Direct Response TV Production Notes – Testing Commercials for Impact

We’ve all seen them.  Commercials that have lovely music and probably win some lovely award. But did they sell?

I mean the ones where you don’t know what’s being advertised until the very end, if at all. Where there is no voice-over?

My suggestion for advertisers is to watch their commercials with the sound off. Then turn away and listen to them without watching them. Do they persuade you in both modes? Imagine the audience that leaves the room, but is in listening range. What do they hear? Would you buy?  And the group that mutes all commercials or has other distractions… Would the visual alone do the job?

Does your creative stand up to these tests?

Take a lesson from the DRTV space. They make sure to get the call to action out there. They repeat the phone number to call. It might even get annoying, but you know what they are selling and what number to call.

This is why I love a great jingle. Leave them with something memorable. Even singing!

So try the test for yourself. Let me know what you think.

1 Comment Posted in Advertising in General, DRTV, Direct Response Advertising, Internet Advertising, Television advertising
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How To Do A Sticky-Post

No, it’s not a Post-It Sticky. Or a sticker.

When I wanted to make a post “stick” in a Wordpress blog and be the top of the blog, I found some old instructions out in the Spheriverse. I thought I’d post some new ones. They are real easy. Even I could do it!

  1. Create the Post.
  2. Go to Edit Post.
  3. Then choose Quick Edit.
  4. Check Make this Post Sticky.

You are done! Excellent job. You make me proud. Just keep sharing what you learn and we’ll all get through this with ease and a lot faster.

6 Comments Posted in Blog Tips
Social Media: Your Audience Is Choosing Their Killer App

I find myself talking about Killer Apps a lot lately when it comes to Social Media. Each one of us will have our favorite: whether it’s Facebook, Twitter, or any of the myriads of social networks here now or coming in our future. 

If you haven’t read Tim Sanders’ book “Love is the Killer App,” do it: http://bit.ly/KillerApp. It’s a great read.

Folks will use what works for them. I talk about telling my mother we wanted her up on email back in ’95. She was horrified because she thought I was going to quit calling her. Now she gets daily IMs, daily emails AND phone calls.

When we showed my mother-in-law a computer in ’95, she wanted to know why we thought she’d use it. Once we showed her how to track the stocks she had been recording meticulously day-by-day, she got it. Then we showed her how to cut and paste in word processing software, and she got it. These were her Killer Apps. Well, I’d like to think that included emailing with us. Today I greet her each morning on IM.

Now when I show a client how to use LinkedIn to get new WARM prospects with ridiculous ease compared to the old ways,  they get it. Or when we see what a Facebook Fan Page can do for search results, and clients get it.

So this is how we find our business prospects today. No more monologues. We find our audience where they go to learn more, share knowledge, take webinars and connect with other professionals. We get their attention by thoughtful answers to questions, and with thought-provoking questions and discussions. Over time, we can be acknowledged as experts and build reputations for what we know and contribute. This makes our ENGAGEMENT in our Social Sphere of Influence meaningful to our prospects and to us.

4 Comments Posted in Social Media
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Getting Started: Planning Your Social Media Strategy

Think about this process as developing your own Social Sphere of Influence. Take the aerial view of your business today and where you want it to go in the near future and in the long-term. What are your goals?

Not all elements may be appropriate for your business and you need not tackle every facet all at once. Even pros like Mari Smith, a renowned maven in Facebook, suggest that embracing manageable efforts in sequence might be best for many of us. Dani Babb on Fox Business suggested just getting started and that you may make mistakes along the way.

 The idea is to do some planning. You may want to outsource your online business management at the beginning when the setup is more labor intensive and while you learn. Gradually you can take it over as you are able to accommodate the requirements of time and resources in your organization. Or you may decide to continue with outside guidance as the Social Sphere expands. For example, I heard that Comcast has doubled their social media staff doing customer service from about 7 to 14-15 in the last year. Prepare for success.

Speaking of success, you might like to know about some real results before we get started. “The world’s most valuable brands. Who’s most engaged?,” a study prepared by Wetpaint and Altimeter, demonstrated that revenues increased by 18% by using social media (http://www.engagementdb.com).

So let’s get started. Make a list of what you want and need your Social Sphere of Influence to do for you. What does that list look like?

Consumer connection – Is that:

  • Retention
  • Finding new consumers
  • Education
  • Building relationships
  • Getting feedback from consumers
  • Increasing sales?

