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Digg it UP - The Ten Key Questions In Direct Response Radio Advertising
Contribution Of IT To Management hic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions.It helps in simplifying the production process, benchmarking, reducing cycle time and improves the precision of design and production. SouthStream Seafood’s, an American firm involved in sea food business implemented TQM to organize its business structure. It was able to smoothly communicate with wholesalers and retailers thus generating huge profits. TQM is for an organisation which does not need a radical change in their structure but would like to improve and put a check on its quality.Enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems have an enormous impact on business and organizations around the world. ERP systems are in most cases implemented with the goal to improve some aspect of the organization, e.g., strategic, organizational, management, operational, or IT-infrastructure. ERP systems are often assumed to be a determini 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 a How To Find A Nursing Job - 8 Tips To Take Some Of The Headache Out Of Your Search IntroductionDo you have your nursing degree and are ready to take the medical industry by storm? Are you an experienced nurse looking for an exciting new challenge? Regardless of the level of your nursing experience, looking for a new job can be a time-consuming and frequently frustrating process. A big part of the job search process is knowing where to look for nursing positions.The following tips and tricks are designed to take some of the headache out of your search, by giving you some guidelines on steps you can take to land your ideal nursing position.1. Visit the recruiting departments of local hospitals, medical centers, and doctor’s offices to inquire about available positions. If there are no current vacancies, ask if you can submit your resume to remain on file should future openings match what you are seeking.< 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 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 Why Should I do Business With You? sing 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)":It's the question that is on the minds of all our customers regardless of what products or services we are offering. Potential customers want to know what makes you so different and why should they do business with you as opposed to one of your competitor's.Price at one time use to be a determining factor in the decision-making process when it came to a purchase, now, that is not always the case. Our customers are much more informed and savvy when it comes to buying and while they want the BEST deal (I mean don't we all?) it goes much deeper than that. Many have said that they will spend the extra money on a purchase because they are getting better care, better customer satisfaction…whatever “better” is in their minds. “Care, Customer Satisfaction, Service” these are all “values.” These values, when visibl - 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 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 a Those Little Things services, events, and other items that are promoted in direct response radio advertising campaigns.Moving to another state meant finding a new dentist. I tried one a neighbor recommended who seemed friendly, competent and eager to please. But, I never went back. His office was a case study on the importance of little things.The coat hook was missing a screw and falling from the wall; waiting room magazines were outdated; the posted office hours were taped over with an index card and new hours written in marker; the credenza was overflowing with mail and claim forms. There are plenty of dentists to choose from, and while he might be a competent one, why chance it?It's the same at work. Bosses choose which people to give a great assignment to, take a chance on or consider for a project. Customers choose which businesses to frequent. All those little things really aren't so little. They're impressions. And those impre 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 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 a Lead Generation 101 the distribution channel(s) that will be used for the product? (Web, retail, direct)Part seven of a series on Turnaround TacticsOnce you get your streamlined sales force up to speed, it's going to need more people to talk to.You already have a lead generation program in place. But is it working? Is it sufficient? Probably not, otherwise you wouldn't be reading an article called "turnaround tactics." So you have to stoke the lead machine.Step one is to decide what a lead is worth to you, so you can know what to spend on getting one. Do you know the lifetime value of your typical customer? Do this calculating for revenue and profit: add the initial sale plus all subsequent add upsells, resells, back-end products, over the entire life of your customer. Average this across your customer base, and voila - lifetime customer value. Your fist sale may be $50,000, but with service alone over five years 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 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 a Business Cards hic, geographic, or other relevant dimensions.“Let me give you my card,” should be a staple in your networking conversations. If you have just started your own business and you do not have business cards, then you need to place it toward the top of your list. Business cards are a relatively inexpensive way to advertise your business effectively.The cost of business cards can range from relatively inexpensive to high priced, but no matter what price range your business can afford, they are an essential. When you are networking with people it may be easy to tell them all about your business, and they may be very excited to work with you. However, most people have terrible memories, and they will probably be lucky to remember half of your business name by the time they are ready to give you a call. When you hand out business cards, your potential clients have a friendl 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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