How Realistic Are Your Expectations?

How Realistic Are Your Expectations?

Today I am am going to challenge your thinking about advertising and marketing.

We are going to talk about the expectations you have for your advertising and marketing.

It comes in different forms, depending on the lingo and verbage you use, but it comes down to one thing:

How Realistic Are Your Expectations?

Sometimes we look at the Return On Investment of advertising and come up with a formula.

Other times we look at the Gross Profit Margin as a way to calculate the success of an advertising campaign.

Some businesses use a % of last years sales as the amount of dollars that they will spend this year and think that is the magic formula.

Others go by the seat of their pants and will buy the bright shiny object that someone is selling that promises to make them rich.

Do you fall into any of these categories?

I admit that I have fallen into all of those categories both personally and professionally at times.

Several years ago, I was caught up in being a first adopter when it came to tech.  It came to a screeching halt after I spent $800 bucks on a new phone that I really didn’t need, but it was the newest and the best for at least 30 days.

I returned that phone when reality hit and changed my ways back to my usual research based approach way of buying stuff and adopting stuff into my life.  I do the same for my clients too.

There’s an old saying in the advertising business:

“Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half.”

That quote is credited to John Wanamaker. He was a very successful United States merchant, religious leader and political figure, considered by some to be a “pioneer in marketing”. He opened one of the first and most successful department stores in the United States, which grew to 16 stores and eventually became part of Macy’s.  He’s been dead for nearly 100 years but that quote lives on.

During the 50 years that I’ve been living, businesses and marketers have been wrestling with figuring out which half of their advertising is wasted.  We have come up with various schemes to track the results or formulas like I mentioned to make us feel better but I’m going to challenge the entire notion that half of your advertising is wasted.

In some circles they divide the type of advertising you can do as direct advertising and brand building advertising.

The direct advertising people have used multiple methods to track their results including:

  1. A coupon that has a discount that consumers use and the business can track
  2. A special phone number that is only used in one form of advertising so any calls coming to that phone line is attributed to that ad
  3. A secret phrase that a customer says to get a special offer or special savings

These methods of direct advertising were being used in the John Wanamaker days in newspaper ads, and later phone book and direct mail ads.  Broadcast ads on radio and television have used them.  They were being used before the World Wide Web and internet advertising options came about 25 years ago.

Our lives are now connected with the smartphones that even the homeless population have.

The area of advertising and marketing that has continued to attract more and more businesses each year is still the bright and shiny world of online ads.

Radio, TV, and Print ad sales have either seen declines or remained steady in the past dozen years while those trying the digital marketing world continue to see double digit percentage growth.

Promises of, “we can target your ads to the right people and prove to you that your dollars are making you rich” and “we can track it all with pixels and our analytic dashboards”…  Sadly those are empty promises.

I know.

I have spent considerable time in this advertising and marketing world working from the inside out.  I know that the intentions of the digital marketers is good, but I also know that it falls short.  Way short of the promises.  Those promises were made to eliminate the wasted advertising and only spend money on the advertising that works.

Theoretically, it should work.  But in the real human world it falls short.

In my current position with WOWO radio, I have access to a whole host of online marketing options.  Our company, Federated Media, has invested a considerable amount of resources in time, people and money to create the division we call Federated Digital Solutions.

My first year with WOWO, I took a cautious approach and let my co-workers sell our Digital Solutions to their clients before I offered them to my advertising partners.  I wanted to see the success stories of what I could offer before I recommend them to my trusted ad partners. By year two, I started offering them and in years 3 and 4, more and more of my radio advertising clients were also using our online digital marketing solutions.  Some use our digital marketing without using WOWO radio.

Now that I’ve completed 5 full years at WOWO, I have several success stories in the digital ad world that I can share with you.

I must caution you: The value of Direct Marketing is overblown as it is not as easy to measure as the sellers claim and Branding by itself without giving a buyer an easy path to follow to make a purchase can be a waste.  It takes a combination of these two schools of thought to create a long term success.

Why?

Two reasons:

First off the measurement of Direct Marketing is actually flawed, sometimes given more credit that it deserves.  I have a WOWO Radio client that switched to a nationally known digital marketing company.  This national company broke their own rules regarding consistency for Name, Address, Phone number listing that is actually a common rule of thumb according to Google itself.  The rule of consistency is that you want your Name, Address and Phone Number to be the same, consistently all over the web including your own website.  This national company has hijacked my clients website to place a tracking phone number on the website and all other listings online that it can get its hands on.

