Billboards in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ

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Turn daily drivers into new customers with Hasbrouck Heights billboards that you control in just a few clicks. Blip connects you to 130 digital billboards near Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, letting you set any budget, schedule your ads, and watch results in real time.

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How much is a billboard in Hasbrouck Heights?

How much does a billboard cost near Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey? With Blip, you can advertise on Hasbrouck Heights billboards on any budget, because you choose a daily spend that Blip automatically maintains while your 7.5–10 second blips rotate on digital boards serving the Hasbrouck Heights area. You only pay per blip, so your total cost is simply the sum of the individual ad plays you receive, based on your preferred times, locations, and real-time advertiser demand for billboards near Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey. How much is a billboard near Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey? With flexible budget controls you can raise, lower, or pause your spend at any moment, making it easy to test, refine, and scale your campaign as you go—so you get exactly the exposure you want, at the price that works for you. Here are average costs of billboards and their results:
$20 Daily Budget
133
Blips/Day
$50 Daily Budget
333
Blips/Day
$100 Daily Budget
667
Blips/Day

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Hasbrouck Heights Billboard Advertising Guide

The Hasbrouck Heights area sits at the heart of one of the most densely traveled commuter corridors in the United States. With 130 digital billboards near Hasbrouck Heights within 10 miles—stretching through nearby Lodi, Maywood Ridgefield, Secaucus, North Bergen, Weehawken Kearny, Jersey City

Infographic showing key insights and demographics for New Jersey, Hasbrouck Heights

Understanding the Hasbrouck Heights Area Market

Hasbrouck Heights is a small borough with an outsized advertising footprint due to its location and surrounding infrastructure, which makes Hasbrouck Heights billboards especially efficient for reaching both local and regional audiences.

  • Population: Hasbrouck Heights has about 12,000–12,200 residents, while Bergen County as a whole has roughly 950,000–960,000 residents based on county-level data and recent planning documents from Bergen County. Directly surrounding Hasbrouck Heights, nearby communities add substantial volume: Lodi (about 25,000 residents), Hackensack Maywood Teterboro (home to the airport but fewer than 100 residents).
  • Income: Bergen County consistently ranks among New Jersey’s most affluent counties. County and state economic reports place median household income for Bergen County in the $115,000–$125,000 range, with many nearby municipalities—such as Hasbrouck Heights, Maywood, and surrounding suburban boroughs—regularly reporting median household incomes above $90,000–110,000. This supports strong discretionary spending on dining, retail, home services, elective healthcare, and financial products, all of which respond well to targeted billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights.
  • Density: New Jersey has over 9.2 million residents in just over 8,700 square miles, and Bergen and Hudson Counties are among its most densely populated areas. Hudson County Jersey City North Bergen), while Bergen County’s inner ring of suburbs—including Hackensack Lodi, and nearby towns—often exceeds 6,000–9,000 residents per square mile. That density translates into very high impressions per billboard in a compact geography.
  • Economic base: Bergen County supports more than 450,000 jobs according to county economic development materials, across sectors such as healthcare (Hackensack University Medical Center, Holy Name), retail (Paramus and Route 17 corridor), logistics, and professional services. Hudson County adds well over 200,000 jobs, heavily concentrated in Jersey City Secaucus, and North Bergen. This creates strong two-way commuter flows past your billboards.

Local government and news resources that help define the area’s profile include the Borough of Hasbrouck Heights Bergen County, Hudson County NorthJersey.com and NJ.com.

Because our digital billboards are placed in nearby cities like Lodi (1 mile away), Hackensack Secaucus (6.1 miles), we can capture not only Hasbrouck Heights residents but also the broader consumer flows that surround them—commuters, shoppers, and visitors traveling to and from Manhattan, the Meadowlands Sports Complex American Dream complex. This cluster of placements effectively acts as a billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights network, extending your reach far beyond borough boundaries.

