You have to like an owner who values production people and jocks who can do good production. 8)
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There was a time when production people had the time and latitude to do what were called "chutz spots." Chutz (taken from the Yiddish word "chutzpah," meaning "nerve" or "gall") spots were funny, bawdy, bold, occasionally obscene, often contained inside lines and always over the top shtick. Think "Mel Brooks meets Richard Pryor meets Robin Williams meets Albert Brooks." I first observed, heard of and produced chutz spots working with Don Berns, Norm Schrutt and Jeff Kaye. To write, produce and deliver a good chutz spot required a keen understanding of (borscht belt) humor, real life experiences, inside information about the client or his direct competitor (who he often despised) and... a whole lotta chutzpah.
The spot had to be the right fit for the client/person who called the shots on the buy. Very often, the radio sales person (let's face it, usually a guy) would write some or all of the spot and work with the production person who'd produce it. It could be a "big production" or a one take, off-the-wall, half-libbed stream of sales hype. A lot of times, the tape just rolled and be edited. (One of the most memorable chutz spots I've heard was done by a Rochester production guy for Paul Rosa's stores. To this day I still remember one of the lines.)
The sales guy would then take the spot to the client and with a straight face say something like, "I took all the points about your business that you gave me and worked with my production people. (It was never 'one person,' always 'production people.' We run a big shop at our station.) Here's what we came up with." Press play. 90% of the time, the client/buyer loved it, so much so that the radio sales guy had to convince the buyer that the chutz spot couldn't be used on the air. You knew it was a good chutz spot if/when the client played it for two or three other people in the store, shop or car dealership.
After everybody had a good laugh and things calmed down, the actual radio spot would be played. The sales person almost always walked out with a signed contract. For his work, the production guy usually got a dinner gift certificate and maybe a talent fee if the spot traveled, which usually was the case, because the client would say "I want to use the spot WXXX produced."
One thing I learned watching the pros who proceeded me and working with some of the heavy hitters in radio sales and passed along to other production people: "Never ask the client if he/she liked the spot. Always say, "isn't that commercial great! Here, let me play it for you again." When I put demo/specs on cassettes, they always were put on twice, with a three second gap between. The sales guy would never have to rewind the tape, only press and release 'pause.' Again, most times he/she walked out with a signed contract.
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Yes, this is old school stuff. These are different times, but local-direct is often relationship based and there are factors that still apply to selling the product and renewing the contract. It's still about people as much as it's about CPM.