
Local advertisers speaking at WMS 09 in Washington D.C. this morning had plenty to say about how they perceive their choices in advertising, online and off.
Dianne Bonanno, Senior Manager, Marketing Communications, The Graduate School, said that her adult education company is doing good business. “In a downturn, people invest in themselves and institutions,” she noted.
Advertising-wise, things are changing quickly, as the company seeks to attract decision-makers at companies who pay for their employees’ tuition, as well as open enrollment students who are paying for themselves. “We were a lot in print, but as national institution, we have moved to a lot of online. We’ve added social media, too. It doesn’t cost hardly anything. There are so many free tools. We are taking full advantage of that.
Bonanno also noted that social media takes the place of a lot of email and other correspondence, which is too cumbersome to manage. The company also advertises in the Washington metro, news channels, news radio and other broadcast networks. Whenever possible, however, Bonanno said it works to put codes in its advertising to measure it.
Jerome Fowlkes, managing member, Broadlands, LLC, a discount hair cut company, said that it is spending ten percent of its gross on advertising, in part via coop campaigns with other hair cut stores. It zeroes in on “people looking for a deal or a discount, so direct mail efforts like RedPlum work especially well. Newspapers aren’t in the works, however.
“When a newspaper rep calls me, they don’t understand how I think. Basically, I ran a couple of ads with you, and got no response. Now I have moved on.” Fowlkes has also done some Internet marketing, and has aspirations to do more. “I want a more robust-type Website to bring people in,” he said.
Valerie Passwaiter, Assistant Marketing Manager for Northwest Federal Credit Union (and wife of BIA Sales Exec Steve Passwaiter) said her company has “benefited from recession in ways we never could have imagined” because Credit Unions are perceived as safe places to store money and provide good customer service. The Credit Union has recently boosted its marketing budget by ten percent to leverage the new interest in credit unions.
Some of the money is being spent on a coop campaign developed by WRC-TV, which lets Credit Union use a template ad that has ten seconds customized for them at the end. Broadcasters aren’t necessarily going to win a larger share of the ad budget, however, “because they don’t listen. They talk at me.”
Newspapers are guilty of some of that as well, but the at least benefit from being a well known commodity. “I know what they are, where they serve,” she said.
Some of the broadcast advertising has come with a website complement. The Web element is well worth the money, she said. “It has the best tracking mechanism. When we ran a campaign for auto loans on WTOP-FM, the website part of it on wtop.com had click-thrus from banners on top of the page. That $15,000 campaign ultimately was found to bring in $200,000 in car loans during a two week period – a major success.
Passwaiter would like to use social media more as well. She has seen the success of Verity Credit Union in Washington State, which is paying young bloggers to comment on the good, bad and the ugly as they like. But company executives don’t see the value of it as a marketing tool. “They see daily visits to the fridge; what t heir kids are doing,” she said. “It is also tough for us to investigate as a tool, except on employees’ own time, because many office locations have restrictive website policies.”
Feist Yellow Pages, one of the most innovative independent Yellow Pages publishers (before being acquired by Yellow Book) had a cooperative marketing program with its advertisers that kicked back around 10% of the Yellow Pages spend in exchange for being tagged on radio, outdoor and television commercials.
I spent a month or so in Wichita, and was amazed at how many times I heard the phrase “Find us in the Feist Yellow Pages” after local tv and radio commercials.
It was a hugely successful branding campaign, and was just one of several good moves by Feist to dominate their market.
As a side note, Tom and Roberta Feist were the ones who took a case to the US Supreme court over the constitutional right to publish factual information (names, addresses and telephone numbers).
Every search engine, blog, encyclopedia, and directory owe Tom and Roberta a tip of the hat.