Key Traffic Corridors Serving the Hasbrouck Heights Area

The Hasbrouck Heights area is effectively wrapped by major highways and arterials, which is where many of our 130 digital billboards are positioned in nearby towns. New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) data and local transportation plans routinely show six-figure daily volumes on these corridors, making them prime locations for Hasbrouck Heights billboards and related inventory in adjacent municipalities.

  • Route 17 corridor (Lodi / Hasbrouck Heights area):
    NJDOT traffic counts in central Bergen County commonly show 90,000–120,000 vehicles per day on key segments of Route 17 between Lodi, Hasbrouck Heights, and Paramus. This route feeds major retail destinations, including several regional malls that together attract millions of shopping visits annually. It is a primary artery for local commuting, shopping, and access to Teterboro Airport and the Meadowlands, and a critical spine for high-impact billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights.
  • I-80 near Hackensack / Lodi:
    I-80 is a major east–west interstate feeding directly toward the George Washington Bridge and New York City. Segments in eastern Bergen County typically exceed 150,000 vehicles per day, with some sections approaching 170,000 daily vehicles in peak-count locations according to NJDOT summaries. A large share of these drivers are repeat commuters, giving advertisers multiple weekly exposures when they invest in billboard rental near Hasbrouck Heights and its neighboring interchanges.
  • Route 46 & Route 3 (through Lodi, Little Falls, Woodland Park, and toward Secaucus):
    Route 3, a primary approach to the Lincoln Tunnel, regularly carries more than 100,000 vehicles per day near Secaucus, while Route 46 supports 70,000–90,000 vehicles per day on many segments. These parallel routes move both local traffic and long-distance commuters and event-goers heading to the Meadowlands Sports Complex.
  • NJ Turnpike / I-95 & Western Spur near Secaucus, Kearny, North Bergen:
    NJDOT has reported volumes on these sections typically in the 150,000–170,000 vehicles per day range. Some interchanges around the Secaucus Junction area and the approaches to the Lincoln Tunnel and George Washington Bridge are among the most heavily traveled in New Jersey.
  • Local urban corridors in Hackensack, Ridgefield, North Bergen, and Jersey City:
    These cities serve as retail, employment, and residential hubs. Hackensack Jersey City North Bergen and Secaucus host extensive warehousing, retail, and office parks that generate heavy truck and commuter traffic throughout the day.

For detailed roadway and volume information, advertisers can reference NJDOT’s traffic resources, local transportation planning through Bergen County, Hudson County Hackensack North Bergen.

For your campaigns, this means:

  • Short drive distances and intense traffic density make frequency easy to build. With 100,000+ vehicles per day on multiple corridors, a single commuter can easily pass the same board 10 times per week.
  • Strategic selection of boards along Route 17, I-80, Route 3, and Turnpike corridors can ensure repeated exposures to Hasbrouck Heights area commuters at relatively low spend using Blip’s flexible bidding.

Commuter Patterns and Best Times to Run Your Blips

The Hasbrouck Heights area is heavily commuter‑oriented. A substantial share of residents work in Manhattan, Jersey City Hackensack Secaucus office parks attract workers from across the region.

  • Mode of travel: State labor and transportation reports show that roughly 70–75% of New Jersey workers drive alone to work, with another 7–10% carpooling. In car‑oriented suburban counties like Bergen, drive‑alone rates are often at the higher end of that range. That means roughly 3 out of every 4 workers are potential billboard viewers during their daily commute.
  • Transit commuters: NJ Transit reports carrying hundreds of thousands of weekday riders system‑wide, and the nearby NJ Transit rail and bus network—especially the Pascack Valley Line, Bergen County Line, Main Line, and bus routes feeding the Port Authority Bus Terminal—serves tens of thousands of daily trips through and around Hasbrouck Heights, Hackensack Lodi, and Secaucus. These riders also generate vehicle traffic to and from park‑and‑ride lots and stations.
  • Morning peak: Typically 6:30–9:30 a.m., as traffic funnels toward Manhattan (via Route 3 and the Lincoln Tunnel, or I‑80/Route 4 toward the George Washington Bridge) and toward employment centers in Hackensack, Secaucus, the Meadowlands, and Jersey City. On many key segments, more than 50% of daily volume occurs in the combined morning and evening peaks.
  • Evening peak: Generally 4:30–7:30 p.m., with strong volumes westbound and northbound back through Lodi, Maywood
  • Weekend patterns:
    Weekend traffic remains robust; state tourism and retail studies indicate that key shopping corridors in Bergen County see heavy Saturday and Sunday volumes, particularly between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. Traffic is especially strong toward:
    • The Meadowlands area, including MetLife Stadium American Dream complex, where large events can draw 60,000–80,000 attendees for NFL games and major concerts and millions of visits per year for retail and entertainment.
    • Shopping corridors in Paramus/Bergen County and urban retail corridors in Hackensack Ridgefield, North Bergen, and Jersey City

