I see most stations like to 'sell' enhanced underwriting. I'm curious about the 'mentions' and 'billboard' or 'Mini Underwriting'.
The Mini or Billboard is restricted to 5 seconds or 10 words depending on the station. The mentions are simply the name of the business and contact info, usually a website, address or phone although one station offers either website address or physical address and phone number.
I'm rather intrigued by these spots. They have a quality that is unique. From my research I conclude saying who you are, what you do and how to get in touch is the best advertising money can buy.
By not offering detail, I discovered the lack of detaill actually enhances the business image because the listener, by hearing the business mentioned time and time again forms an opinion in their mind about the business. The listener concludes they must be successful and good at what the business does because they hear about the business regularly. Additionally, the mentions build instant recall so when the listener needs the product or service, they think of that business first.
The other option is the simple name mention (Weather is sponsored by First Bank and Trust). It seems the name mention does much the same. Even though no address, phone or website is mentioned, I havee been told quote 'nobody remembers phone numbers, websites and street addresses. People will look it up on the internet and get in touch'.
Naturally the business name has to say what you do. If you're Smith and Sins, that won't cut it, but Smith and Sons Appliance Warehouse and Service Center says something to me.
I once considered such name mentions as great bonuses for regular advertisers because they were 'easy' but now I realize their value.
My question is: do you offer this type of underwriting? Is it stand alone or along with enhanced spots? Do these spots seem to work as I have found? Are they good sellers or a tool to turn a no into a yes by gaining some dollars versus none?
The Mini or Billboard is restricted to 5 seconds or 10 words depending on the station. The mentions are simply the name of the business and contact info, usually a website, address or phone although one station offers either website address or physical address and phone number.
I'm rather intrigued by these spots. They have a quality that is unique. From my research I conclude saying who you are, what you do and how to get in touch is the best advertising money can buy.
By not offering detail, I discovered the lack of detaill actually enhances the business image because the listener, by hearing the business mentioned time and time again forms an opinion in their mind about the business. The listener concludes they must be successful and good at what the business does because they hear about the business regularly. Additionally, the mentions build instant recall so when the listener needs the product or service, they think of that business first.
The other option is the simple name mention (Weather is sponsored by First Bank and Trust). It seems the name mention does much the same. Even though no address, phone or website is mentioned, I havee been told quote 'nobody remembers phone numbers, websites and street addresses. People will look it up on the internet and get in touch'.
Naturally the business name has to say what you do. If you're Smith and Sins, that won't cut it, but Smith and Sons Appliance Warehouse and Service Center says something to me.
I once considered such name mentions as great bonuses for regular advertisers because they were 'easy' but now I realize their value.
My question is: do you offer this type of underwriting? Is it stand alone or along with enhanced spots? Do these spots seem to work as I have found? Are they good sellers or a tool to turn a no into a yes by gaining some dollars versus none?