Nation and World
Tuesday July 22, 2008
Televisions at pumps boost sales at gas stations

MIAMI -- In the midst of a cruel summer for America's drivers, there's a diversion: TV at the gas station.

The Associated Press
Paloma Peralta looks at a TV monitor as she refuels her car at a gas station in Miami. The number of televisions atop gas pumps has skyrocketed since their introduction at a handful of stores in 2006.
The number of televisions atop gas pumps have skyrocketed since their introduction at a handful of stations in 2006. Now, three privately held companies have placed more than 20,000 screens at thousands of stations from the Massachusetts Pike to Southern California.

"We try to bring some fun to the pump," says Roy Reeves, vice president of sales and marketing for PumpTop TV, an Irvine, Calif., company that provides screens and content at nearly 600 stations nationwide.

Fun at the pump. When was the last time you heard someone say that?

The TVs are also bringing in added revenue for gas retailers, who have recently seen their margins shrink because of an increase in fuel load costs and credit card fees. When the owners advertise anything from candy bars to car washes on the TVs, they say in-store sales rise compared to other stations without the screens.

Gas Station TV says that in tracking its retailers' sales, stores with screens installed on pumps report selling 75 percent more car washes and 69 percent more snacks if those items are advertised. The other two pump TV companies report similar sales increases.

"I actually have several customers a day saying, 'Hey, I saw your ad on TV as I was pumping gas,' " said David Yegenian, who has eight screens at his Tustin, Calif., service station.

"In this difficult time, we have to make ends meet however possible."

TV programming at the pumps varies by location and provider. PumpTop TV, for instance, provides real-time traffic maps, local sports scores, headlines and weather. FuelCast carries trivia and NBC content. Gas Station TV broadcasts ABC programming and carried an American Idol-type search earlier this year for a host who will anchor some segments.

All offer heavy rotations of 15-second ads - oil companies are staple advertisers - and all pump "networks" say they will roll out more screens in new markets later this summer. None have released revenue figures, but all say they are growing.

These companies pay gas station owners "rent" in exchange for placing the flat screens above the pumps, and the retailers also can advertise specials or products inside the convenience store.

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