Other Initiatives:

  • Finding, talking to investors
  • Introducing new products, new services

What else do you need to do?

Some of the forms beyond your website that you can put in your Social Sphere might include:

  • Blogs
  • White papers, articles, newsletters
  • Social media: LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and an ever-growing list of large and niche networks

Each choice offers different opportunities. Each offers the possibilities to have different as well as several voices. Formats can be intriguing. Twitter’s short format can be challenging. Each has its own place and may or may not fit with your plan. Any and all can be viral. So a good consumer experience has an excellent chance of being shared.

Take blogs, for instance. Blogs can look like a website with the look and feel, navigation and sections for Services, About, Contact et al. The difference should be the immediacy of news that’s regularly updated from once a month to once a week. This is the Podium point-of-view. Your voice. Representing your company’s voice.

But the blog can be opened up to receive comments from readers, consumers, and the entire Spheriverse. Now it becomes a two-way superhighway of discussion, feedback and response to that feedback. An ongoing conversation. This has the power to be exponentially expansive and rewarding – for both your business and your consumer.

 Articles, white papers, press releases, and newsletters are also a way to put out your voice, your opinions, and your announcements. But your website and all the parts of your Social Sphere will bring conversation back to you. It’s your job to plan the management of receiving and responding to those messages.

The social media each have their own channel of audience to offer. LinkedIn has professionals and folks looking to hire and be hired. There are groups to join to begin conversations. You can seek out and make important connections with people looking for answers. Consumers are everywhere in all the social spaces. Your approach to each will probably be a little different with each one. Certainly the confinement and environment of the formats and technologies of each will impact the messages that you design.

As time goes on, no doubt the Spheriverse will continue to expand at a rapid pace of cyber speed. Choices will increase. But the concept of the two-way dialogue remains constant. The challenge is in managing the communications most effectively. Enjoy and grow with the movement.

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Advertisers Use Social Media to Improve Consumer Retention

It’s a common occurrence visualized in an apt dating scene, a Customer breaks up with an Advertiser because they are not relating or having a dialogue. Get out of your monologue as an Advertiser. Use social networking to continue the conversation and ENGAGE your customer to improve and maintain that relationship.

Companies today have made significant investments in consumer retention management programs (CRM) from call centers to print and direct mail campaigns. Now they are working the sphere of social media and related efforts as part of their online business management to achieve.

It’s a very cost-effective way to stay in touch with consumers who have had an experience with the brand. As a known entity, the relationship is warmed up, ready to be improved upon!

Listener to the Consumer in this video: “..it’s not exactly a dialogue….You say you love me but you aren’t behaving like you love me…You aren’t even listening are you?”

View The Break Up – Brought to you by Microsoft Advertising

The Break Up – from Microsoft Advertising

4 Comments Posted in Advertising in General
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Interesting Times – Unique Opportunities in Social Media

Marketing is going through interesting times all right. I think social media has turned it all upside down on its head. I also think that’s a good thing.

I hear a lot of talk in the industry about WHY to jump into social media. To me, as someone who has been measuring results from coupon codes in the ‘70s through DRTV (direct response television) on to Internet performance-based advertising, the reasons are clear. Once I heard that consumers were in social media talking about products and services, I was in. But the hit-my-palm-on-my forehead moment is the incredibly low cost – basically time! I’m dumbfounded that this point isn’t being screamed from the rafters.

Strike While the Price Is Hot (read: low)

I think of myself as a fairly early adopter, although I felt late to the Social Media party. I like to learn new things and there is clearly a ton of variety to put together great social media strategies. It’s fascinating to me: part publicity, part customer service, relationship and trust building to yield WARM leads so you never have to work another cold lead. How cool is that!

Let’s step back for a little media history lesson at the risk of dating myself to make my point. I remember when the earliest infomercials were doing a 15:1 (mid to late ‘80s). In infomercial-speak, that’s getting $15 in sales for spending $1 in advertising. Infomercials were new and the audience wasn’t skeptical – yet! So I could spend $1000 on a half-hour of programming and yield $15,000 in revenues for my client. And we knew by the next day and certainly within a few days. We were into measurement and immediacy with constant refinement against those first benchmarks. Now that was something to write home about.

Especially when you see that today, a winning infomercial is one doing 2:1. Yup, $2 back for $1 spent on media. Media and other campaign costs, like telemarketing, multiplied. This evolution of deterioration in returns took several years. So we were able to enjoy the tremendous profits of the earliest days for awhile.

