Radio versus Social Media

Radio versus Social Media

For the past few years, President Donald Trump has called the major news media Fake News. Meanwhile the commentators on the networks and news organization he calls Fake, call the Presidents favorite channel Fake News.  I’m not about to dive into a political rabbit hole but this is just one example of how we as consumers have been losing trust in the long standing traditional news media, no matter what side you are on, there’s someone on the other side that will say, you’re wrong and they are right.

What led to this widespread division is not just what the news organizations are doing, but the availability for anyone and everyone to become their own “media”.  I’m talking about Social Media.

We can forget about Tom and MySpace which was the forerunner to Facebook.  MySpace is still around but Tom skipped town.

Facebook is attempting to take over the world, still but in light of what they have been doing with data collection and arguing over their legal liabilities, Facebook is losing ground when it comes to Trust. 

I just read a story that summarized findings of a survey taken this summer by Engagement Labs that points out how badly the trust factor in Social Media has fallen this year.  How bad is it?  “Facebook down 56%, Instagram down 38% and Twitter down 140%”

Yikes.

Now before I go any further with sharing the results from this story, I want you to know where I am coming from.  Since 2003 I have worked exclusively in the marketing world.  8 years at a group of radio stations, followed by some shorter positions working for a website development company that specialized in marketing solutions, another several months back in radio, followed by nearly a year as the “Social Media Magician” at an ecommerce company before I returned to radio again in 2013.  

The ScLoHo brand came about due to my online activity I was doing 15 years ago.  I have lived in both social and online media along with traditional media for a long time and I know the strengths and weaknesses of all of it.  The company I work for has a digital division and I can probably out debate anyone on the pros and cons of all this. 

Back to this story and survey from this summer…

A new survey of radio listeners finds their trust in radio and its personalities continues to grow as social media has become far less trustworthy during the past year. Conducted by data and analytics firm Engagement Labs and commissioned by iHeartMedia, the study shows listeners ages 18-69 place higher trust in radio than in television or social media and that 79% of respondents said radio is more or just as trustworthy compared to a year ago while social media is 50% less trustworthy during the same time period.

Here’s more specific numbers:

Among radio listeners 18-69, the survey found 75% trust radio, 66% trust television, 57% trust websites, 38% trust Twitter and 37% trust Facebook.

My radio station, WOWO Radio is a news/talk formated station and I just received data relating to our listenership and the trust factor that I’ll share in a few weeks.

One more quote from this story:

The survey also found that an overwhelming majority of respondents indicated that radio improves their mood, helps them feel less isolated and more connected to their community. More than three-fourth of respondents (77%) trust the information they receive from their favorite on-air hosts. In addition, heavy radio listeners were found to wield robust word of mouth power for advertisers, having more brand conversations and more influence than heavy internet users and TV viewers.

It’s that last part, the robust word of mouth power for advertisers that I’ll gladly talk to you about specifically with regards to WOWO radio if you reach out to me and I’ll also be including that information in an upcoming article and podcast.

 

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Work for WOWO

Work for WOWO

The final weeks of 2021 are here and I have an update for you. I just started running an ad for an advertising sales account executive to join my team at WOWO.  And I’ve included a healthy hiring bonus.  Here’s the text of the radio ad:

It’s true. Everyone is hiring. But you’re not just anyone. You’re a self-motivated, over-achiever who’s looking for a new career home. Have you considered that home might be right here, working for your favorite radio station? The legendary WOWO radio has been making an impact on our community nearly a century, and I’m looking for our next radio sales account executive to join our growing team. This is Scott Howard, General Sales Manager for WOWO radio. We invest in you before day one on the job: it starts when you take our free sales talent assessment.  Text sales to 46862. That’s sales to 46862 to receive your free talent assessment. With only one sales opening, do it right now! If you wait, you’ll also miss out on the five thousand dollar, $5000, $5000 sign on bonus. That’s right – a five thousand dollar sign on bonus for the next WOWO account executive. Text sales to 46862 so we can start investing in you at Federated Media; or send me an email: scott@wowo.com. Federated Media  an equal opportunity employer.

 

Why WOWO is the Best Choice for Advertising (Part One)

Why WOWO is the Best Choice for Advertising (Part One)

Today I’m kicking off an occasional series of Why WOWO Radio in Fort Wayne, Indiana is the Best Choice for Advertising Your Business. I am calling it an occasional series because, every few weeks I’ll add another article interspersed with the other articles I share each week on this website and the Genuine ScLoHo Media & Marketing Podcast.

