R
randarand97
Guest
Results are not so much of a factor. When 3rd party verification can be offered the client (advertiser) that the ad agency created a media mix and content that should have worked effectively, then the advertising agency did their job. Results are not always known as in being strategically pinpointed, but more generalized. For example, was customer count up? Did your cash register ring more? If so, it worked.
I like to point out to potential radio advertisers that ask about results that radio works but may not seem to. I ask them when was the last time they told a business owner they heard their radio commercial and that was why they were at the business. I've yet to find somebody that said that.
Radio loses over TV and print because of the attention other media requires. You watch TV. You do not do other things that require your full attention while watching TV. The same is the case for print. Radio can accompany any activity and can go anywhere, so radio sells at a different level, not requiring the full attention of the listener. So, the information gets heard and digested by the listener but that 'memory' is not attached to a specific point in time. Think of it this way: you can't seem to get a song out of your head and you might not even like it too much but you simply cannot identify the very moment you got the darn song stuck in your head.
With all the negative said of broadcast radio, it is still a viable medium for advertising and reaching the masses. There can be a substantial number that tune away from the radio station when the commercials start and radio still has enough of the cross-section of the population listening, it is still nicely priced and hits your market. TV suffers just like radio. How many hit mute when the commercials begin or leave the room to hit the fridge or bathroom? Even with that percentage, television works too.
I'm not trying to be a cheerleader for radio advertising as it is, but in reality it still performs and typically leaves its customers with satisfying results. If it didn't you would not be hearing commercials at all.
One of the things that has not been brought up is the fact the rates stations charge is partly dictated by outside sources. In larger markets rates are set by a ratio determined by the ad agency. Radio struggles with that but in order to win the buy, assuming you're not the top station, it is to get the per unit rate down to the price ratio the ad agency is using. Simply put, if you have a high rate, you have to bonus the client with free spots to earn the buy. So, programming and charging higher rates are not going to fly. The ad agency buys demographics and numbers listening. They don't care about superior programming or the number of spots you play per hour. They are more concerned with showing the client they made the best decision and got the greater number of impressions for the client they serve. That insures there are no lone wolves out there.