Universities and colleges are under growing pressure to demonstrate real progress on sustainability, not just commitments on paper. One of the most practical, visible levers is often hiding in plain sight: how you communicate across campus.
Shifting from static posters and bulletin boards to a coordinated digital signage network is a concrete way to cut waste, reduce carbon impact, and support broader environmental goals, all while improving the student and visitor experience.
Here are the steps your team can take to digitize your wayfinding, announcements and more.
1. Replace Print-Heavy Communication with Digital Networks
Traditional campus communication relies heavily on posters, flyers, banners, and temporary directional signs. These are resource-intensive to produce, labour-intensive to distribute, and almost impossible to track or measure.
A campus-wide interactive digital signage system centralizes communication into a managed network of displays. Instead of thousands of printed sheets each term, staff update a single content management platform and publish information instantly across buildings and faculties. Over time, this significantly reduces paper, ink, and transport-related emissions associated with printing and distribution.
2. Use Signage to Promote Sustainable Behaviours
Digital signage can do more than replace paper; it can actively influence sustainable behaviours.
Strategically placed screens in lobbies, dining halls, residence buildings, and student centres can highlight:
- Waste sorting and recycling guidance for that specific building
- Real-time transit updates to encourage public transportation
- “Turn off the lights/devices” reminders in labs and study spaces
- Water conservation prompts near refill stations and washrooms
Because content is dynamic, campaigns can be adjusted seasonally (e.g., heating and cooling reminders in winter/summer) or aligned with sustainability events such as Earth Week or Move-Out Waste Reduction initiatives.
3. Optimize Energy, Not Just Messaging
Modern commercial displays and media players can be configured with energy-saving profiles including automatic dimming, overnight shutdown schedules, and sensor-based activation in low-traffic areas. Central management means IT or facilities teams can set policies for the entire network instead of adjusting individual screens.
Combined with sustainable hardware choices and thoughtful placement, digital signage can deliver communication value with a controlled energy footprint, especially when compared to the ongoing environmental cost of high-volume printing and physical distribution.
4. Support Reporting and Sustainability Metrics
Are your teams being asked to show measurable progress? A well-implemented digital signage network can support this in two ways:
- Operational reporting – Estimating reductions in printed materials and associated CO₂ equivalents by shifting specific campaigns (e.g., orientation, exam schedules, event promos) to digital channels.
- Awareness and engagement metrics – Using content analytics and, where appropriate, interactive wayfinding to understand which messages are being used and where to focus future campaigns.
This turns signage into an accountable communications asset that can be referenced in sustainability reports and strategy updates.
5. Make Sustainability Visible in the Campus Experience
Finally, the way a campus looks and feels sends a clear message about institutional priorities. A network of well-designed, consistently branded digital displays that carry sustainability information, campaigns, and performance updates (e.g., energy-use dashboards, waste diversion progress) shows students, staff, donors, and partners that environmental responsibility is embedded in daily operations and not just in policy documents.
Get Your Campus Outfitted with Modern, Sustainable Digital Signage
For institutions planning to modernize communications and advance sustainability targets, digital signage is both a practical and highly visible step.
Speak to an expert at youRhere today to discuss a custom solution for your educational institution.