Sprint: Unlimited Love Billboard in Times Square

You are in Times Square and a billboard asks a simple question. What do you love. You tweet your answer with #EVOLOVE to @sprint, and the screen answers back with places in New York City where you can find it.

Sprint in the USA created an integrated advertising campaign for the launch of the HTC EVO 4G LTE phone on their network. To launch EVO in New York City they set up an interactive billboard in Times Square that encouraged visitors to tweet things they love with #EVOLOVE to @sprint. Then, with the help of local experts, the billboard re-tweeted locations of where these things of love could be discovered in New York City.

Why the mechanic works

The mechanism is a clean exchange. You give the brand a public signal. A tweet about something you love. The brand gives you an immediate, useful response. A location you can act on right now. That “reply with value” is what turns a hashtag prompt into participation.

Extractable takeaway: Interactive OOH works best when the public input reliably triggers a fast, specific reply that helps someone decide what to do next.

It also creates a visible social proof layer. The billboard is not only showing Sprint’s message. It is showing other people’s messages, which makes the campaign feel alive and current while you are standing there.

In consumer technology launches and telco marketing, a social-to-DOOH loop, where a social post immediately changes what the screen shows, turns a landmark screen into a real-time recommendation engine that people can influence from their own phones.

What Sprint is really buying

This is a launch tactic that behaves like service. It positions the EVO as a device you use to discover the city, not just a phone with specs. At the same time, it lets Sprint demonstrate “unlimited” as a lived experience. Always on, always connected, always responding in real time.

The real question is whether you can keep the reply layer fast, relevant, and brand-safe in public.

If you cannot operationalize that reliably, a simpler DOOH idea will outperform an “interactive” one that feels slow or generic.

Steal this reply-with-value billboard pattern

  • Make the input obvious. One hashtag. One handle. One sentence prompt.
  • Return something concrete. Maps, directions, a nearby place, a clear next action.
  • Curate the response layer. “Local expert” guidance beats generic automation for relevance and trust.
  • Design for the crowd and the clip. The street moment should be fun to watch. The video should still work without being there.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the Sprint #EVOLOVE Times Square billboard?

A digital billboard that invites people to tweet what they love with #EVOLOVE to @sprint, then responds by showing where in New York City they can find that thing.

Why connect Twitter to a billboard instead of running a normal DOOH spot?

Because participation becomes the content. The screen stays fresh, people feel seen, and the interaction creates a public spectacle that attracts more participants.

What is the “value exchange” in this campaign?

The user provides a public message and attention. The brand provides a timely, useful recommendation and makes the user visible on a high-profile screen.

What makes this different from simply displaying tweets on a screen?

The reply layer. The billboard does not only mirror tweets. It answers them with specific places and directions, which turns social chatter into utility.

What is the biggest execution risk?

If the responses feel slow, generic, or off-topic, people stop playing. The campaign only works when the replies feel genuinely relevant in the moment.

Norms Restaurants: Social Media Above-the-Line

A TV spot that treats social as the main stage

Here is a new TV spot promoting the NORMS Restaurants Facebook page. It does something different. The commercial is grounded in social media rather than simply being an add-on.

How it works: the channel is the creative, not the CTA

The mechanism is straightforward. Instead of telling you to “go to Facebook”, the spot behaves like social. It borrows the language, pacing, and cultural cues of the feed, then uses TV as the amplifier. By “social-native”, I mean it is structured like something you would actually scroll past in a feed. This works because viewers recognize that grammar instantly, so the follow action feels like continuing the same experience.

In US regional restaurant brands, social channels can function as a 24/7 extension of the dining room: service, deals, personality, and community in real time.

The real question is whether your mass media can behave like the channel you want people to adopt, rather than merely pointing at it.

Why it lands: the message and the operating model match

Just as social media never sleeps, NORMS Restaurants also never closes. They are open 24 hours a day. That alignment matters. The spot is not trying to look modern. It is connecting a true operational differentiator to a behaviour that is always on.

Extractable takeaway: When an “always-on” message is backed by something operationally true, the creative reads as utility instead of theatre.

The intent: make “follow us” feel like utility

The point is not only awareness. It is habit formation. If the brand is always open, then the social presence can be positioned as always available too, with updates that feel useful, timely, and worth checking. This is what it looks like to put social “above the line”, treating it as the primary experience and not a supporting channel. Here, “above the line” means the social presence is the main stage, while TV is used mainly to accelerate adoption. If you want social to matter, design mass media as an on-ramp to a repeatable social habit, not as a separate campaign.

Early results the brand shared at the time

This family owned business shared the following success within 10 days of the TV commercials:

  • Gained 1,000 fans on Facebook
  • Gained 150 followers on Twitter

Moves to put social above the line

  • Make the channel the idea. If you lead with social, the creative has to feel native to how social behaves.
  • Anchor the message in something operationally true. “Always on” lands when the business actually is.
  • Give people a reason to follow, not just a reason to notice. Utility beats slogans for repeat behaviour.
  • Measure fast, then iterate. If the goal is followers and engagement, build feedback loops early.

A few fast answers before you act

What is different about this NORMS TV spot?

It is built around social media as the core creative idea, not as a last-second add-on call-to-action.

What is the main mechanism that makes it work?

TV is used as the reach layer, while the creative language is intentionally social-native, so the handoff to Facebook and Twitter feels natural.

Why does the “social never sleeps” line fit NORMS?

Because NORMS is positioned as open 24 hours a day, so the always-on idea matches the operating model instead of feeling like marketing theatre.

What is the business goal behind grounding a TV spot in social?

To turn awareness into ongoing follow behaviour, so the brand gains a direct channel for repeat visits, offers, and relationship building.

What is the most transferable takeaway?

If you want social to sit above the line, treat it as the product experience, then use mass media only to accelerate adoption.