How
Radio Reps Get the Best Of You
By Duane Sprague
When done correctly,
radio it works very well. The problem however, is that radio is
not bought correctly in most dealerships, simply because the dealership
does not have a trained media buying professional on staff, and
the reps knowing this, take advantage. Here are a few of the top
ways radio reps get the best of you.
Radio reps know
the tricks, and a good one uses them well to disguise a poor buy
as a great deal. There are over a dozen ways that the data can be
misrepresented, the facts blurred, and your budget wasted.
For example,
a rep may show you one or more colorful bar charts or graphs that
graphically show a huge number of listeners on their station compared
to the competition, or a big growth in listeners over the last year,
or an impressive share (percent) of listener audience in a particular
day part. We call these "one sheets" in the media buying
profession, and they mean nothing really by themselves, but they
look impressive.
The numbers
in the charts may be true, and they will even quote a reputable
source like Arbitron, (the radio rating and research firm) but they
mean nothing if they are taken out of context from the rest of the
data, and compared to a four Arbitron book average, analyzed against
your target demo, analyzed based on a cost per target rating point,
cost per thousand, audience reach, and audience turnover. These
figures indicate the true efficiency of a station buy.
Another trick
often used by your rep, is to broaden the day parts. Radio is sold
by specific day parts, and they charge according to the Arbitron
ratings for each day part. If for example, station WWYG has a very
successful morning drive day part (Monday - Friday 6:00 am - 10:00
am) they will try to broaden that expensive day part to include
5:00 am - 10:00 am. By doing this, they can sell you a more expensive
spot, and place it in a very poor time, from 5:00 am - 6:00 am,
where it costs you top dollar, but it performs very poorly. What
they tell you of course, is that their drive time is 5:00 am - 10:00
am, and then they stuff as many of your spots in the first hour
as they can.
One of the most
famous of devious rep ploys, is to ask you what your budget is,
and then come back with a "package deal" for their station
that consumes your entire radio budget. Two problems with this.
Number one, package deals are always to the benefit of the station.
When broken down and analyzed, at least 50% of the spots they give
you run in very low rated day parts, which you should never even
pay anything for, yet alone full price. Number two, by consuming
your entire radio budget, you are extremely limiting your audience
reach. Even the number one station in market only reaches a fragment
of the population.
Another underhanded
trick is to charge you a prime rate for prime times, and then pre-empt
your spots for another advertiser that paid even more. You buy only
morning and afternoon drive times for example, and they run your
spots just before or just after those prime hours, because they
booted your buy for an even more profitable one. And you never know
it, because even most media people do not know how to do a post
flight analysis, or they simply don't have the time and patience.
So you paid for A, and got B, and nobody but the station is the
wiser.
And by the way,
never sign a radio stations time order, because the clauses are
always in their favor. Also, the times they order for your spots
to run are too broad or vague, thus allowing for a lot of spots
to slip into undesirable times and days. For this reason, I have
created my own time order, which guarantees that my spots run exactly
where I want them, or I don't pay.
These are just
a few of the ways you can get taken, but in the defense of radio
reps, all reps are not bad all of the time, and some reps do not
use any sales trickery or misrepresentation whatsoever. If you want
to learn more about the subject of media buying in future articles,
let this magazine know.

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Duane
is available to conduct informative seminars on the following topics:
- Effective
database marketing
- Media planning
and buying for maximum results at reduced rates
- Effective
marketing tips and strategies
- The 10
year economic outlook for the automotive industry
- Marketing
to the sub-prime buyer
- Conducting
local market research for improved used car inventory and marketing
decisions
- Reducing
your used car acquisition costs by 40-60%
Contact:
Phone (888) 265-1963
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