I did a poll on facbook, not too long ago, asking how many times a year had people either copied down a phone number or called a phone number off of an outdoor advertisement including vehicle graphics. Pretty much everyone responded never. The person that said they did use a phone number off of truck advertisement, only did it once and admitted that they would have prefer it if there were a web address instead.
Try for yourself, post your own poll and try to get non sign making folks to chime in. I bet you will get similar results.
I like the changes that you made btw.
No one will remember a phone number either. A web address is the best way to go...
I too have asked many about taking phone numbers off vehicles, almost all say no.
On more than one occasion, I've taken a picture of a sign with a phone number. I take pictures of things I want to remember all the time.
I would be hesitant to leave a phone number off a truck... Last week someone came in saying they got a phone call while sitting at a light from the car waiting behind him at the same light. What are the chances he would have made that sale if the number wasn't there?
Also, so many of our customers are contractors who don't have websites or facebook pages. As someone else mentioned, there are still plenty of people (young and old) who don't even use email.
I read something a long time ago that said "make it easy for people to contact you." So that is what we strive to do
I disagree with taking the number off the vehicle. People sit behind wrapped vehicles in traffic all the time. People walk by them in parking lots, etc. What's the harm in not having the phone number? Dan's got some pretty solid numbers from actual clients that get a lot of phone traffic from their vehicles with the phone numbers on them. I'll let him chime in on that, but why, from a marketing standpoint, would you not put the phone number for a business on their advertising? I know a lot of older people who aren't on Facebook, aren't into technology and if you put just a website and a logo on there, they'd not know how to contact you. To me, you'd be isolating your market to only tech savvy people which seems short sighted if your customers aren't all tech savvy.
This is actually an interesting point. One of my clients does have a phone number on the wraps we designed for them - a unique phone number that identifies the call as having originated from his truck (its the only place that phone number is ever used). So every call on that line they know is from someone calling having seen a truck.
In one year after rebranding them and redoing their truck design, they received an 865% increase in phone calls from their trucks versus year prior with old branding and wrap design. Perhaps the reason why many people say they never call a phone number from a truck wrap is that they can't read it or find one amidst the clutter?
I'm not quite ready to throw in the towel on phone numbers, but when I possible I assign higher priority to web than phone.
The entire design has too much symmetry and needs more flow. Contrast pertains to more than just color, but to textures as well as flow. The logo is what you would call an object with anti-flow because of it's geometric symmetry. You need a background that flows against it to make it pop more. The rays of light are boring and uninspired. They remind me of this...
http://saltandlighttv.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Sacre-Coeur.jpg
In a majority of Dan Antonelli's wrap designs he uses a flow/anti-flow relationship between the main focal points of the layout. You will notice that the logos, which are often confined to a geometric and symmetrical skeleton are balanced with a more organic icon, often times in the form of a mascot. This is why his wraps are so appealing and they all tend to follow this same formula. You're sunburst background would be better suited to a logo with a more organic feel, such as a whimsical script.
As much as agree with the above, as I'm still a new name floating around and the general dumb public are still asking dumb questions still I'd like to leave the shopping list on there...so maybe run the shopping list for 12 months then drop it when I redo the wrap.......I like it now but would lose the shopping list. Have a look at any big company's vehicle branding - they usually only have a logo.