What this means is that no matter what drove a customer to find my client, the phone number that they will find online is not the true business phone number, but the special tracking number.  And the national digital marketing company is claiming credit for any and all calls that come in on that special tracking number.

Also, if you do a deep dive into Google Analytics, which most people don’t, you will find all kinds of weird website traffic coming from spammers and bots.

Finally, and this is something I learned a couple years ago, there are limitations in the ability to track connections between secure and insecure websites and all those apps that we have on our phones that have paid ads on them? Google can’t track those either.

What was once the almighty gold standard in tracking your direct marketing online, is not really doing that great of a job.

That’s just the first reason.

Here’s the second.

We are human and direct marketing usually ignores the Human Relationship Marketing Principles that are impossible to accurately track.

Honestly, we don’t know consciously why we buy one brand over another.  When we go to the store and are faced with a dozens of choices of cookies to buy, we already have narrowed it down in our minds to a small handful.

Certain brands of cookies are superior to me and that list could be totally different from your list of favorite cookies.  You make like peanut butter, I may like soft chocolate chips, and even with those two distinctly different options, each of us have a favorite in the category that we want.

This is due to branding.  We recognize the brand and our human emotions move us to grab the cookies that we want based on our own personal experiences, recommendations from friends and family, and yes, advertising messages.  Branding creates Top Of Mind Awareness, or TOMA which places one company or one cookie over another in our own personal preferences.  This is the Human Relationship side of the buying that direct marketing usually ignores.

That 50% of marketing that John Wanamaker wished he knew was wasted, wasn’t wasted at all.  It was probably building the Macy’s brand which has survived to this day.  Macy’s Thanksgiving day Parade which began two years after the death of Wanamaker has been one of their most successful branding marketing campaigns for more than 90 years.

Let’s wrap this up with this caveat. I know that with a lot of companies there is a lot of wasted money spent on advertising, but it’s usually not because they are investing in branding.

My offer to you is to help you evaluate your marketing and advertising and see where the true waste is.  Afterward, we can come up with recommendations for improvement and most importantly set realistic expectations.

Contact me.

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The Talk Radio Advantage For WOWO Advertisers

The Talk Radio Advantage For WOWO Advertisers

Not all advertising venues are created equal. The idea of an ad is an ad is an ad is like saying a cow is a cheeseburger is a filet.  Yes they are all forms of beef, but with big differences.

In Fort Wayne, I’ve worked in the radio advertising world since 2003.

I have created successful advertising campaigns for hundreds of companies using all formats of radio stations including both music and talk formats.  But this story is not about me.  It’s about what I have observed over the past 5 years that I’ve been on the WOWO Radio advertising sales team.

Quite simply, WOWO listeners pay attention to the ads on WOWO and respond to them like no other form of advertising I have ever seen in Fort Wayne.

This is a conversation I have several times each month.  It is about the mental state of people who are exposed to your advertising messages. 

We are going to look at the big picture and include many of the places you can spend money to advertise.

Start with television.  When you and I sit down to watch a show, we are paying attention to the show.  When commercials come on, most of us stop paying attention, at least not the same level of attentiveness that we have during the show.

Newspapers and magazines.  Unless it’s a fashion magazine that is chocked full of 50+ pages of ads before the articles start, we are not really interested in the ads.  We bought the paper to read the stories, get the scores, or see if someone died.

Social Media.  Facebook for example is a place to go to find out what’s happening with friends and family.  They have managed to work ads and sponsored posts into out timelines so we can’t help but seem them but we are not on Facebook to check out the ads.

Radio. Not all radio stations are created equal.  For this discussion, let’s look at the difference between music based stations and talk based stations.  The reason we tune in to a station that plays music, any music for that matter, is to hear music that we like.  In Fort Wayne we have country music stations, rock music stations, pop music stations and plenty of variations.

Every listener to a music radio station selects that particular station because they want to hear that particular style of music.  Anytime the music stops for any length of time, say 2 minutes, we pay less attention.  If the station plays 5 or 7 minutes of commercials in a row, we really tune out and pay less attention.  Some may even change stations.  The reason we listen to music radio stations is to hear music.  It’s to escape.  Anything other than music on a music station is an irritant.

