Google Search

eobot

Search This Blog

Sunday, August 25, 2013

(SALES) Radio Inspires, Internet Informs

8-21-2013

Your clients and prospects aren?t hearing much about radio these days. The trade publications they read and the industry association conferences they attend are all featuring shiny new-media "gurus," leaving the impression that traditional media are dead.

And frankly, the SEO (Search Engine Optimization) social and mobile media worlds are changing so rapidly, it?s impossible for anyone to really claim to be a "guru" and local advertisers are confused by all of the jargon.
These gurus would have you believe we?re experiencing a media revolution when, in reality, we?re experiencing a media evolution, where the Internet is simply electronic print, replacing everything from phone books to brochures, and from printed coupons to newspapers.

Radio account executives who understand that the marketing communications game has not changed, only the names of some of the players, are successfully converting previous print budgets into a broadcast and digital mix.
One of the tools our station clients are using to capture more 52-week radio campaigns is the ENS Media Marketing Funnel. Learning to articulate and present our Marketing Funnel helps advertisers to sort through the new media hype and to develop a strategy where radio fuels their digital marketing efforts to the exclusion of print.
The marketing funnel explains the process of how consumers move from unawareness at the top of the funnel, to awareness, and from recognizing a need to establishing a brand preference, and from purchase intent to purchase at the bottom of the funnel.

To understand the marketing communications funnel, we must first understand two underlying marketing communications principles:
1.) The roles of emotion and logic in consumer behavior.
2.) The unique compatible roles of intrusive media and passive media.

Emotions First
Consumers seldom understand their purchase behavior. They believe their purchases are logical, rational, and well thought out, but seldom is this the case.

In reality, consumers buy emotionally, from the heart, first and only justify their purchase decisions rationally and logically. In our Winning the New Media Economy advertiser seminars I explain it this way:

?I want a classic 1967 Mustang convertible for nostalgic or heartfelt reasons?.that?s the car the rich kids were driving around the high school, tunes turned up loud, spinning the tires and turning young girls? heads, when I had to drive our rusted-out farm truck to school.

"Of course, when I find my Mustang, I?m not going to tell my wife I want to spin the tires and turn young girls? heads. I?m going to rationalize my decision, search the Web, and declare the ragtop is ?an investment.' It?s a classic that can go nowhere but up in value!

I?ll buy the Mustang from my heart, but justify it with my head.?        

Intrusive Media First
Passive media are those that require you to consciously stop what you are doing and actively seek out before they can influence you. Passive media are primarily print, brochures, websites, and yellow pages. You must already have an awareness of, or have identified a need for, a product or service before you will take time to search for and absorb the passive media message. 

You won?t search the Web or yellow pages for a tire store if you don?t need tires, and you certainly won?t take time out of your busy day to read a tire ad if you don?t need tires.

Intrusive media, on the other hand, are those media which reach and influence consumers while they go about their daily activities, be it driving in their cars or watching TV. Only intrusive media, primarily radio and TV, can penetrate the consumer?s thoughts before they are in the market for a product and before they have entrenched opinions and brand preferences.

The passive media can only reach people who are ready to buy. In reality, however, you won?t be part of the passive media search, if you?re not in the funnel. It?s too late to create a trust or preference after consumers are ready to buy, but you need the passive media to justify and rationalize the consumer?s buying decision.

The Perfect Bundle: Radio Inspires, Internet Informs
Marketing influence begins at the top of the marketing communications funnel, moving consumers from unawareness to need recognition, then down to brand preference and purchase. Businesses that don?t capture consumers at the top end of the marketing funnel, cannot be one of the finalists considered at the purchase end of the funnel.

Consumers enter the top end of the funnel emotionally, and almost unknowingly, while they only search passive media when they are ready to buy; after intelligent marketers have already created an awareness and preference for their products.

Radio?s intrusiveness can influence consumers at both the entry of the funnel and at the purchase end of the funnel.  

In a perfect world, your advertisers do not want their prospects to search for what they sell online because that search reveals all of the competitors who sell the same thing. What they really want is for prospects to have such an awareness and preference for their business that they search for that businesses name rather than searching the category generically.

Radio account executives who become marketing communications experts can persuade their prospects about the strategic importance of radio, using this Marketing Funnel.

Wayne Ens is president of ENS Media Inc, www.wensmedia.com  producer of the SoundADvice radio e-marketing system and the Winning in the New Media Economy revenue development system. He can be reached at wayne@wensmedia.com

(8/22/2013 8:48:52 AM)
Re: "...your advertisers do not want their prospects to search for what they sell online because that search reveals all of the competitors who sell the same thing."

With these words you have encapsulated the radio industry's problem: We'll not serve what the consumer wants, but what we believe they should have.

Besides accountability, part of the "why" behind growing digital ad dollars is its offering options to consumer; such as showcasing a wide variety of product choice from little consumer effort. Failing to see this research/shopping-cycle change is but one reason why radio doesn't understand its stagnating revenue.

Intrusive media worked at a time when consumer media options were few. Impressions no longer carry that high of a value.

Where you are correct: "...SEO (Search Engine Optimization) social and mobile media worlds are changing so rapidly, it’s impossible for anyone to really claim to be a 'guru'..." However, that doesn't mean radio shouldn't increase knowledge in these disciplines - each are also causing radio problems.

(8/21/2013 8:58:13 AM)
This is important and well-articulated information, Wayne.
Unfortunately, the greatest majority of radio-folk and advertisers continue to treat radio as "newspaper-of-the-air" by attempting to present an overwhelming amount of information to an audience who has yet to be engaged (emotionally) by the product or the advertiser.

While the web pages of advertisers are, it could be argued, replacements for catalogues and print ads, they too are missing the same opportunity as we are.
The intenet, like radio, is an electronically delivered medium. As such the web is still contacting viewers/listeners at an emotional level first.
Indeed, they (web designers and advertisers) are missing the same opportunities to engage at an emotional level as we are.
Please avoid telling them as the web-crowd seem to be a lot more open to change than our gang. :)


Add a Comment | View All Comments Send This Story To A Friend


View the original article here