Worse than voicing their own spots are clients that think they can write them. To them everything is important. As a producer I would try to explain that a 100MPH delivery and 2 different phone numbers was a waste of time and money. Some times I would, in 3 sentences, explain why it wasn't an efficient use of their :60 seconds, and in the middle of that explanation I would randomly say "My home phone when i was a kid was xxx-xxxx", and then finish my explanation. Then I would ask them what was my number when I was a kid. Not one ever remembered the number.
I always thought that radio commercials gave you name recognition, some kind of personality, and maybe build a little trust. Telling me you are selling a couch for "799 this weekend only" does't do much unless I know you, like you and trust you. So, if a client has a real personality and can translate that to a radio spot,, thats a win win, but if they suck, they hurt their business and usually end up blaming it on the radio station.
thats my 2 cents,, now I'm broke.
I always thought that radio commercials gave you name recognition, some kind of personality, and maybe build a little trust. Telling me you are selling a couch for "799 this weekend only" does't do much unless I know you, like you and trust you. So, if a client has a real personality and can translate that to a radio spot,, thats a win win, but if they suck, they hurt their business and usually end up blaming it on the radio station.
thats my 2 cents,, now I'm broke.