1 / 33

Interactive Ad of the Day

Interactive Ad of the Day. Let us pause and pay tribute. C3 Ratings. Advertising Principles and Practices. Media Planning and Buying. Key Media Planning Decisions. Target Audience and Media Use Match the advertiser’s target with a particular medium’s audience. The Aperture Concept

eagan-oneil
Télécharger la présentation

Interactive Ad of the Day

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Interactive Ad of the Day

  2. Let us pause and pay tribute

  3. C3 Ratings

  4. Advertising Principles and Practices Media Planning and Buying

  5. Key Media Planning Decisions • Target Audience and Media Use • Match the advertiser’s target with a particular medium’s audience. • The Aperture Concept • Aperture: when consumers are most receptive to a brand message. • The goal is to reach the right people at the right time with the right message. Principle: Advertising is most effective when it reaches the right people at the right time and place with the right message.

  6. The Core Concepts • Reach: % of audience exposed at least once. • Frequency: # of times a person sees it, on average. • Effective reach: % of people who’ve seen it 3+ times (or more). • Frequency distribution: Exactly how many see how often.

  7. Key Media Planning Decisions Principle: Reach is the first place to start in setting objectives for a media plan. Principle: The tighter the focus on a target market, the easier it is to find appropriate media to deliver a relevant message

  8. Delivering on Objectives • Plans may emphasize reach or frequency • High reach strategy • Used to deliver reminders for well-known products • Used to launch a new, easy-to-understand product • Low frequency strategy • Used with well-known brands and simple messages • High frequency strategy • Used with more complex products that require repetition • Used to build excitement about a new product or event • Used to counter competition or build share of voice

  9. Because frequency is an average • …it can be misleading

  10. Frequency Distribution

  11. Who am I?

  12. Back in the day or why is a soap opera a soap opera? • The Hucksters

  13. Repeat it, repeat it, repeat it. • What media concept is Mr. Evans a fan of?

  14. Reach vs. frequency • An age-old debate. • In some schools of thought, one is an effective frequency level. • Meet John Philip Jones

  15. The greatest commercial ever made

  16. Who am I?

  17. The Second Greatest

  18. Page 323 “The goal of media planning is to maximize efficiency”

  19. Sheehan’s 4th Law “The goal of media planning is to maximize efficiency and impact.” In other words, Efficiency = $/Impact Efficiency Goal: $/Impact, across time

  20. Cost per thousand (CPM) Cost of message unit x 1,000 Gross Impressions Cost per point (CPP) Cost of message unit Program or issue rating Cost Efficiency: CPMs and CPPs • Used to measure a target audience’s size against the cost of reaching that audience

  21. Practice Sheets

  22. Back to the Future The Wonderful World of Disney Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom

  23. Bewitched Chevrolet • Bewitched Quaker

  24. Product Placement

  25. Scheduling Strategies • Flighting strategy • Alternating periods of intense advertising activity (bursts) and no advertising (hiatus). • Pulsing strategy • Advertising is intensified (peaks) before an aperture and reduced to lower levels (valleys) until the aperture reopens; bursts of activity.

  26. Where to spend your money.Geography • CDI: Category Development Index % of sales/% of population • BDI: Brand Development Index: % of brand sales/% of population

  27. IF… • There is a CDI of 122 and you have a BDI of 87, what does it mean? • There is a CDI of 95, and you have a BDI of 116, what does it mean? • Should you spend more money (“heavy up”) in high or low BDI markets?

  28. Delivering on the Media Mix Strategy • Media Weighting • How much to budget in each DMA or region and for each target group. • Used with seasonality, geography, audience segments, or level of brand development by DMA. • Size, Length, and Position • Based on advertising objectives. • A technical/informational ad may require more time or space while a reminder add will require less. • Media Optimization Modeling • A computer technique that enables marketers to determine the relative impact of a media mix on product sales and optimize efficiency.

  29. Scheduling Strategies • Timing strategies: When to advertise? • Seasonality, holidays, days of the week, time of day • Lead time: time between thinking about purchase and purchasing; also refers to production time to get an ad in a medium • Duration: How long? • Advertisers can’t afford to cover the entire year • If the period is too short, the message may not have sufficient impact • If the period is too long, the ads may suffer from wearout • Continuity: How often? • How advertising is spread out over the length of the campaign • Continuous strategy spreads ads evenly over campaign period

  30. The Media Budget • The size of the budget greatly affects media decisions • Local vs. national • TV vs. radio • At the end of the planning process, the media planner develops a pie chart showing media allocations

  31. The Central Role of Media Research

  32. Media Buying • A media plan is a set of recommendations a client must approve before further action. • Once approved, media buyers convert objectives and strategies into tactics. • Provide inside information to media planners • Select specific media vehicles • Negotiate and contract for time and space • Bargain for preferred positions • Secure extra support/value-added media services • Monitor media choices during and after the campaign • Handle billing and payment • Ensure make goods • Perform post-campaign evaluation

  33. Functions of a Media Buyer

More Related