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Advertising Nursery Plants and Trees in Newspapers
by Pat Malcolm

Published on this site: September 19th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Classified ads and display ads are not used much anymore to advertise
nursery plants in newspapers, although 15 to 20 years ago, plant ads were
commonly seen in newsprint publications and farm magazines. Several reasons
are responsible for the nursery plant businesses abandoning this form
of media advertising. The main reason has been the emergence of other
competitive, lower priced media forms, the most significant being the
Internet, followed by free advertising offers in a regional area, all-ad
papers containing only local classified ads. The advertising costs are
sponsored by full page car or real estate advertisers on the front page
and the back page covers. These Internet and the free ad papers will be
discussed more fully later in this article.
Twenty years ago the nursery operators advertised commonly listed shrubs,
trees, perennials and annuals in classified ads that were placed at the
back pages of the paper. Certain plants were advertised that could be
grown to reach a marketable size for sale by the nursery growers. For
instance in the spring; annuals, perennials, flowering trees and shrubs began to bud and flower,
and the nursery growers would list plants like petunia, azalea bushes,
flowering redbud trees and crape myrtle shrubs for sale, often with a
posted low-sale prices on each plant available. During the summer season
various shrubs were grown and containerized for sale, along with fruiting grapevine plants
or blueberry bushes loaded with highly colored, ready to eat berries or
grape clusters. Lists of shrubs such as fast growing holly, juniper, boxwood
or ligustrum bushes were priced for quick sale to be used as privacy hedges
for landscape borders. During the fall chrysanthemums and pansy plants
were available to buy for fall color and buyers were encouraged to plant nut
trees, fruit trees and berry plants, while trees were in the inactive
dormant state during fall and winter for best results. Larger nurseries
often used larger display ads with a photo of a featured plant image,
followed by a list of plants, trees or shrubs for sale.
These classified and display ads began to disappear from newspapers with
the appearance in the 1990s of regional area papers offering monotonous
pages of classified free-ads, that included backyard, mom and pop sellers
who grew a few easily rooted plants to advertise at below cost prices
to compete with licensed nursery growers. Free classified ads were also
offered to local, private, used car sellers and for home flea market items.
The regional, free classified ads were sponsored by full pages ads from
automobile dealerships and real estate companies, because they were willing
to pay for a large local circulation exposure potential. Stacks of these
printed papers were left to distribute in key locations for local circulation
and later were dropped off at home driveways or sent out by bulk mail
to post office box holders. For several years these papers boomed in circulation
and greatly damaged the circulation advertising markets of local newspapers.
After several years the financial sponsors of the free, classified, ad
papers began to drop out, mainly, because the automobile dealerships began
to realize that the free, used-car, local ads in the papers were competing
with their own potential sales, and most of those free papers have now gone out of business in the year, 2006.
Newspapers were able to recover much of their lost revenue that resulted
from the advertising of several types of free papers to be replaced with
the advertisements that began with the advent of the box stores. Box stores
are large chains of merchandising giants such as Walmart, Lowe's, Home
Depot and K-mart...........They are called box stores, because most of their buildings
are shaped like huge boxes. Most of these stores carry extensive lines
of hardware, school supplies, building materials, plant nursery and many
other items. These stores often hire newspaper companies to print a distinctive publication,
a sales paper that resembles an over-sized mail order catalog with color
photos of various featured product offerings. These publications are distributed
by the local newspaper circulation departments, as an additional enclosure
or supplement to be found as a separate advertising unit inside the newspaper.
Often the box store publications will be printed in color on high quality
newsprint, appearing better in quality than the newspaper itself. Most
of these box store advertising papers are printed and inserted into the
Sunday Edition (Highest Circulation), although they may appear at anytime on any day.
Nursery plants often cover the entire front page of these papers in the
spring with interesting 4 color photos of annuals, to draw customers in
to buy shrubs, perennials or shade trees offered for sale. Sometimes fruit
trees, berry plants or grapevines will be featured, full of fruit to entice a shopper
to drive over to the store to buy on impulse, a plant on sale. During
the Christmas Season lighted Christmas trees are photographed for sale
with gifts packages placed underneath the entire tree. Many store items
are shown unpackaged, as suggested gifts that a shopper can buy. Potted mums or poinsettia color
photos are scattered throughout the box store paper. The nursery plant
advertising campaigns in the box store papers have decreased over the
years, yielding ad space for the higher priced TV's, appliances and many
other more expensive products than plants. The box store publications
have become more sophisticated each year moving far ahead in printed quality,
surpassing the newspaper pages that surround it.
Many newspapers are facing a crisis in circulation drop, due to televising
advertising placement and the Internet, pay-per-click advertising. These
box stores are wealthy enough to open their own publishing printing presses,
and when the decision is made to change their distribution patterns, once
an in-house mailing list has been developed from credit card sales and
newspaper referrals from the past. It can be expected that the box stores will eventually
quit the newspaper publishers to independently mail out their own printed
papers using bulk mail services at the U.S. post offices. This separation
of the box stores with their substantial financial support to the newspapers
will withdraw extensive monetized resources away from the struggling newspaper
circulation. Newspapers may end up on that same fateful path taken by
the pony express.
There is no question that the box stores have surged forward toward the
domination in the retail sales of nursery plants in the United States
as garden marketers of plants. Their success in cornering the sale of
annual and perennial plants has been benefited much by their sales papers
that were distributed by newspaper inserts. That success may continue for many years into the future,
or it may end this year. The brilliant ideas that worked for many years
past, may fail in 2006. No industry, business or individual is secure
or invincible in a fast changing economy, and all matters of business
are vulnerable to uncontrollable world events that may threaten to unfold
before us tomorrow.
Even a subtle appearance of fungus or bacteria can cause a quick death
to plants, or infestations may cause a "stop sale" or quarantine
of plant material imposed by agricultural inspectors. The imposition of
a quarantine of plant material by USDA officials can not only disqualify
current plant sales, but rumors of such an action can influence plant buyers to avoid buying from
a nursery for extended months or years because of a notice of quarantine.
No gardener wants to buy plants from a diseased nursery inventory. The
same "stop sale" quarantine notice can result from an insect
infestation or the presence of a noxious weed in a store stocked with
shade trees, fruit trees, grapevines or berry plants. The risk taken by box stores in handling live,
perishable plants in quite different from selling non-perishable hammers,
nails or house paint, that last incorruptibly for years; requiring no
maintenance such as plants need, like watering fertilizing, light and
oxygen exposure or free replacement of plants that may have been returned by customers as
dead plants. Can box stores continue to operate a nursery operation as
a profitable business on a long term basis?

Patrick A. Malcolm, owner of TyTy Nursery, has an M.S. degree in
Biochemistry and has owned and operated TyTy Nursery for over three decades.
http://www.tytyga.com


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