While just this year I was named the General Sales Manager for WOWO radio, and this is my 7th year working for WOWO, I’ve been writing and publishing these stories and insights for over 15 years.  Pretty soon, I’ll have my 20th anniversary of returning to the media and marketing world in Fort Wayne after having worked in radio in Detroit and other places too.

Recently Marketing Charts.com published a story on the “Graying of America” that caught my attention. I’m a young Baby Boomer and for most of my life, I was part of the most sought after demographic for advertisers.  I was part of the Pepsi Generation.  Until I turned 55 that is.

See, in my work in advertising, the desired demographic was either the 18 to 34 year olds when the Baby Boomers were that age, and then more recently 25 to 54 year olds were the hot target market.

When the advertising guru’s followed the Boomers in to middle life with that initial switch, many of them forgot what they were chasing.  As the Boomers got older, the advertising people stayed with the 25-54 year olds which was foolish.

Why?

Because the age 55 and older people in America are not the same as their grandparents were when they were in their 60’s.  We didn’t turn into a bunch of grumpy old men and women sitting around playing checkers and reminiscing about the good old days.  We blew that stereotype sky-high.

Boomers have more money, more free time, more overall freedom and they’re not sitting around waiting to die.

Coupled with the misconception of what Boomer are doing, the advertising people ignored the fact that the younger generations are smaller.  That’s what this story from Marketing Charts dot com points out.

Over the past 10 years, since 2010 the number of pre-teens has been going down, so has the teenage population and college crowd.  There has been 11 percent growth in the 25 to 34 year olds, but less than 2% growth in the 35 to 44 age group.  45 to 54 year old population had a big loss of over 9% in the past decade. So if you are targeting your advertising to 25 to 54 year olds today, there are statistically fewer of them.  That mean less people to buy your stuff than a decade or two ago.

When you compare that with the growth of the older population…

55 to 64 year olds grew in size by over 15%; 65 to 74 year old grew by  almost 45%; and even the 75 and older crowd grew by more than 20% in the past decade.

Clearly the Baby Boomer population is still alive and kicking, and not just dying off.  Some Boomers parents are very active in their 80’s and 90’s.

WOWO Radio has been the most listened to radio station for adults age 25 and older for years and admittedly the biggest chunk of our listenership was age 50 and older.  But we’re not our grandparents.  We’re upgrading our lifestyles, socking it away for retirement one day and living longer, healthier lives than previous 50, 60, and 70 year olds were.

One more statistic I noticed this summer from our most recent ratings survey was that the WOWO Radio audience is becoming more diverse.  We are also getting younger listeners, those between the age of 25 and 50 have grown in the past year.  Another trend is the ratio of men and women listening to WOWO Radio.  We used to be 60% guys and 40% women 10 years ago.  Today it’s nearly 50/50.

Let’s wrap this up with a few more facts and figures from the Marketing Charts report.  Baby Boomers have more than 54% of the nations wealth, and if you add it the money from the next older generation, that’s where 75% of the buying power is in America.  These people are also the least affected by the fall out of COVID-19.   And these are the WOWO Radio listeners.

There you have it, Part One of Why WOWO is the Best Choice for Advertising.  Contact me to get started with a campaign to marketing your business.

 

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Breaking The Rule Of 3

Breaking The Rule Of 3

Last week I shared with you the “rule of 3”.

It’s a standard rule in communication that says in order for a message to really be remembered, you have to hear it 3 times.

Feel free to go back and read about how this is used in teaching and preaching.

In the advertising world, this is usually important too and is a formula we use in creating ads.  When I write ads for clients or even for myself, and I am wanting listeners to remember a website as the call to action, I mention the web address 3 times in a 60 second commercial.

I have been running ads on my radio station, WOWO radio for over a year that offer free business tips if you send an email to Scott@WOWO.com and I get results from those ads because I give my email address 3 times in the ad.

Now there are other reasons why I get results too and that’s what we are going to talk about today.

WOWO’s audience is consistently the largest radio audience in Fort Wayne. We have more adults age 25 and older listening every week than any other station. That is another reason we get results for our advertisers.

Right messaging to a large audience sounds like a winning formula, right?

However there are some special characteristics of the WOWO radio audience that allows us to break the rule of 3 sometimes.

WOWO is a news and talk radio station, so our listeners are not using us as background music.  Many music stations have what I call passive listeners.  They may listen to their favorite music station but it’s not something that they are doing as a primary activity.  The music plays while they are working or driving or doing stuff around the house.  When ads play on a music radio station, many listeners subconsciously or even deliberately tune out.  The impact of an advertisement playing on a music station is less than a talk station, generally speaking.

