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Showing posts with label Truth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Truth. Show all posts

Friday, October 4, 2013

(WIZARD) The Snowy Truth Of Advertising

10-2-2013

Every employee has opinions about the advertising that represents their company. This is natural, I suppose, because those ads, by extension, represent the employee as well. And so they tell the boss what they think, adding, ?and all of our customers think that, too.?

But if the development of successful advertising were as instinctive as most people believe, a higher percentage of ads would be successful.

Most business owners trust their instincts and personal preferences in the creation of their advertising. Others empower a ?creative? family member, an ?artistic? employee, or, worse, a group of employees ?who studied advertising in college? to craft their messages and select the media that will move their businesses to the next level.

And the results of these advertising campaigns are nearly always disappointing.

Philip Stanhope addressed this situation when he said, ?Every young man thinks himself wise enough, just as every drunk man thinks himself sober enough.?

Joss Whedon, too, might easily have been talking about writing ad copy when he said, ?Remember to always be yourself. Unless you suck.?

But no one ever thinks they suck. No one considers their own company to be boring or their own product to be average. Each of us is from Lake Wobegon, ?where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average.?

We look in the mirror and assume that everyone sees what we see. And then we ?hold these truths to be selfevident? in our advertising.

But does anyone ever see us the way we see ourselves?

Most people have an opinion when it comes to advertising. And they feel certain they know what would work. But it?s only when you?re allowed to play with live ammunition ? real dollars ? that you begin to feel the slip of the ice beneath you and draw the sharp air of reality into your lungs.

The amateur believes an ad will be successful if it captures an aspect of the business that is unique and beautiful.

But every business is unique and beautiful, just like every snowflake in a snowbank.

When you have walked on that snow and slipped and fallen again and again and left the stain of your blood on the whiteness, you learn some hard truths that are not self-evident:

1. The world of advertising is noisier and more crowded than you ever dreamed possible.
2. Even though you are paying money to reach them, prospective customers are not required to give you their attention.
3. Until you win the customer?s attention, your message does not exist.
4. People turn their attention ? moment by moment ? to whatever is most interesting.
5. It is hard to make ads interesting.
6. The message contained in your ad must be relevant.
7. The message contained in your ad must also be credible.
8. True isn?t always credible. And credible isn?t always true. Competitors know this.
9. Ads soft enough not to repel anyone are also too weak to strongly attract anyone.
10. If you evaluate each ad by asking, ?Who might this offend?? you will never craft an ad sharp enough to pierce the clutter.
11. Every brand attracts a different set of core values in the hearts of its customers. The strategy that grew Apple computers into a worldwide brand won?t work for J.C. Penney. Just ask Ron Johnson.
12. The best ads contain entertainment, information, and hope.

The hardest part of my job as an ad man is telling my clients how to respond to people they care about when those people begin telling them how they should advertise.

You face the same problem, I know.

When you?re held accountable for real ad dollars, you spend your formative years experimenting with a lot of ideas that make perfect sense and absolutely should work.

They just don?t.

But every amateur thinks they will.

Roy H. Williams is president of Wizard of Ads Inc. E-mail: roy@wizardofads.com.

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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Entercom CEO David Field Doesn't Sugar Coat The Truth.

Field said Q3 doesn't look any better after reporting Entercom's net revenue declined 1% in Q2 to $104.7 million. In Q2 of 2010 Entercom reported $105.8 million but that was during a time when it looked like consumers and businesses were hopeful that the economy was on an upward trajectory. Now, all bets are off as the markets are rattled and consumers worry about a double dip recession brought on by Washington's inability to work out budgetary problems. Field said "conditions remain sluggish and Q3 is pacing down." Field began his comments with "we picked a beautiful day for a conference call," clearly a reference to the stock market drop of 634 points.

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Telling The Truth About Radio's Relationship with 18-34s

This is a series of challenges to the often illogical, sometimes mathematically impossible and largely unsubstantiated claims and positions put forward by Pandora and by bloggers or reporters on their behalf. The challenge today is directed most squarely the reporter who invented the thoughtless, entirely fact-free headline, ?18-34 Demo Deserts AM/FM For Pandora ?. This is a claim even the article to which it referred did not make. And, for the record, it's a claim Pandora has not made either. [The publication retracted the headline the following day, to its credit.]

Three different research companies, including the one that did the ratings for Pandora, have published studies this year showing that digital radio users consume MORE broadcast radio, NOT less.  Young people are staying with radio.  An analysis by Arbitron of the last 3 years for the ten markets selected by Pandora clearly shows that, from Q2 2009 to Q2 2011:
- The number of people 18-34 using broadcast radio has increased
- The percentage of 18-34s using broadcast radio has increased
- The amount of time per day 18-34s spent with broadcast radio has remained consistent
- 18-34s in these 10 markets alone spent over 110 billion hours listening to broadcast radio over the air in the past 12 months

Arbitron itself is publishing a report that includes that demographic and more, based on the actual actions of tens of thousands of panel participants in their PPM radio measurement system. We challenge anyone to prove that young people are ?deserting AM/FMs for Pandora.?  While you're searching for that non-existent information remember that what you can prove is that Pandora?s playlists are used along with, not in place of, broadcast radio.          


Respectfully,
Mary Beth
May Beth Garber
EVP/Radio Analysis and Insights
Katz Radio Group
Los Angeles

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