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Write You - The Ten Key Questions In Direct Response Radio Advertising
When Losing Your Job....How to Stay Positive ct appeals that will be successful for your specific direct response radio advertising campaign, which is why in-market testing occurs in the next phase.As we go through todays business cycles of ups and downs, it will not be uncommon for us to experience a layoff or job loss for one reason or another. When a job is loss, it is much like any other loss we experience in our life, (1) an ending, followed by (2) a period of confusion and distress, leading to (3) a new beginning. We feel this sense of loss because overtime we begin to identify ourselves with the circumstances of our lives. Who we think we are is partly defined by the roles and relationships that we have. When you lose a job there are a few things to keep in mind in moving through it:Remember it is not about you. Most businesses lay off based on certain financial targets and commitments they have made to the shareholders, bankers, and/or Board of Directors that may be at risk. Often it is about the survival 7. Who is the target consumer segment? Describe them in terms of age, sex, socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions. 8. What are the strongest motivations for this customer segment to buy this type or class of product? What does the customer hope to gain by purchasing, and what loss would the customer avoid by purchasing? 9. What objections or excuses might the customer use to delay or avoid buying the product? What is the answer to each of the objections or excuses? Business Question: 10. How will you measure success? This a very important question and the one most often unanswered going into the testing phase. Ideally, you will know exactly what media CPO (cost per order) is required for you to achieve break-even profitability. Armed with this information, you'll have a context with which to view the results of advertising tests. Without it, you are in danger of either pulling the Logistics At Wal-Mart IntroductionMany people wonder how Wal-Mart is able to charge such low prices and continue to make a profit. There are several factors in their business model that contribute to this ability, but a big one is their ability to adapt to an ever-changing global marketplace. Some criticize Wal-Mart's efforts to deliver to their customers a quality product at low prices, but in reality, Wal-Mart has been able to deliver low prices by being efficient. This efficiency is present in several areas but one of the most important places is how they are able to manufacture products all over the world and get them to retail outlets, which are also all over the world. This ability requires a flawless logistical system that allows product to be shipped anywhere at a moments notice.One of the keys to Wal-Mart's effective logistical system is the flex Successful radio advertising campaigns require that certain fundamental pieces of information about the product (or service), customers, and business be clearly understood by everyone involved in the effort. Sales, marketing, customer service and the radio advertising agency should all have the chance to provide input from their perspective, and all of these groups should be operating with the same set of complete information. Without this foundation of common understanding, the chances of your radio advertising campaign being successful are diminished. Why? Because you slip from a methodical, disciplined approach to building your business profitably with direct response radio advertising to a more haphazard and risky approach that relies on luck. Successful direct response radio advertisers earn their way to great wealth by taking a disciplined approach. The questions we'll outline below are to be answered as part of just such a disciplined approach and they are meant to be addressed during the pre-launch phase of building your radio advertising campaign. In many respects, building a successful direct response radio advertising campaign requires a mentality akin to that of a researcher. Researchers uncover knowledge about a particular topic. The first step in research is identifying the problem you are trying to solve. In the case of direct response radio advertising, you are trying to solve the following "problem(s)": - Creative: which advertising appeals will result in the highest number of most qualified leads? Answering these questions will minimize your media CPO, thereby maximizing your radio advertising (and overall business) profitability. The list of questions that follows is aimed at guiding any potential radio advertiser down the road to solving the above "problems". The answers to these questions are the input into creating and testing a hypothesis (again, thinking like a researcher) about which combination of radio advertising appeals and radio media targeting will result in the most profitable radio advertising campaign. The 10 Key Questions Note: we'll use the word "product", however the following thought process is also applied to services, events, and other items that are promoted in direct response radio advertising campaigns. Product Questions: 1. What benefits does the product provide to its users? What problems does it solve? In what ways does the product make the user's life better? Be sure to identify key claims that can legally be made about the degree of benefits to the product user. 2. How does the product work? It is important to note that this is input information only. One of the biggest mistakes in creating advertising of any type is an over-emphasis on features and not benefits. Discussing how the product works can lead advertisers astray, into the world of the "neat" factor and out of the world of what matters to your target customers - what the product does for them. 3. How is the product different? Be sure to compare the product to alternatives or substitutes, as well as to competing products. Also include information about any patents, trademarks or clinical test results. 