The early adopters to infomercials were entrepreneurs. People willing to dump the habit of paying traditional advertising dollars out with no idea of what sold their products and services. (Granted, I started out as one of those.) When we added telemarketing to media and we could measure sales from every TV airing and voila! We had accountability and beaucoup bucks. But I’ll come back to these folks…

I also remember the early days of Google Adwords before buying keywords like “mortgage” went over $10 a click and made it impossible to convert. A click doesn’t mean a sale. A click doesn’t even mean a lead. It didn’t take long for folks to figure out that they had to bite the bullet to stay in the game and forget looking at short-term conversions.  The time from keywords costing pennies a click to dollars a click was more like months than the years it took with the infomercial industry experience. The gaps of greatest prosperity have been closing rapidly.

It was also a crazy time in ’99 when each month we were looking at a flurry of new formats from email to banners and pop-ups to co-registration. Kind of like social media, Internet marketing had different creative formats and they weren’t all right for every client. In the days before the CAN SPAM law, we also didn’t have the overwhelmed inboxes like we do today. Click-thru rates were higher. With time, the costs went up and the returns have gone down.

The Big Difference

Looking around, the media cost of social media can be as little as the time and effort put forth to make contact with customers. That looks like a pretty great business investment to me. A real no-brainer.

So here we are – in the early days of social media. Where things are changing at the speed of light. There is a lot to learn and that will keep on being the case. And we will learn as we go. Stumbling in the dark.

In lean times, training budgets go by the wayside. But the great thing about marketing with social media is the professionals from freelance copywriters to IT staff and marketing professionals are using it to SHARE and teach each other in open, joyful, comradishness. “Hey, we’re all in this together.” And there is so much to learn with not only the speed, but also the VOLUME of jigsaw pieces to put together, not just to make the picture, but to do them in the right order from the get-go.

Get out there and learn – some webinars will take an hour to get just one good tip – and if you find some great how-tos, I hope you will share – whether it’s a book, URL, webinar or University.

So let me suggest some folks to follow who have given me a hand up the social media ladder:

Mari Smith, a delightful spirit and creator of the ABC’s of Social Media:  http://whyfacebook.com

Mike Stelzner, White Paper Czar and Wrangler for #SMSS09 (Social Media Summit): Writing White Papers,  http://www.writingwhitepapers.com/blog,   @Mike_Stelzner

Darren Rowse of ProBlogger, King of Blogging: http://www.problogger.net/ and @problogger

Denise Wakeman, Queen of Blogging at The Blog Squad, http://www.buildabetterblog.com@denisewakeman

Jason Alba, the Uber hero of “I’m on LinkedIn – Now What?” at http://linkedinforjobseekers.com

David Meerman Scott, author of  World Wide Rave, The New Rules of Marketing, http://www.davidmeermanscott.com and @dmscott

And one of those special few to make the early transition from DRTV to Internet and now to Social Media: Marty Fahncke, http://martyfahncke.wordpress.com/about @fawnkey

My Prediction and Strong Recommendation

It surprised me greatly how slowly it was for many direct marketers to embrace the Internet. It seemed like such a natural. And it seemed like it took forever for the big players and early adopters of DRTV to get websites up, let alone great landing pages that converted well. You’d think they would have jumped on it. Clicks were cheap in the early days. Cost per sale/lead advertising was more prevalent and better converting early on. Email open rates, click-thru rates and closes were easier and results more cost efficient. So I wondered if it was comfortable to stay with what they knew. Some said they were swamped with their current business and had no more bandwidth to learn and allocate the resources. I’d say that’s a very different story today. They’ve learned, embraced and apply measurement to their Internet strategy. Shrinking profits will do that. But I’d say many missed the early days with the best efficiencies by waiting. So where am I going with all this?

Mark my words, the cost to use social media will go up. Some services have started to monetize their services with ads and premium services. The squeeze has started. It will never be any cheaper to use social media to make your point, find new leads, and sell more products. This is the time to get the best return for your time and any costs. Make hay while the sun shines!

Just the Beginning

So I hope you’ll follow us. I’ll share links to webinars, tips that worked for me and lessons learned along the way.

@Social_Dynamics

Facebook Fan Page: http://bit.ly/_FanPage

206-426-2246

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