- 1University of Colorado, Fellow in Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences; Faculty Executive Director of Buckley Center for Sustainability Education, Professor in Environmental Studies, United States of America (boykoff@colorado.edu)
- 2University of Colorado, Professor in Department of Theater and Dance as well as Environmental Studies; Faculty Associate Director in Buckley Center for Sustainability Education
- 3University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, senior associate dean for academic and faculty affairs and a professor of advertising in the Hussman School of Journalism
Amid many communication strategies in 2025, creative advertising approaches are clearly powerful tools. Yet out-of-home (OOH) or outdoor media (OM) often receives little attention in advertising research, particularly when used in the context of climate change, sustainability and environmental issues. This research helps to bridge the gap with experimentation and analysis OOH or OM in the context of environmental messages by exploring how size, type (static versus mobile), placement, and content on advertisement engagement may shape engagement with climate change messages. We use data collected in a real-world field experiment (measured through QR codes) in 2022-2023, garnered through two waves of data collection using QR codes and clickthrough rates on mobile smartphones. We found that larger advertisements outperformed (in terms of engagement) smaller ones with the same message, that exterior bus advertisements garnered more engagement than interior advertisements, and static billboards were more engaging in terms of QR code scans than the transit or bus advertisements with the same messages. Furthermore, we found that general climate change advertisements and messaging gained more engagement than more specific sustainable fashion advertising messages that linked to climate change. Overall, we found that creative advertising through OOH/OM can be immensely powerful and effective in raising awareness and garnering engagement or even persuading people to take action within a wider context of advertising/PR work and climate science-policy processes and institutions facing influential carbon-based industry and climate change countermovement pressures. This experimental research has been designed and executed in order to help provide insights for ongoing campaigns for enhanced climate, environment and sustainability awareness and action. In the context of ongoing research to understand the utility of advertising – by carbon-based industry, by groups seeking to inspire greater pro-environmental behavior – our experimental work provides insights and implications for academics and practitioners who seek to shape and influence pro-climate awareness and behavioral action. Together, these dynamics shape ongoing challenges of communication, (mis/dis)information-sharing, education and literacy in contemporary society.
How to cite: Boykoff, M., Osnes-Stoedefalke, B., and Gangadharbatla, H.: How Advertising Matters: Media Strategies & Tranformative Change for Sustainable Development, World Biodiversity Forum 2026, Davos, Switzerland, 14–19 Jun 2026, WBF2026-243, https://doi.org/10.5194/wbf2026-243, 2026.