4. What offers may be used in the radio advertisement? For example, is there a free trial, free shipping, or a bonus quantity with purchase? 5. What are the distribution channel(s) that will be used for the product? (Web, retail, direct) 6. Are customer testimonials, expert endorsements, or a corporate spokesperson available for use in the radio ad? Customer Questions: Answering the following questions requires at least some customer research. It may be primary research (for example, conducting a qualitative focus group or a quantitative survey), or secondary research (reviewing qualitative or quantitative research compiled by others about your product category that you can apply to your specific situation). Don't overlook your current customer base and results from prior tests as a source of valuable customer information, but be aware that this data will not be randomly collected (i.e. to some degree your current customers will be a reflection of the advertising that brought them in). In any case, research will not spell out the exact appeals that will be successful for your specific direct response radio advertising campaign, which is why in-market testing occurs in the next phase. 7. Who is the target consumer segment? Describe them in terms of age, sex, socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions. 8. What are the strongest motivations for this customer segment to buy this type or class of product? What does the customer hope to gain by purchasing, and what loss would the customer avoid by purchasing? 9. What objections or excuses might the customer use to delay or avoid buying the product? What is the answer to each of the objections or excuses? Business Question: 10. How will you measure success? This a very important question and the one most often unanswered going into the testing phase. Ideally, you will know exactly what media CPO (cost per order) is required for you to achieve break-even profitability. Armed with this information, you'll have a context with which to view the results of advertising tests. Without it, you are in danger of either pulling the p Concerned with the Bottom Line? Consider Expense Management Automation - Part II any respects, building a successful direct response radio advertising campaign requires a mentality akin to that of a researcher. Researchers uncover knowledge about a particular topic. The first step in research is identifying the problem you are trying to solve. In the case of direct response radio advertising, you are trying to solve the following "problem(s)":What we covered in Part I:In Most organizations, travel and entertainment (T&E) expenses are often overlooked as insignificant or inevitable. Because of that, they do not immediately come to mind in the context of traditional supply chains.Understanding Expenses Many leading global companies with the most sophisticated ERP systems can provide detail such as the exact quantity, location and price of the smallest component of a commodity in their products supply chain.The Power of EMA As is true with any automated process, EMA is about enhancing collaboration, streamlining processes, controlling costs, and enhancing the information exchange within and across organizational boundaries.Part II:Functions of Expense Management AutomationExpense Mana - Creative: which advertising appeals will result in the highest number of most qualified leads? Answering these questions will minimize your media CPO, thereby maximizing your radio advertising (and overall business) profitability. The list of questions that follows is aimed at guiding any potential radio advertiser down the road to solving the above "problems". The answers to these questions are the input into creating and testing a hypothesis (again, thinking like a researcher) about which combination of radio advertising appeals and radio media targeting will result in the most profitable radio advertising campaign. The 10 Key Questions Note: we'll use the word "product", however the following thought process is also applied to services, events, and other items that are promoted in direct response radio advertising campaigns. Product Questions: 1. What benefits does the product provide to its users? What problems does it solve? In what ways does the product make the user's life better? Be sure to identify key claims that can legally be made about the degree of benefits to the product user. 2. How does the product work? It is important to note that this is input information only. One of the biggest mistakes in creating advertising of any type is an over-emphasis on features and not benefits. Discussing how the product works can lead advertisers astray, into the world of the "neat" factor and out of the world of what matters to your target customers - what the product does for them. 3. How is the product different? Be sure to compare the product to alternatives or substitutes, as well as to competing products. Also include information about any patents, trademarks or clinical test results. 4. What offers may be used in the radio advertisement? For example, is there a free trial, free shipping, or a bonus quantity with purchase? 