Ads on a music radio station are also more likely perceived as an irritant. 40 years ago when I was a top-40 radio personality and the station I worked for created and promoted “commercial-free-music sweeps”, we were actually implying to our listeners that listening to ads on the radio was bad.

Compare that to a radio station like WOWO that doesn’t play background music. As a news and talk radio station, WOWO is foreground listening, not background. WOWO listeners are more “tuned in” mentally and emotionally to the words they hear on WOWO compared to a music radio station. So when an advertisement comes on WOWO radio, yes it’s still an ad, but it is less of an irritant compared to an ad on a music station.

Both music stations and talk stations can create emotional bonds with their audiences.  We recently saw the departure of a couple of morning shows on two of our companies music stations and listeners were sadden and expressed it on social media.  But both stations listenership levels remained steady despite the change in personalities.

Talk radio, is different.  The radio personality sets the tone for the show and the bond with the listener is huge.

Here’s how the rule of 3 applies and how we can break it on WOWO.

As a loyal listener to WOWO for years before I started working here in 2013, I had a perception of certain businesses that I thought advertised all the time.  Turns out I was wrong.  One example from nearly 20 years ago was a small meat market and deli that I would hear the afternoon talk show host talk about all the time and how they had the best ham salad made fresh in their store.  Turns out the ad ran once a week.

My jaw dropped when I learned this.  Because I was usually listening to WOWO on Friday afternoons which was the one day this ad would air, I thought they were a major advertiser, when in fact they were doing the bare minimum and getting results.  They broke the rule of 3.

However, here’s why they were successful despite having such a small advertising schedule. They were long term.  They may not have been following the rule of 3 on a weekly basis, but over time, yes it worked.

These days, we don’t accept advertising schedules that are that small on WOWO because the rule of three is still important.  Often what we recommend is that businesses follow the rule of 3 when they begin with WOWO so listeners can build familiarity with them as quickly as possible.  I start with placing all of their ads on one of our 3 hour talk shows.  If you air 10 or 15 times per week in a 15 hour radio show, you can create a level of trust and familiarity with that audience. Then, we can make adjustments over time to expand their advertising to include other shows on WOWO in order to expand their audience.

The rule of 3 when applied to music radio stations usually means buying 21 ads per week which divided over 7 days = 3 per day. But as I mentioned earlier, the effectiveness of those ads are probably less simply because of the listening environment and attentiveness of the audience.

Before you decide to use the rule of 3, or break the rule of 3, I urge you to talk with me or a member of my marketing team to craft a campaign that fits all the criteria needed to be a profitable investment for you and your business.

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Reboot Your Business

Reboot Your Business

Do you remember at the end of 2019 how we thought it would be really cool to hear Barbara Walters welcome in the new year by saying,
“This is 2020”, the way she did for 25 years.

Little did we know what kind of year 2020 would be, not just in our own little worlds but the entire world.  I’ve seen friends ask if we can go back 6 months and do this over again, but the answer is no, we just need to ReBoot 2020 and your business given the circumstance we have now.

There are some big changes that have occurred in the way businesses operate and yet there are some things that haven’t really changed.

Some call it the differences between tactics and strategies. Wikipedia says:

The terms tactic and strategy are often confused: tactics are the actual means used to gain an objective, while strategy is the overall campaign plan.

In terms of rebooting your business, there are certain tactics that have changed, such as social distancing, or offering curbside pickup for your customers.  Meetings with clients now include video which was a bit on the controversial side 6 months ago or at least cutting edge.

What about the advertising and marketing?  Some of the patterns we saw 6 months ago are continuing while others are completely different.

Broadcasting, the world I work in has seen television’s model having to make some drastic changes while my radio world has been pretty stable for the listeners at least.

On the TV side, they halted production of the network shows and jumped to reruns or come up with a broadcast from home version of many shows which isn’t the same as before.  I don’t know if or when my favorite shows are returning to production.  Meanwhile at my radio station, WOWO in Fort Wayne, we implemented a couple of changes to accommodate our afternoon talk show host who has a weakened immune system due to the anti-rejection meds he is on after having kidney transplant surgery a few years ago.  Pat Miller broadcasts his show from his home every afternoon for the foreseeable future. The host of Fort Wayne’s Morning News on WOWO also did her show from home for 10 weeks since was pregnant with her firstborn.  Kayla did her show live every morning up until her water broke live while she was on the air.  We lined up 8 weeks of fill-in hosts while she is out, but everything on our station sounds normal.