With Blip, we can schedule campaigns to appear only during the most valuable times of day for your audience:

  • B2B / professional services:
    Concentrate blips from 6–9 a.m. and 4–7 p.m. on weekdays near Hackensack, Secaucus, and Jersey City boards to hit office commuters, when commuter traffic may reach 2–3 times off‑peak hourly volumes.
  • Restaurants and QSRs serving the Hasbrouck Heights area:
    • Morning coffee and breakfast: 6–9 a.m. on Route 17 and Route 46 when inbound traffic is strongest.
    • Lunch specials: 11 a.m.–2 p.m., particularly on high‑density corridors toward Hackensack and local business parks, when many corridors experience a mini‑peak of midday traffic.
    • Dinner and delivery: 4–9 p.m., focusing on boards drivers see as they return to the Hasbrouck Heights area.
  • Retail and events:
    • Increase bids on Fridays from 3–8 p.m. and weekends 10 a.m.–6 p.m. along routes leading from urban centers (Jersey City, North Bergen) back toward Bergen County, when weekend shopping and event traffic is heaviest.

Because Blip allows us to set dayparting and budget caps, we can shift spend to these high‑value windows without paying for low‑impact overnight impressions unless they fit your brand (e.g., late‑night food, streaming services).

Geographic Strategy: Where to Show Up to Reach the Hasbrouck Heights Area

Think about the Hasbrouck Heights area as a hub, then use surrounding cities strategically for your billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights:

  • Lodi (1.0 mile) & Maywood (2.1 miles):
    These are your closest boards to Hasbrouck Heights residents. Together they add roughly 35,000 local residents on top of Hasbrouck Heights’ 12,000+ residents. Use them for:
    • Local businesses (restaurants, gyms, salons, auto services, local medical practices).
    • Neighborhood‑focused calls‑to‑action (“5 minutes up the road,” “Exit off Route 17,” etc.).
    • High‑frequency exposures—local residents can easily see your message 10–20 times per week on their regular errands and commutes.
  • Hackensack (2.7 miles):
    As the Bergen County seat and a major employment, healthcare, and retail hub, Hackensack boards help us:
    • Reach Hasbrouck Heights residents who work or shop there. Hackensack’s daytime population exceeds its resident base due to large employers such as Hackensack University Medical Center, which alone employs thousands of workers.
    • Capture city residents who frequently travel through the Hasbrouck Heights area for dining, schools, and services.
  • Bogota & Ridgefield (within 3.5 miles):
    These nearby municipalities, Bogota Ridgefield, each with several thousand residents, intercept north–south flows crossing the Hackensack River and moving between Hudson and Bergen Counties via routes like Route 1&9 and Route 46.
  • Secaucus & North Bergen (6.1–6.2 miles) and Weehawken (7.3 miles):
    These locations sit directly on routes to and from the Lincoln Tunnel and Manhattan.
    • Secaucus, with roughly 20,000 residents but far more daytime workers due to office parks and the Secaucus Junction rail hub, generates significant two‑way commuter traffic.
    • North Bergen, with more than 60,000 residents and dense residential neighborhoods, adds a steady local audience.
      They’re ideal for:
    • Targeting Hasbrouck Heights area residents who commute to NYC.
    • Promoting brands that want dual exposure to North Jersey and Manhattan‑bound traffic.
  • Jersey City (9.2 miles):
    With over 280,000 residents and a rapidly growing waterfront business district, Jersey City PATH and NJ Transit, mean strong daily movement in and out of the city along the same Turnpike and Route 1&9 corridors where your boards sit.
  • Woodland Park, Little Falls, Totowa (7.0–8.4 miles):
    These western suburbs— Woodland Park Little Falls, and Totowa—collectively add tens of thousands of residents and sit along I‑80 and Route 46. Boards here are great for drawing customers from western suburbs into Hasbrouck Heights area businesses or reinforcing regional brands (healthcare, higher ed, auto dealers, home services) that serve multiple counties.

