The problem with TV advertising



It is too sexy!

When you look at the output on your television they are annoying and intrusive. To a marketing manager, or an executive though, the process of creating the ad is like living a little slice of Hollywood magic. It is sexy, and it is fun, and it can make you feel like a movie executive.

Additionally, if your senior management think marketing and advertising are the same thing (and most of them do), TV advertising seems safe to them as they have experienced it. Their experience is that they notice the ads on TV, and that TV ads can be so appealing that entire shows are dedicated to showing the best ads. The reality is that the attention they receive does not mean that they are effective, but this matters less than you would think. The mental perception that TV advertising works is hard to counter even with logic and data.

The reality for marketing managers is that a marketing campaign can be easier to sell to executives if it includes TV. “If we take this TV package with NBC you will get to appear on the Apprentice and talk to Donald Trump about our company.” is a very compelling pitch to a CEO. Stroking the pride of an executive in this way can also be a very good way to get advancement in a company regardless of any measurable outcome.

All this is why the downturn economy might cause some companies (the less smart ones) to focus more on TV than other advertising mediums. The question for them is not about the dollar cost, but rather the risk in the investment. Rightly or wrongly TV is often seen as low risk advertising spend. It is human nature to be more comfortable with things that are familiar to us, and things that our peers are doing.

Todd’s post earlier today on his discussion with an F500 marketer was brilliant. It was great to see an example of a marketing manager that takes their job seriously and looks for ways to improve the effectiveness of their campaigns. These people are not as rare as my earlier comments might suggest, but it is still good to see them in action. It was also a perfect example of how the podcasting space needs to sell itself to media buyers, clearly and concisely laying out the benefits of the media and then backing it up with hard, defendable data.

If you are a marketing manager that wants to include podcasting in your proposals, what can you do? There is nothing that you can do to replicate the glamour factor of TV, but you can change the executives perception of the risk. As I said earlier, part of the internal risk calculation people make is their familiarity. If you can get your executives actually listening to podcasts they will quickly become comfortable with them and the advertising will be easier to propose.

Here are a selection of podcasts that have great business content that will really appeal to your executives as a starting point. There are so many more as well that I have not had time to listen to myself.

Manager tools – EVERY manager should listen to this podcast [iTunes Subscribe]
The Economist which also has an audio word for word subscription of the magazine [RSS Subscribe]
Slate Big Money A newcomer that shows some promise [iTunes Subscribe]
WSJ Your Money Matters Every exec has a stock portfolio they are worried about [iTunes Subscribe]
TimesOnline Business Ideas Examines how other exec’s have changed markets [iTunes Subscribe]

If they are at all interested in tech make sure they add GNC as well. :)


Psystar Still At it – Now With Notebooks



Six months ago, Psystar entered the Desktop arena with a PC for $600 that could get your choice of Windows, Linux or Mac OSX. Of course Apple responded with a Lawsuit and Psystar countered. Every time we speculated Psystar is going down – Yet, they seem to continue on.

Psystar has announced in a Press Release they will be putting in Blue-Ray Players and NVidia 9800GT Graphics Cards into their lines of machines. Further, AppleInsider notes a Psystar representative has acknowledged:

Although there is no mobile open computer at the moment, I can tell you that it is something that is in development

How can this be? You would think that if there is a lawsuit under way that Psystar wouldn’t buck the system. Granted, the notebook can easily have Microsoft of Linux on it, but to jump into the pile of leaves like that is interesting and maybe even reckless. Could it indicate that Psystar may have the advantage in the lawsuit or are they just doing “Business as planned”?

One thing is for sure – If Psystar comes out with a $600 notebook (and one with Firewire I might add), Apple will definitely have to look at their practices with customers. Even though they are a debt-free company doesn’t mean they could fall into bankruptcy due to lack of sales.

BTW – For those that don’t know, Rainer Brockerhoff explains why Firewire on the Macbooks was not feesable with the new design.


Monetization for the Small Blogger



I’m an admittedly small blogger. I have a thousand or so readers of my daily livejournal blog, a kind of a personal look at my life that includes stories about my job, my kids, and my own stupidity. I have a hundred readers of a writing blog I maintain, and a couple hundred readers of a circus blog I started several years ago. I’m the definition of a small blogger.

I’d love to make a little (okay, a lot of) money on my blogging, but up until now, that really hasn’t been an option. I tried the usual adsense track, but that earned me about thirteen cents in a year, so that’s not a way to go.

But by next year, small bloggers like me just may have a way to monetize our blogs (small podcasters too). Larry Genkin, the founder and editor of Blogger and Podcaster Magazine, has opened a new site intended to help small bloggers turn their hobby into a more lucrative business. I’m skeptical but interested, and signed up. The site is accepting signups, but will not go live until early 2009. The site is the Blogger and Podcaster Network.