Talk based radio stations are a different animal. Stations like WOWO which are a combination of News and Talk have listeners who tune in for information.  The programming on talk radio stations is brain food, not escapism like the music on a music radio station.  When the newscaster or program host is talking, listeners are paying attention to the words.  It’s the information that people want to hear.

So what happens when your commercial airs on a talk radio station like WOWO? 1st off, it’s not interrupting music, taking the place of your favorite song, so it is less of an irritant. Next, if your ad is a live endorsement from the radio personality, that is the very best kind of commercial because you have the credibility of the radio personality combined with the credibility of WOWO and a receptive audience that is listening to hear the talk, whether it is about politics or your business, it doesn’t matter.

If you air regular recorded commercials on a talk radio station like WOWO, you still get a receptive audience that is not turned off by talking on the radio and you are on WOWO which adds credibility to your business.

I discovered another way to use WOWO’s talk radio format to help your business and that is with our live 10 second sponsorship messages of news, weather, traffic and sports.  These are done live by the newscasters and program hosts and are embedded in the program and carry almost as much weight as a full endorsement.

This relationship between the WOWO listeners and the WOWO air staff with our news and talk radio format is one of trust.

For many it’s as strong a bond of trust as a trusted friend.  

You don’t get that with a newspaper ad.  You don’t get that with a TV commercial, You don’t get that with nearly any other form of advertising you can spend your money on.

This is the Talk Radio Advantage WOWO advertisers receive.   Want more info?  Let’s talk.

Do They Like You?

Do They Like You?

I picked up a new book from Seth Godin recently and am reading it right now.  Or perhaps by the time I publish this and the podcast goes live, I will have finished it.

But I doubt it.  My reading style is reflective when it comes to things like marketing.  I should tell you that the name of Seth’s latest book is This Is Marketing. There are all kinds of bonus features online you can get and a community you can join once you buy the book.

But in just reading the little portion that I’ve read before I started writing today, I noticed that there are parallels to what he wrote and what I’ve been sharing over the years.

Today I want to ask you a serious question that not many business people stop and consider.

The question is:

Do They Like You

Things are different in the advertising and marketing world from when my parents and grandparents were around.  Mass marketing was common because we had mass media.  Mass media was defined by a limited number of media and entertainment options and so the masses of people they attracted were pretty large because of the limited options.

In the video world for example, there were between 3 and 5 TV stations in Fort Wayne, Indiana and they carried programming from ABC, CBS, PBS, NBC and Fox.  Want to know the big news of the day? Sit down and watch the half hour newscast with the family when it came on TV live.

The percentage of people watching one thing at the same time was huge in comparison to today.

Advertising by interruption worked because of the mass of people you would reach.  Same was true of radio, newspaper and other forms of entertainment like movie theaters that seated hundreds at a time to watch the couple of films that were released each week.

Advertising by interruption is a topic I’ll expand on in the future but for now, I want to share with you what happens after you have reached someone by advertising or word of mouth or by accident.

That person is going to form an opinion of you and your business. They are going to ask themselves that question:

Do They Like You

This will determine if they become a long term customer worth thousands of dollars in your future, or if they are never coming back and instead will be worth thousands of dollars to your competitors.

Advertising can’t fix a broken business.

If you screw up and end up chasing away the customers that your advertising brought in, you better fix that leaky boat.

And now a plug for what I do.  I make money when businesses buy advertising solutions from me that air on my radio station, WOWO in Fort Wayne, Indiana and/or pair it up with some of the digital advertising solutions I offer.

But my heart is in looking at the big picture of your business and the entire customer experience.  I want to help you figure out ways to be sure the answer is:

Yes, they like us

Contact me and let’s start a conversation about your marketing, advertising and how to be better in ways that your customers care about.

I’m going to wrap this up with a story of a local restaurant that my wife and I really were rooting for.

After several years of being our Saturday night date night destination, the owner of the building decided that they would not renew the lease of this highly popular restaurant and bar.  The owner decided that they were going to reinvent the place and after being shut down for a couple of weeks, they slowly opened with a limited menu and then a full menu.