5. What are the distribution channel(s) that will be used for the product? (Web, retail, direct) 6. Are customer testimonials, expert endorsements, or a corporate spokesperson available for use in the radio ad? Customer Questions: Answering the following questions requires at least some customer research. It may be primary research (for example, conducting a qualitative focus group or a quantitative survey), or secondary research (reviewing qualitative or quantitative research compiled by others about your product category that you can apply to your specific situation). Don't overlook your current customer base and results from prior tests as a source of valuable customer information, but be aware that this data will not be randomly collected (i.e. to some degree your current customers will be a reflection of the advertising that brought them in). In any case, research will not spell out the exact appeals that will be successful for your specific direct response radio advertising campaign, which is why in-market testing occurs in the next phase. 7. Who is the target consumer segment? Describe them in terms of age, sex, socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions. 8. What are the strongest motivations for this customer segment to buy this type or class of product? What does the customer hope to gain by purchasing, and what loss would the customer avoid by purchasing? 9. What objections or excuses might the customer use to delay or avoid buying the product? What is the answer to each of the objections or excuses? Business Question: 10. How will you measure success? This a very important question and the one most often unanswered going into the testing phase. Ideally, you will know exactly what media CPO (cost per order) is required for you to achieve break-even profitability. Armed with this information, you'll have a context with which to view the results of advertising tests. Without it, you are in danger of either pulling the News Flash!! Bad Speling Afekts Biznez! 10 Key QuestionsDid you know that somewhere around 50% of all websites have one or more of the following problems?* typing errors* spelling mistakes* grammatical problems* punctuation problems.Wow! A whopping 50%!Hard to believe??No, I don't think it is.In my daily business life I briefly skim or read anywhere up to hundreds of web pages, brochures, flyers, business cards and emails per day.I'm lucky - I've got a *proofreader's eye* [I'll give it back soon - haha] which means that mistakes like those mentioned above just JUMP OFF THE PAGE and draw my attention to them.I can't help myself - I'm a wordsmith, a lover of words, and despite all those years at school with my eyes rolling back in my head with boredom during the English class, the information somehow seeped into my brai Note: we'll use the word "product", however the following thought process is also applied to services, events, and other items that are promoted in direct response radio advertising campaigns. Product Questions: 1. What benefits does the product provide to its users? What problems does it solve? In what ways does the product make the user's life better? Be sure to identify key claims that can legally be made about the degree of benefits to the product user. 2. How does the product work? It is important to note that this is input information only. One of the biggest mistakes in creating advertising of any type is an over-emphasis on features and not benefits. Discussing how the product works can lead advertisers astray, into the world of the "neat" factor and out of the world of what matters to your target customers - what the product does for them. 3. How is the product different? Be sure to compare the product to alternatives or substitutes, as well as to competing products. Also include information about any patents, trademarks or clinical test results. 4. What offers may be used in the radio advertisement? For example, is there a free trial, free shipping, or a bonus quantity with purchase? 5. What are the distribution channel(s) that will be used for the product? (Web, retail, direct) 6. Are customer testimonials, expert endorsements, or a corporate spokesperson available for use in the radio ad? Customer Questions: Answering the following questions requires at least some customer research. It may be primary research (for example, conducting a qualitative focus group or a quantitative survey), or secondary research (reviewing qualitative or quantitative research compiled by others about your product category that you can apply to your specific situation). Don't overlook your current customer base and results from prior tests as a source of valuable customer information, but be aware that this data will not be randomly collected (i.e. to some degree your current customers will be a reflection of the advertising that brought them in). In any case, research will not spell out the exact appeals that will be successful for your specific direct response radio advertising campaign, which is why in-market testing occurs in the next phase. 7. Who is the target consumer segment? Describe them in terms of age, sex, socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions. 8. What are the strongest motivations for this customer segment to buy this type or class of product? What does the customer hope to gain by purchasing, and what loss would the customer avoid by purchasing? 9. What objections or excuses might the customer use to delay or avoid buying the product? What is the answer to each of the objections or excuses? Business Question: 10. How will you measure success? This a very important question and the one most often unanswered going into the testing phase. Ideally, you will know exactly what media CPO (cost per order) is required for you to achieve break-even profitability. Armed with this information, you'll have a context with which to view the results of advertising tests. Without it, you are in danger of either pulling the Total Customer Service - A Priority Of Ensuring Results rks or clinical test results.Total Customer Service is a business as well as an administrative philosophy standing erect on the foundation that an organization is actually honoring people. Yes, people who are inside and outside the organization. Furthermore the relationship between these two groups of people that actually produce the results preferably a win-win for all.Total Customer Service fits a public, a private, or a professional organization that is being set up in the first place to proceed and grow by offering an idea, a product or a service, to the customers. Thus the practice of Total Customer Service is what these organizations shall put first as the top priority.What is Total Customer Service? Any individual owner or leader of an organization can define it in any way he or she wants to, yet that definition looses its meaning, importan 4. What offers may be used in the radio advertisement? For example, is there a free trial, free shipping, or a bonus quantity with purchase? 