Another Publication Moves to the Web



Yesterday, the Christian Science Monitor announced that it would be going to web-only publication. That isn’t exactly true, as they will continue to produce a weekly news magazine in printed form. But the fact is, the majority of their work will now be done online.

Of course, the transferring of periodicals to the web has been happening for quite some time; there was a day when newspapers and magazines could be cutting edge on their news. Now, they are days or weeks behind the information we can get at a snap on the Internet. In addition, the costs of producing a print publication are skyrocketing; publishing on the web is certainly more cost-effective.

I think there’s still a place for print periodicals to exist, certainly. I read several hard-copy newspapers each week and will continue to do so. I also subscribe to a handful of magazines whose information is useful to me. I do think that if a periodical does not fill a needed niche, then it is destined to die. It goes back to the “scarce goods” concept.

But how do these periodicals monetize their web content, and continue to be able to pay staff and overhead costs? That becomes the question. Several recent studies indicate that web readers are easily able to ignore web advertising, and some browsers even provide plug-ins that block ads for readers.

But studies also show that readers of the web prefer short reads of 3-4 paragraphs, and do not tend to read in-depth articles the way they do in a print publication. So, if you move to the web, do you run the risk of making your information much more shallow to appeal to the “quick read” audience that the web provides?

Big questions with no answers, at this point.


Consumer Electronics Show 2009 Preperations!



Ces2009It’s hard to believe that in about 70 days the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show will be upon us. I also cannot believe I am going to have to shell out nearly $2500 bucks which is the going rate for a hotel room during the event.

Vegas really rips people off during a show like CES. Anyway planning is underway, and based on our coverage the last three years you all must be licking your chops waiting for the pile of interviews and content that comes from us during and after CES.

Our daily wrap up shows in 2008 reached over 750,000 viewers! The 120 plus interviews posted after the event reached millions.

The event is really a killer physically/mentally because you go a whole week with almost no sleep, and your on your feet for hours. Last year I lost 13 pounds during the show. A great way to burn off Holiday over eating.

Andy McCaskey and I are on the sponsor hunt in a big way. The exposure for our sponsors is as always huge. Our videos content last year reached millions of viewers, and resulted in literally 100’s of thousands of customer referrals to the companies we interviewed.

The 2008 coverage is still racking up views, its content that keeps on giving back all year long. We are in such high demand that companies exhibiting at CES are already calling to setup interviews! In response to this we are ramping up this year to have more teams on the ground, no one is guaranteed a interview, but we know where to find the most innovative and cool products CES has to offer.

If your interested in working with the most sought out team at CES you need to act now. If you are interested in sponsoring us this year drop me a email or call me today at 808–741–4923. I have a sponsorship and information packets ready we have three sponsorship slots available.

No one covers CES like Andy and I. As a added bonus for our viewers we will have more back channel content this year than last. We will also be streaming some of our content live. Contact me for interview information or a sponsorship kit for our 2009 CES Coverage ceo@rawvoice.com


Podcasting Advertising – Smart Choice in Crappy Economy



I spent about a hour on the phone today with a media buyer who is exploring the podcasting advertising space for the first time. She represents a well known Fortune 500 company.

As we talked I asked her why it had taken them so long for them to look into advertising in podcast. Her reply was “we have to get smarter in a crappy economy”.

Overall the conversation was a very good one and I hope to introduce the company in Quarter 1 2009.

The most amazing part of the conversation was when we talked budgets when I laid out dollar amounts she got pretty excited. In essence she said you mean I can reach XX,XXX,XXX number of people in my exact demographic for X number of dollars and spend less for 90 days of advertising reaching who I want to reach, that what I spend in one week on TV which has no such guarantees.

When my answer was of course followed by we back it up with proven metrics she was stunned.

Podcast Advertising is a Smart Choice in a Crappy Economy!

Want to know more about advertising in Podcast in a Crappy economy contact me at ceo@rawvoice.com


Apple – Podcast – App Store & Rest of Story



NoiphoneApple really upset the developer community last month when it rejected several podcasting applications from being approved to the iPhone App Store. With the upcoming 2.2 iPhone software the real reason may now be known!

It appears that Apple has added stand alone downloading of podcast directly to your iPhone without the need of using iTunes in version 2.2.

If indeed this is what they have done, it proves that Apple was Anti-Competitive in denying the applications that were made for this same purpose. Their heave handed actions was to get rid of the competition before they added their own functionality.

I remain committed to only building Android Applications due to this apparent anti-competitive nature that Apple has.  Thanks JW for the Tip