Instead of visiting every week, my wife and I visited every other week.  Then we skipped a few weeks.  After our last visit, I said we are only going to visit once a month or less.

Things had changed under the new management.  The last straw for me was the food was inconsistent.  When I finally found a dish I loved and came back two weeks later, it was not the same.  It was such a disappointment.

The service had been slow under new management due to a lack of staff, but we were willing to wait.  A longer wait time for our food was acceptable since it was undergoing this transformation.  The staff was also great, the ones we saw behind the bar and the wait staff that stayed under the new management were like friends.

But when the new place lost it’s appeal with the food and when you are in the food business, that’s deadly.

Sadly, I don’t like them anymore.  They are no longer getting my date night money every week, or my occasional lunch money, or my recommendations to friends and business people.  I won’t write a bad review online, because I want them to get it together, but not on my dime.  I will check back every 4 to 6 weeks and see if they are improving.  If they don’t, they will have to shut down.

My lesson for them and for you is to ask the question:

Do They Like You?

and find out ways to get better, fast.

As always, I’m here to help.

Connections and Relationships

Connections and Relationships

Changing your logo won’t make you rich.

Advertising your brand might be worthless.

Instead, if growing your business is important, focus on Connections and Relationships.

I do a lot of reading and observing.  I take pride in the fact that I have a pretty diverse circle of friends of all ages.  Some are in their 70’s pushing 80 and others are just old enough to vote in the next election.

Personally, I have worked in show business and as an entry level material handler in a factory.  I enjoy my relationships with millionaires and with people who are working multiple jobs to make ends meet.

What’s this have to do with branding, marketing and advertising your logo?

Let me tell you.

We the people of this United States value a few things over everything else:

  1. Trust
  2. Honesty
  3. Hope

I’ll go deeper.

We want to Trust that when ever we are going to spend money on something, that we are paying the right price, not getting ripped off with a bunch of hype and advertising promises that aren’t really true.

We crave Honesty in our business dealings.  We understand that no one is perfect, but when something happens that needs fixed or corrected. don’t weasel your way out of it.  Be honest.  Do what you can to fix the problem.  By the way, you will earn greater loyalty by fixing a problem for someone than if everything went smoothly the first time.

Also we want to be optimistic in this country of ours.  No matter what we are buying, we want to have hope that the purchase we are making will improve our lives. This is the Hope I am talking about. The new car, and the box of cereal, both purchases are based on Hope to fill a need or desire.

Here’s a couple of ways to implement these three values:

First off, live them.  Not just you, but everyone in your business.  The front line clerks and staff that deal with the public, your customers everyday need to convey Trust, Honesty and Hope in their actions and attitude.  You need to model it and live it so it can be passed down the line.

This is what builds relationships and relationships build your business.

I call this your Internal Marketing.  It’s what you do to give your customers a good feeling about being your customer.

Your External Marketing is about making that initial connection outside of your business location.  It’s about inviting people to check you out, inviting them to browse your place and look around.  Doesn’t matter if it is online or in person, the same principle applies.

Your External Marketing includes your paid advertising.  You need to be consistent in conveying Trust, Honesty, and Hope in your ads that reflect the customer experience that you have built in your company.

I’m going to tell you why I work in the radio industry and not some other form of media or advertising sales.  It has a lot to do with what I have just said.  And it is more true right now with where I work at WOWO Radio in Fort Wayne, Indiana compared to nearly any other place I have worked in media.

As a former radio personality, I experienced first hand the power of listeners making a connection with the voice on the other end.  My first wife and mother of my kids, met me because I was on the radio.

When a radio personality does it correctly, he or she can create an intimacy with individual listeners that is as strong as a lot of in-person friendships.

Television personalities can do this too to a certain degree, but studies have shown that the bond isn’t as personal as radio personalities can create.

What about social media advertising? Billboard advertising? Newspaper, magazine, placemat, direct mail advertising?  Those are just ads.  There might be a bit of connecting, but certainly not relationship building.

The kind of relationship building via radio advertising with WOWO occurs on many levels.  Long time listeners to the station consider WOWO as a trusted source of news and information as they have been a leader in providing that since before I was a kid and have continued the past couple of decades as a news and talk radio station.  That trust in the station is also transferred to the businesses that advertise on WOWO.