With 130 nearby digital boards, we can build layered coverage:

  • A tight ring of boards around Lodi, Maywood, and Hackensack for high‑frequency local branding within the 12,000–50,000‑resident catchment immediately around Hasbrouck Heights.
  • An outer ring in Secaucus, North Bergen, Weehawken, and Jersey City to capture commuters, visitors, and urban residents before they enter or after they leave the Hasbrouck Heights area.

This layered approach means you don’t need every sign physically within the borough limits; well‑placed billboards near Hasbrouck Heights in adjacent towns can still dominate the local mindshare.

Who You Can Reach: Audience Segments in the Hasbrouck Heights Area

The Hasbrouck Heights area and surrounding Bergen/Hudson communities give advertisers a rich mix of audiences:

  • Affluent suburban families and professionals:
    • Many nearby boroughs report homeownership rates above 55–65%, with some smaller communities exceeding 70%.
    • Median household incomes commonly above $100,000 in many Bergen County suburbs, with some communities surpassing $130,000–$150,000.
    • These households typically spend heavily on home improvement, financial services, healthcare, private education, and premium retail, often allocating 30–40% of budgets to housing and another 10–15% to transportation and vehicle costs—prime categories for billboard advertising.
  • Commuters to Manhattan, Jersey City, and local hubs:
    • Tens of thousands of daily commuters pass through key junctions such as Route 3 at Secaucus, I‑80 by Hackensack, and the Turnpike Western Spur. In some sections, daily commuter volumes rival those of major national corridors like I‑95 around other major metros.
    • Thousands of daily commuters use NJ Transit (via nearby rail and bus connections; see NJ Transit) and—crucially for billboards—private vehicles along I‑80, Route 17, Route 3, and the Turnpike.
    • Strong fit for brands offering services timed to commutes: coffee, food, streaming, podcasts, financial apps, auto repair, dealerships, and insurance.
  • Local small business shoppers:
    • The borough’s downtown and surrounding commercial strips attract a hyper‑local audience that often lives within a 5–10‑minute drive. In smaller Bergen County boroughs, local business districts can draw daily visit rates where 50–70% of residents shop locally at least once per week.
    • Great for local restaurants, independent retailers, gyms, salons, dog walkers, contractors, and medical/dental practices.
  • Event‑goers and regional visitors:
    • The broader Meadowlands region, including MetLife Stadium American Dream, draws millions of visitors annually through nearby highways. MetLife Stadium alone can host 200+ event days per year including NFL games, international soccer matches, and concerts, while American Dream’s retail, indoor ski slope, and theme/water parks attract a steady year‑round flow.
    • During major events, traffic volumes on Route 3, the Turnpike, and adjacent arterials can spike significantly—often creating multi‑hour windows of slow‑moving vehicles.
    • Ideal for hotels, attractions, casinos, nightlife, and seasonal events, as well as brands seeking regional exposure across New Jersey and New York visitors.

By aligning your creative and scheduling with these segments, we can tailor a Blip strategy that drives measurable local results through Hasbrouck Heights billboards and complementary placements nearby.

