How to ensure media plan execution for DOOH: a step-by-step guide with 7 points
From location selection to analytics — everything you need to know before launching an DOOH advertising campaign.
Most owners of digital advertising inventory in Digital Out-of-Home launch an advertising network without a plan. Equipment is purchased, a video is uploaded, screens are running. It seems like everything is ready. But a month later it turns out: ad time sales metrics are not growing, money has been spent, and the result is unclear.
The reason is almost always the same — the CMS has no media planning settings
In the case of a software product, media planning is not about a table with an address program, general OTS indicators and budgets. DOOH advertising, created from Digital Signage equipment, requires clear software logic for playing back an advertising campaign according to a given algorithm. Additionally, technometric solutions may be involved, which will provide data about who sees the advertising, where and when. Without this functional logic, even the most expensive screen works in vain. It is already on the basis of these IT capabilities that the placement of the advertising campaign is ensured in accordance with the table.
This guide contains a step-by-step scheme that is suitable for both outdoor DOOH advertising and indoor Digital Signage.
Step 1. Define the goal — specific, not general
“Increase brand awareness” — that is not a goal. That is a wish.
A media plan goal looks different: increase the number of café visitors during lunch hours by 15% over six weeks. Or: raise the average ticket in a store by promoting higher-margin products.
Everything else depends on the goal — screen formats, placement, content, campaign duration.
Ask yourself: what should change after this campaign? Sales, traffic, customer behavior at the point of sale? The answer to this question is the real goal.
Step 2. Define the audience and point of contact
Outdoor digital advertising and indoor are different contact scenarios with a person.
Outdoors, a person is moving. They have three to four seconds to notice a digital billboard and read the message. They do not stop, do not read fine print, do not remember details.
Indoors — a different situation. A café or store visitor is standing in a queue, waiting for an order, browsing a display. The attention window is wider. More can be shown here: product composition, a promotion with conditions, video content with details.
Therefore, the media plan audience is not abstract “males 25–45”. It is a person at a specific location, at a specific moment of the day, with a specific intent.
Digital signage in retail works on a buyer who has already entered the store and is ready to make a decision. Digital signage in HoReCa — on a guest who is choosing between several menu items or deciding whether to stay for another coffee. These are different moments, different messages, different content logic.
Step 3. Choose formats and locations
The format is chosen based on the goal and audience, not the budget.
For reaching a wide audience — DOOH networks: screens at bus stops, in shopping centers, on building facades. For targeted impact at the moment of decision-making — indoor screens directly near the checkout, at the entrance or in the waiting area.
A few questions to help with the choice:
Where is your audience at the moment they need your product? How far are they from the point of purchase? How much time do they spend within the screen’s field of view?
If the goal is to launch programmatic DOOH campaigns to promote a brand across multiple cities, the logic is one. If the goal is to increase sales of a specific item in a restaurant chain, the logic is different. In the first case, reach and contact frequency are important. In the second — placement precision and content relevance.
Personalized DOOH campaigns deserve separate consideration. They allow changing content depending on the time of day, weather, day of the week or current traffic. In the morning — one message, in the evening — another. This is not science fiction, this is already a standard feature of most platforms on the market.
Step 4. Plan content and display schedule
Planning a screen’s operation is not “upload a video and forget about it”. It is a schedule that takes into account audience behavior at different hours.
A café in the morning is one flow of people with one set of needs. The same venue on a Friday at seven in the evening — a completely different audience with different expectations. If you show them the same content, you are losing half the screen’s potential.
The basic principle: divide the day into slots and assign each slot its own content.
Morning — breakfast promotions, business lunch, quick offers. Daytime — main menu, new items, seasonal offers. Evening — atmospheric content, special offers for groups.
For outdoor DOOH the logic is similar, but seasonality and weather context are added. Real-time advertising campaigns allow content to switch automatically: in rain — one message, in heat — another. This improves advertising relevance and recall.
