and marketing this really shouldn't come as a surprise. The reason why the pharmaceutical industry, for example, spends over 33% of its revenue on marketing is because it works. Otherwise, why would they do it? It's true for every other industry as well, including the automobile industry which spends roughly $21 billion to convince you and me that we cant live without cars. So why aren't more transit agencies following LA's lead and investing in marketing?
The common perception is that money spent on marketing would be better spent on the transit systems themselves. The problem with this line of thinking is that it is short sighted. Over time, a sustained investment in marketing increases the number of people who use transit. Increased ridership leads to increased revenue and, ideally, an increase in service to match the new demand. That's what's happening in LA right with Measure R. It's also what Clayton Lane, a transport expert for EMBARQ, calls "the virtuous cycle."
There's no doubt that LA still has a long way to go to solve its traffic problems. The first day I arrived here was a Wednesday and at 10:30 PM I got snared in a traffic jam on the 101. As a friend who lives here told me, "Traffic just sort of pops up out of nowhere." Fortunately, Metro is set on increasing transit ridership by doing a number of big projects like the orange line expansion, the now complete gold line expansion, and perhaps even the ambitious "subway to the sea." And unlike other cities, LA will likely see a greater than normal increase in ridership thanks to its great marketing.
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Unfortunately, it all has very little to do with reality, just as Metro's well-paid marketing division has very little to do with the passage of Measure R.
The primary demographic of Metro continues to be the poor and working classes as well as teenagers despite the highly visible middle class that utilizes the Red Line for a few brief stops in downtown. Unfortunately, Metro has turned away millions of potential straphangers with remarkably dreadful subway service (the bus service is plain horrible) when it had the chance to bring them on board. Lousy customer service, TransitVUE boards that fail to display the train arrival times, broken down trains and a fare-collecting procedure that is a joke overseen by deputies whose lack of discipline is alarming—this is what Metro passengers undergo when they get past all the brilliantly seductive and sadly deluded advertising campaign on which Metro spends far too much of its meager funds.
L.A. Will not see "a greater normal increase in ridership thanks to its great marketing," but owing to the USA's second-largest city's inability to maintain a fiduciary standing as well as the region's poor economic outlook.
If there are any doubts as to the decrepit demeanor of Metro's service, one need but spend a week at The Bus Bench's Web site to see the past few years' worth of atrocious "service" and incidents.