Creative Best Practices for the Hasbrouck Heights Area

Traffic is dense and often fast‑moving on the highways serving the Hasbrouck Heights area, so clarity and brevity are critical. We recommend:

1. Ultra‑clear, commuter‑friendly messaging

  • Use 6–8 words max on major highways (I‑80, Route 3, Turnpike) and 8–10 words on slower corridors; industry research suggests recall drops sharply once messages exceed 10–12 words.
  • Focus on one main idea and one action (“Exit at Lodi,” “Order tonight,” “Call now,” “Visit today”).
  • Assume 3–5 seconds viewing time on high‑speed routes and 6–10 seconds in congestion.

2. Local orientation cues
Residents in the Hasbrouck Heights area think in terms of exits, landmarks, and nearby towns:

  • “5 minutes from Route 17 in Hasbrouck Heights area”
  • “Next to Teterboro Airport” (if accurate for your location)
  • “Off Exit 66 on I‑80” or similar, where appropriate
  • References to major nearby destinations—such as American Dream, MetLife Stadium, or Hackensack University Medical Center—can help anchor your location.

3. Design for congestion
North Jersey roads are often slow and bumper‑to‑bumper during rush hour—this is an opportunity:

  • Use large, high‑contrast fonts (white/yellow on dark; black/navy on light).
  • Feature bold icons or photos that read clearly from 500–800 feet.
  • Avoid script fonts or thin text that disappears on bright days, especially given glare on elevated east–west corridors like Route 3.

4. Tailor by nearby city
Because Blip allows us to upload multiple creatives and target different boards, we can localize messaging:

  • On boards near Lodi/Maywood: “Local to Hasbrouck Heights area? Try us tonight.”
  • Near Secaucus or North Bergen: “Commuting back to Hasbrouck Heights area? Pick up dinner on the way.”
  • In Jersey City: “Bergen County homes from $X — 20 minutes away” for real estate and homebuilders, emphasizing quick access via the Turnpike and Route 3.

5. Use time‑sensitive or dynamic messaging
Digital boards near the Hasbrouck Heights area are perfect for:

  • “Tonight only,” “This weekend,” and countdown‑style promos keyed to major events at MetLife Stadium or seasonal shopping peaks.
  • Weather‑related messaging, especially during winter storms or summer heat (HVAC, auto repair, indoor attractions).
  • Sports/event tie‑ins for MetLife Stadium, local college games, or high school rivalries (for example, referencing Hasbrouck Heights High School’s Aviators teams).

Leveraging Seasonality in the Hasbrouck Heights Area

Local behavior shifts with the season, and we can adjust your Blip schedules and bids accordingly.

Winter (Dec–Feb):

  • Holiday shopping: Regional retail corridors in Bergen County—especially the Route 17 and Paramus mall area—see some of their highest foot traffic and sales in November–December, often accounting for 20–30% of annual retail revenue for some categories.
  • Traffic can slow significantly during snow and ice events, extending billboard viewing time; average commute times on key corridors can increase by 20–40% in poor weather.
  • Strong opportunities for retail, e‑commerce, heating/oil services, auto maintenance, and healthcare (urgent care, flu shots).
  • Focus boards near Hackensack, Secaucus, and Jersey City for commuter‑ and shopping‑related messaging.

Spring (Mar–May):

  • Home improvement season: National and regional data show home services and garden spending can rise 15–25% above winter levels during spring. Contractors, landscapers, roofers, HVAC, and garden centers can win big.
  • Graduation season and school‑related services (tutors, test prep, summer camps) ramp up in April–June.
  • More daylight means better visibility into early evening; sunset in late spring can be close to 8 p.m., so extending campaigns through 8–9 p.m. captures post‑work activity.

Summer (Jun–Aug):

  • Travel to the Shore, the Meadowlands area, and outdoor dining increases; weekend traffic to coastal and recreational destinations rises sharply, and evening restaurant and entertainment spend typically peaks.
  • Great period for restaurants, bars, events, attractions, auto services (AC repair, road‑trip prep), and family entertainment.
  • Target boards in Secaucus, North Bergen, and Jersey City for outbound weekend travelers heading west and south, and boards near Lodi, Maywood, and Hackensack for residents sticking closer to home.

