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The Radio ConnectionIn today’s fast paced environment, interaction with family and friends is often relegated to a few left over minutes here and there, leaving many people feeling isolated. Radio fills the gap. Radio provides a one on one emotional experience. It easily creates a connection that is personal and unique for each listener. It’s just you and the voice on the radio, speaking to you. TV and print media are mass media. Print is an especially difficult medium to elicit an emotional reaction with. TV is emotional but not personal. You know it’s you and the thousands of others who are watching the same show. As an advertiser, you have an opportunity to speak directly to your customer, using words and phrases that have meaning for them. Radio can relate messages that have synergy with campaigns in other media, but shouldn’t be written in the same style. Effective radio is a conversation with the customer. It’s your chance to tell a story. Would you be interested in a story that started with a company name or with the following? “ We have friendly, knowledgeable staff. Stop in and see us. We have 20 colours of sofas in a variety of sizes and styles.” Boring isn’t it? It’s easy to talk about your business and what you want to sell. It takes more time and effort to talk about what your customer wants, but it’s worth it. It’s easier to get quick results by announcing a sale, than it is to build a relationship with the public. Where do you think those sale shoppers will be when your competition is having a sale, not at your business I bet? Another of radio’s great strengths is its ability to reach a defined market segment. When you buy newspaper advertising, you buy their whole and very general readership, all the demographics and special interest groups. Now it’s not a bad thing to reach more people, but if you have a limited budget you can spend it very quickly in your daily paper, on one ad,…. one day, ….one time. That’s not a great frequency and just hit and miss reach. What if your best prospects don’t read the paper on the day your ad runs? Radio gives you an opportunity to target the age and interests of your segment of the market. With the same budget as a reasonable sized ad in your daily newspaper, you can buy a whole week of radio commercials. Don’t get sidetracked by commercial prices at the top stations. It is not about reaching a huge number of prospects a few times. It’s about reaching a smaller number of listeners enough times so they feel they know and like you, and want to do business with you. Spend time and money creating a message that conveys a message your customers can relate to. Have you ever bought something you just had to have, and then gone home and explained logically to a family member why it was an essential? You bought on emotion and justified with logic, the same thing your customer does. Forget generic when it comes to radio. This is one time it pays to get personal. In the US the norm is 60 seconds for a radio commercial, in Canada 30 seconds. If you’ve got a great story to tell and you’re a good storyteller, use 60 seconds otherwise the shorter commercial is better. The only thing worse than boring the listener for 30 seconds, is boring them for 60. Frequency to raise awareness for your business name and purpose in speaking to them can be achieved economically by adding a schedule of sponsorships and/or 10-15 second messages. This is a good example of a 30 second radio script that connected with the customer. How do we know it connected? Sales increased.
On radio, as in all your advertising, you need to keep it simple. A soliloquy well written and well read, is much more effective than something with too many words, more than one point to make, lots of noise or a conversation between a two or more people. Points to remember:
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