As WOWO radio has experienced a big uptick in online listening as people were now listening from home on their smart speakers and looking at the stats, those numbers are still up there as the travel restrictions are being lifted.

The tactics of listening to WOWO shifted to more devices than just the traditional radio, but the strategy never changed.  We didn’t change our programming or anything like that.  Let’s see how we can apply that to your business moving forward.

Are you going to still provide the same basic services and products as you were before?  That’s the strategy.

Are you offering different or additional ways for consumers to receive your products and services?  That’s the tactics.

Also remember the timeless principles like honesty, fairness, under promise but over deliver. Keep your word and never stop inviting people to do business with you with advertising and marketing.

That’s how you can successfully ReBoot Your Business for the rest of 2020 and beyond.

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Radio versus Social Media

Radio To The Rescue

What advertising and marketing medium should I use right now, is a question I hear all the time and especially now.

As you know, I have spent the majority of my life in the radio business, starting out as a teenage disc jockey and then 10 years later moving to the business side in advertising and marketing.  I also have walked away a couple of times and learned out to drive a forklift and run a plastics thermoformer for a living.

I also left the radio business a couple of times to work in the online world and know a thing or two about website development, social media and digital marketing.  I even have spent time in the print business working with newspapers and magazines.

In 2013 I joined WOWO radio in the advertising sales department and this year was named our stations General Sales Manager after a nationwide search.  I have a few other credentials but let’s get to what I really want to share with you.

During the stay-at-home orders that many states have mandated for the health and safety of our people, the common thought was people would be watching a lot more television. That was initially true with a growth of about 30% for broadcast and cable TV.  But then two things happened.

The TV studios ran out of shows as their seasons were cut short because of the social distancing rules and so fresh dramas, comedies and the reality shows had to either go on hiatus or create a version of their former selves.  Streaming services with no or limited commercials were the real benefactors.  Even the TV news networks are losing viewers due to Corona Fatigue.  With the change of seasons and warmer weather, more people are getting outside in a safe, social distancing manor.

The newspaper business has really been hit hard.  Locally we just saw the end of a nearly 200 year newspaper which was slowly dying over the past 20 years.  The afternoon newspaper in Fort Wayne at one time had 60,000 subscribers had shrunk to under 13,000 nearly a decade ago and finally ceased publication as a daily and became a one or two page insert in the morning paper and did an online version too.

Last month both papers used the Coronavirus as an excuse to furlough many of their staffs and pulled the plug entirely on the former afternoon paper.  As a former paperboy as a kid, it was sad to see.  Unless they figure out a way to make money fast, the morning paper will be history too.

So what about the radio business?  Like the newspaper business, if a radio station was struggling to stay afloat before the pandemic, that are really hurting for revenue now.  My station, WOWO radio was not in that position and is not now.  We have seen listenership increases and advertisers looking to increase their advertising if they are open or hold the course of they are not open.  Not all of our advertising partners but most of them, the smart ones want to stay connected to our listeners.

Here’s a quote from one national study:

The longer the coronavirus lockdown continues, the more people are spending more of their time with audio entertainment. That’s according to the media buying agency Mindshare, which has been tracking consumer behavior since the pandemic began sweeping the globe last month. The latest data finds nearly a third (31%) of Americans say they are listening to more radio than prior to the coronavirus outbreak.The new numbers, collected last week by Mindshare’s U.S. Consumer Insights team, also show the longer people are stuck at home, the more likely they are to be boosting their radio listening. In other words, the longer the stay-at-home orders disrupt typical media habits, the more the number of Americans who say they’re spending more time with radio than in the pre-pandemic period goes up.

Among Mindshare’s other latest findings:

  • 51% of Americans have limited their time on media because they don’t want to read any more news about COVID-19. That includes 70% of Millennials.

  • 80% of Americans are likely to support a brand that has taken action and helped communities impacted by COVID-19

And another report says:

Nearly 90 million Americans own smart speakers as of January 2020, a 32% increase from a year earlier and 85% higher than in January 2018.

I have seen WOWO radio’s streaming listenership surge during the pandemic and with a third of Americans now owning and using Alexa or Google Home, radio stations like WOWO are benefiting and that means you as one of our advertising partners will also benefit from this increased listenership measured in both more listeners and listeners spending more time listening to WOWO every week.

There are so many creative ways my team has been able to work hand in hand with our advertising partners, I invite you to reach out and let’s come up with ideas for your business to take advantage of the WOWO Radio Advantage during this special time.

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