Fall (Sep–Nov):

  • Back‑to‑school, sports, and early holiday shopping; families typically shift spending toward apparel, electronics, and educational services.
  • Perfect for education services, local retail, healthcare checkups, and big‑ticket items (cars, appliances, home improvements) before winter.
  • Commuter volumes typically normalize after summer vacations; retime your campaigns to classic rush‑hour windows, taking advantage of stable weekday patterns.

Budgeting, Bidding, and Using Blip’s Flexibility Near Hasbrouck Heights

The advantage of 130 digital billboards near the Hasbrouck Heights area is that we can scale your presence flexibly instead of committing to a single board for months. This makes digital billboard rental near Hasbrouck Heights accessible for both small and large advertisers.

Starting points:

  • Local small business:
    Many small businesses see meaningful impact starting at $10–$25 per day, focused on 5–10 select boards near Lodi, Maywood, and Hackensack during peak commute and evening hours. At typical CPMs for digital out‑of‑home, this may translate into several thousand daily impressions in a tightly defined trade area, essentially functioning as a low‑risk test of billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights.
  • Regional brands:
    $50–$150 per day can support a multi‑city footprint (e.g., Lodi, Hackensack, Secaucus, North Bergen, Jersey City) with strong weekly frequency, often reaching tens of thousands of unique drivers per week and delivering total weekly impressions well into the six‑figure range.
  • Seasonal pushes:
    For key moments (holiday sales, grand openings, big game days at MetLife Stadium), temporarily increase your daily cap 2–3x for 1–2 weeks to dominate prime‑time slots and capture surging event‑related traffic.

Bidding strategy:

  • Start with competitive but moderate bids and monitor how many “blips” (ad plays) you receive on each board. On high‑demand corridors like Route 3 and the Turnpike, you may need higher bids to secure preferred dayparts.
    • Increase bids on your top‑performing boards—often those on I‑80 near Hackensack, Route 17 near Lodi, and Turnpike corridors near Secaucus and North Bergen.
  • Reduce or pause boards that don’t align with your customers’ likely paths (for example, westernmost boards if your audience is primarily eastbound commuters).

Because you only pay for the blips you receive, you can test multiple nearby towns without long‑term risk and then concentrate budget where impressions and conversions are strongest. This flexibility is a major advantage compared with traditional static billboard rental near Hasbrouck Heights that might lock you into one face for months.

Testing, Measuring, and Optimizing Campaigns in This Market

To get the most from your Hasbrouck Heights area campaign, treat it as a continuous experiment:

1. A/B test creative by corridor

  • Version A: “Hasbrouck Heights area” + distance/exit details.
  • Version B: Stronger value proposition (“$X off today,” “Free delivery,” “Walk‑ins welcome”).
  • Run each on a subset of boards (e.g., Lodi + Maywood vs. Hackensack + Secaucus) and compare lift in:
    • Direct website visits (watch for spikes after your scheduled times).
    • Promo code redemptions or specific URL visits.
    • Call volume or form fills.

2. Track time‑of‑day impact

  • Rotate dayparts: test morning‑only for 7 days, then evening‑only for 7 days, then both.
  • Align with your POS or web analytics to see when conversions are highest; in many service businesses, 60–70% of inquiries may cluster in late afternoon and early evening, which can guide your schedule.

3. Use simple measurement tools

  • Unique short URLs (e.g., brand.com/HH).
  • Billboard‑only promo codes.
  • “Mention this ad in the Hasbrouck Heights area and get…” style offers to attribute in‑store response.

4. Refine your board mix
As data comes in, we can:

  • Concentrate spend on boards and times that align with your customers’ real‑world behavior (e.g., boards in Lodi and Hackensack during weekday evenings or Secaucus and North Bergen during morning inbound commutes).
  • Test occasionally on new boards (e.g., Jersey City or Kearny) to reach fresh audiences without abandoning your core.