5. What are the distribution channel(s) that will be used for the product? (Web, retail, direct) 6. Are customer testimonials, expert endorsements, or a corporate spokesperson available for use in the radio ad? Customer Questions: Answering the following questions requires at least some customer research. It may be primary research (for example, conducting a qualitative focus group or a quantitative survey), or secondary research (reviewing qualitative or quantitative research compiled by others about your product category that you can apply to your specific situation). Don't overlook your current customer base and results from prior tests as a source of valuable customer information, but be aware that this data will not be randomly collected (i.e. to some degree your current customers will be a reflection of the advertising that brought them in). In any case, research will not spell out the exact appeals that will be successful for your specific direct response radio advertising campaign, which is why in-market testing occurs in the next phase. 7. Who is the target consumer segment? Describe them in terms of age, sex, socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions. 8. What are the strongest motivations for this customer segment to buy this type or class of product? What does the customer hope to gain by purchasing, and what loss would the customer avoid by purchasing? 9. What objections or excuses might the customer use to delay or avoid buying the product? What is the answer to each of the objections or excuses? Business Question: 10. How will you measure success? This a very important question and the one most often unanswered going into the testing phase. Ideally, you will know exactly what media CPO (cost per order) is required for you to achieve break-even profitability. Armed with this information, you'll have a context with which to view the results of advertising tests. Without it, you are in danger of either pulling the A High End Cleaner Machine ct appeals that will be successful for your specific direct response radio advertising campaign, which is why in-market testing occurs in the next phase.Bulk debris could be a menace to the public or would slow down traffics inside an industrial environment. Applying highly workable vacuum cleaners for exclusive industrial purpose to suction the pile of waste materials could command the great need thatd impossibly be done by manual labor lacking full-packed energy and full speed.Industrial Vacuum Cleaner is prepared to suction considerable amount of waist materials scattered in commercial areas with high-junk disposables. It is a highly designed high-powered machine produced to meet the demands in collecting considerable volume of manufacturing facilities with tremendous capabilities and efficacy even the tiniest littered drop in a certain area.IDENTIFYING FUNCTIONS OF THE INDUSTRIAL VACUUM CLEANER FROM OTHER VACUUM CLEANERSIt has high output level and has a 7. Who is the target consumer segment? Describe them in terms of age, sex, socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions. 8. What are the strongest motivations for this customer segment to buy this type or class of product? What does the customer hope to gain by purchasing, and what loss would the customer avoid by purchasing? 9. What objections or excuses might the customer use to delay or avoid buying the product? What is the answer to each of the objections or excuses? Business Question: 10. How will you measure success? This a very important question and the one most often unanswered going into the testing phase. Ideally, you will know exactly what media CPO (cost per order) is required for you to achieve break-even profitability. Armed with this information, you'll have a context with which to view the results of advertising tests. Without it, you are in danger of either pulling the plug on a profitable campaign or rolling out an unprofitable campaign. Conclusion Once you've answered these questions, you're ready for the next step. It's time to pull together a well-rationed hypothesis about which set of appeals, distilled into a creative approach that ultimately ends up as a radio ad, is likely to work the best. This is a challenging phase because it entails dealing with a large amount of information and a large number of alternatives. Additionally, identifying appeals is only the first step - articulating those appeals is also very important and nuanced. Most often your radio advertising agency will conduct this exercise because they're experienced in dealing with these challenges, but it should be iterative with the client team. Almost always it turns out that more than one creative approach seems to make strong sense. This is appropriate because you will ultimately test a minimum of two approaches (two different radio ads) since what we are trying to learn is which approach works best. As this is a comparative exercise, it requires comparing two ads.
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