Separately — video duration. Outdoor digital billboards have their own optimum — 5–8 seconds. For indoor, where there is more contact time — up to 15–20 seconds. Longer videos do not produce better results. Most often the opposite.
Step 5. Set the budget and allocate it
A media plan budget consists of several line items. Many people account only for placement costs and forget the rest.
What goes into a real campaign budget:
Content production. Videos, animation, adaptation for different screen formats. If you have five different types of screens — you need five versions of materials.
Placement. For DOOH — the cost of a slot in a network or on a specific screen. For owned indoor screens this line item may be absent, but there are platform management costs.
Analytics. DOOH analytics costs money. But without it you will not know what worked and what did not.
Reserve. A minimum of 10% of the total budget. For content adjustments, technical issues, sudden schedule changes.
Allocate the budget from the goal, not from what is left over. If the goal is reach, the larger share goes to wide placement in DOOH networks. If the goal is conversion at the point of sale, the focus is on indoor and real-time advertising content management.
Step 6. Geolocation and targeting
Geolocation campaigns are one of the most precise tools in current DOOH. The logic here is simple: show advertising to those who are within a certain radius of your location.
A person walks past a shopping center. The screen at the entrance shows a promotion for the store they are walking by. No extra noise, a precise message at the right place.
For small businesses this can be a 500-meter radius around the venue. For chain retail — targeted configuration by city districts taking into account target audience density.
Geolocation pairs well with time-based targeting. In the morning — one advertisement for those commuting to work. In the evening — another for those returning home. One screen, two different messages, two different results.
Step 7. Measure the result
A media plan without analytics is a plan without feedback. You do not know what worked. And you build the next campaign blindly.
DOOH campaign analytics today makes it possible to track real metrics: number of impressions, contact frequency, audience reach by location. For indoor — also visitor behavior: how many people stopped near the screen, how the average ticket changed after content was updated.
Basic metrics to record:
OTS (Opportunity To See) — how many times the advertisement entered the field of view. **Reach** — how many different people saw the message. Frequency — how many times one person saw the advertisement. CPM — cost per thousand contacts.
Compare planned metrics with actual ones after each flight. If there are discrepancies — look for the reason. Perhaps the location turned out to be less trafficked than expected. Or the content did not match the audience of that place.
A good media plan is a living document. It is adjusted during the campaign, not only after.
Typical mistakes in media planning
The first — launching a campaign without clear KPIs. If there are no specific figures, there is no way to evaluate the result.
The second — ignoring format specifics. Content for an outdoor screen and for indoor are different materials. One video for all occasions does not work.
The third — not budgeting for analytics. DOOH analytics seems like an unnecessary expense right up until the campaign produces no result and it is unclear why.
The fourth — creating a media plan once and never returning to it. The market changes, the audience changes, the season changes. The plan must adapt.
Conclusion
A media plan for Digital Signage and DOOH is not bureaucracy. It is a way to make every hryvnia of the advertising budget work toward a specific result.
Start with the goal. Define the audience and point of contact. Choose formats for the task. Plan content by slots. Measure the result and adjust.
Digital screens provide tools that did not exist in classic outdoor advertising: content flexibility, geolocation, real-time analytics. But all these tools only work when there is a clear plan. Without it, even the most expensive DOOH network is a costly screen with a video nobody remembers.
How often to review the media plan
A media plan is not a document signed for a year and forgotten. In DOOH and Digital Signage everything changes quickly: new locations appear, operators update their terms, the audience reacts to content differently than expected.
Minimum — a review after each flight. Ideally — every two weeks during an active campaign. Ask yourself: does the actual result match the planned one? If there is a gap somewhere — why?
Sometimes the problem is in the location. Sometimes in the content. Sometimes in the time slot. But it can only be found when there is something to compare against — meaning when a media plan exists at all.
Even the simplest plan is better than having none. And ensuring media plan execution for advertising campaign placement is only possible through a software solution that has advanced capabilities and integration with audience data analytics.