Compliance, Local Nuances, and Community Fit

Outdoor advertising near the Hasbrouck Heights area is shaped by local municipal and county regulations, as well as state rules administered through NJDOT. While we handle the technical compliance for digital billboard operations, advertisers can strengthen their community connection by:

  • Avoiding cluttered or overly aggressive messaging, especially near residential neighborhoods and school zones.
  • Using community‑friendly themes:
    • Local school support (“Good luck Aviators!” if supporting Hasbrouck Heights High School).
    • Holiday greetings for major regional observances.
    • Civic‑minded messages during emergencies (storms, public health reminders), consistent with local guidance and information shared through the Borough of Hasbrouck Heights Bergen County, and Hudson County

Staying tuned to local news via outlets like NorthJersey.com, NJ.com, and municipal calendars from towns such as Hasbrouck Heights Hackensack Secaucus can also help you time campaigns around community events, road work, and major happenings that impact traffic flows and therefore the effectiveness of your Hasbrouck Heights billboards.

Example Campaign Approaches for the Hasbrouck Heights Area

To illustrate how you might structure a Blip campaign, here are a few scenarios:

1. Local Restaurant in the Hasbrouck Heights Area

  • Goal: Increase weekday dinner and weekend traffic.
  • Boards: Focus on Lodi, Maywood, and Hackensack; optional coverage in Secaucus for commuters returning from Jersey City and Manhattan.
  • Times:
    • Weekdays: 4–9 p.m. (when a large share of the 70–75% of drive‑alone commuters are heading home).
    • Weekends: 11 a.m.–9 p.m. to capture both lunch and dinner occasions.
  • Creative:
    • “Dinner near Hasbrouck Heights area – 5 min from Route 17.”
    • High‑impact food photography, clear “Exit at [X]” or “On [Street Name] in Hasbrouck Heights area.”
  • Budget: $15–$30/day to start, scaled up on Fridays and Saturdays when restaurant traffic can be 20–40% higher than mid‑week. Even at this level, consistent billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights can significantly raise local awareness.

2. Regional Healthcare Provider

  • Goal: Promote urgent care and specialty services to Bergen/Hudson residents.
  • Boards: Hackensack, Lodi, Ridgefield, Secaucus, North Bergen, Jersey City.
  • Times:
    • Urgent care: 7 a.m.–10 p.m. to cover before‑work, mid‑day, and evening visits.
    • Specialist services: commute hours, plus lunchtime (11 a.m.–2 p.m.).
  • Creative:
    • “Urgent Care – 10 minutes from Hasbrouck Heights area.”
    • “Same‑day appointments in Hackensack & Secaucus.”
  • Budget: $50–$100/day with emphasis on weekday coverage; during flu peaks or seasonal surges, consider doubling spend for 2–4 weeks.

3. Real Estate or Home Services Targeting Hasbrouck Heights Area Homeowners

  • Goal: Acquire leads for moves, renovations, or home maintenance.
  • Boards: Lodi, Maywood, Hackensack, Little Falls, Totowa.
  • Times: Early morning and evening commute plus weekend mid‑days, when homeowners are more likely to plan projects and browse listings.
  • Creative:
    • “Thinking of selling in Hasbrouck Heights area? Get your free home valuation.”
    • “Roofing & siding for Bergen County homeowners – Call today.”
  • Budget: $20–$60/day; ramp up during spring and fall, when real estate activity and home improvement spending are typically 10–30% higher than winter levels.

By combining the dense traffic corridors, high‑income suburban base, and proximity to powerful employment and retail hubs, digital billboards near the Hasbrouck Heights area can drive both local and regional impact. With Blip’s flexible budgeting, precise board selection, and time‑of‑day controls, we can tailor a campaign that aligns tightly with how people in and around Hasbrouck Heights actually move, commute, and spend each day—and help you get more from every dollar you allocate to billboard advertising near Hasbrouck Heights.

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