A deeper level of trust is established when one of our personalities talks about your business, in either a short sponsorship message or as a personal endorsement or testimonial.  Man, those types of ads are extremely powerful because they combine all the elements we’ve been talking about today. Trust, Honesty and Hope thru Connections and Relationships.

Want to know more?  Let’s talk.  Drop me a note to Scott @ScLoHo.net.

 

Help People Buy

Help People Buy

Today, I have a few key tips for anyone in the business of sales, which is not limited to people who sell for a living, but nearly all of us.  The three words I want you to remember is: Help People Buy.

This month, the company I work for, Federated Media, experienced a tragic loss with the unexpected death of Charly Butcher, the host of Fort Wayne’s Morning News on WOWO Radio.  Charly began his career with Federated Media in the 1980’s on WOWO’s sister station, WMEE.  His life touched countless numbers of people as made evident by the stories and tributes.

One story I heard from my coworker Tracy was how a car salesperson was struggling with a sale but then Charly stepped in to Help People Buy:

We were at a remote at Fort Wayne Subaru and they just got in one single BRZ sport coupe in bright red that was stunning. This guy about 23 was looking at it with lust and the sales person just could not close the deal no matter how hard he tried. Charly went to the guy and said “I tell you what…you buy this car now and I will put you on the air live on Monday to brag about it. You can tell all your friends you will be on WOWO Monday morning.” The guy agreed to it on the spot and sure enough he got his 5 minutes of Fame on Charly’s show that Monday. We had a happy customer, happy sales person, happy manager and Charly was so proud of himself.

I’ve recently told you about my most recent car buying experience, which was filled with unnecessary sales pitches, because by the time I went to the dealership, I already decided exactly which car I wanted and all they really had to do was take care of the paperwork.

Today, I’m going to share with you another bad buying experience I had.

The afternoon after attending Charly Butcher’s funeral, I needed to visit some funeral homes for a brother-in-law who was just transferred to hospice care.  Yes, it was a dreadful week, but sometimes you have to plow through it to get things done.

I visited 3 places and told each exactly what I was looking for:

I am here to get price information for direct cremation for the upcoming passing of my brother-in-law who is likely in the final week of his life.  I am getting this information for my wife who will be making the decision of who we use. No public funeral or additional services are needed, just the bare bone basics.  A family memorial will take place in a few months out of town.

That was the story I told all three funeral homes.  From what I said, if they were listening, they would know that I am looking only for their price and I was not going to be buying anything today.  I told them I was price shopping only.

So what happened?

At funeral home number one, I get what I am looking for, the bottom line price, in writing, but first the guy shows me his powerpoint on who he is, how many funerals they have done over the past 10 years complete with the standard bar chart.

He was not listening to what I said, he was stuck in selling mode.  I redirected him to get the info I needed and left.

Funeral home number two was worse.  Two guys, teaming up to sell me, after I told them exactly why I was there.  They even asked questions about my wife and I that had absolutely nothing to do with why I was there.  Like,  “how long have you and your wife been married?”   I almost walked out.  In the end, I got the answers I wanted and a bad taste in my mouth to never do business with these two salespeople.

Funeral home number three was actually the best.  When I told him the same story I told the other two, he actually listened and told me that they are not the least expensive for cremation services.  I appreciated his honesty instead of his sales pitch and we talked more.  I learned a few things that made me want to transfer some of my own business to them in the future.

I learned a few lessons that day about the sales process that I am going to apply to my work, and hopefully you can apply these same lessons in your company:

How to Help People Buy

  1. Listen first to find out what they think they are shopping for so you can focus on what they want.
  2. Ask questions to clarify what they are looking for as an end result.
  3. Answer their questions first, then ask how else you can help them.

Funeral home number two, almost had me walk out in the middle of their sales pitch, can you imagine having a potential customer come to you and then walk out because you were too salesy?

I bet it happens more than we realize.

By the way, I wrote a piece about Charly Butcher and his impact with WOWO and the community, but did not create a podcast for that article because it contains a few videos.  I invite you to read and watch by clicking on the link to this article on my website at ScottHoward.me

Here’s the link: https://www.scotthoward.me/remembercharly-butcher-of-wowo-wmee-fort-wayne/