Managing Your Environment

 

Hospitality Industry Resource Center Reference Library

          

Advertising - Getting The Most “Bang For Your Buck”

Here are some guidelines to follow when an operator, such as yourself, goes shopping for a prospective new advertising agency.

Follow this 10 point checklist when choosing an ad agency:

1. Make sure that the agency is willing to find out what your problems really are.

When talking to a prospective agency, ask questions that require tough answers & watch out for snow jobs. Don’t guess! To get to real problems & understand your situation, an agency has to be prepared to dig.

They need to be willing to talk to your customers, interview your employees, conduct focus groups. Find out what is the best, most cost-effective way to promote your business. As operators, we don’t always know exactly what those ways are. Challenge the agency to discover them with you..

2. An agency that wants to do too much may be as bad as not going far enough.

Be sensitive to an agency who pitches you on a series of unrelated programs that don’t seem to tie together, accomplish a common goal. Merely "filling the air" with clutter won’t solve your long term needs. Make sure that your program is focused, simple & clear.

3. A parade of people no longer impresses most clients.

In these days of budget cutbacks & organizations that employ one person to do three or four jobs, massing agency troops who swim around like sharks to impress a client doesn’t cut it.

The agency that demonstrates how few people are needed to do an affective job stands the best chance of getting the client’s vote.

Excess numbers of people suggests wasteful, over-budget & lack of understanding.

4. Be aware of the agency that tries to woo you with too many statistics. The K.I.S.S. theory still works. (Keep It Simple, Stupid!)

Many ad agencies & radio stations share one common weakness: They try to over-power you with statistics & numbers.

Look for: An agency that will create a presentation that is fast-paced, enthusiastic & tells more about how your needs will be served than about agency experience & expertise.

5. Tell me less of how you came to be & more of what you’ll do for me.

While agencies like to talk about their accomplishments, (who doesn’t) during an agency presentation, you want to know how the agency can help you, meet your needs.

Find out what the agency thinks your needs are. That’s the first priority. The agency that keeps repeating "and-then-we-did-this-and-then-we-did-that" over & over, is in dangerous water.

6. Understand that some agency people actually lie. Here is what they lie about:

Results: All too often an agency feels it important to inflate the results of a campaign, media buy or sales program. Clients generally see through such truth stretchers because someone in the industry knows the truth.

Creative: One agency claimed it had originated a unique campaign for one of its clients.
Unfortunately for them, a member of the client search team knew that it was the client who had come up with the idea, not the agency.

7. Get it in writing. Money talks & bulls... walks.

Agency executives quite often make promises during their initial presentation that cannot be kept. Such promises made during the heat of a pitch should be recognized for what they really are - agency bs.

Before you sign a deal with a new agency, get it in writing. Do it with the understanding that after you begin the relationship, every time a gray area is identified, you'll both clear it up before moving on.

8. Get engaged before you get married.

It is perfectly normal to tell an agency that you want to have them produce a complete promotional campaign a to z, implement that plan, analyze the results & THEN talk about going to the next level in your commitment to them.

Get them to inform you how you will fit into their priority system knowing that you probably won’t be one of their big "cash cows".

9. Always maintain the right to say "no" & don’t be afraid to use it.

No ad should ever be placed before you see & approve it. No radio spot should ever be aired until you’ve heard the work & approved the finished product.

If you feel that any media production doesn’t fit or is not to your standards....refuse it! Remember, you’re paying for it.

10. Never agree to a program without understanding what it will cost & what you expect it to produce as results.

Yes, if you spend a ton of money over a period of time, you stand a good chance of increasing traffic & sales. But if it costs too much & you can’t pay the bills, you can still go broke! Our industry is filled with the wreckage of well-meaning folks who advertised themselves out of business.

Remember: You are not McDonalds. Make your advertising work within reasonable guidelines. If an agency wants you to promo an event for a week or ten days prior, get a new agency.

Exception: A guest star or attraction that will sell advance tickets. Always set goals for what results you expect your advertising to produce.

EDITOR’S NOTE: You might want to go back & re-read this article again, but this time, replace the word "agency" wherever it appears with the words, "radio station" as the same standards apply to both.

Source: The 4-Part Manager's Survival Guide, "Bar/Nightclub Management & Marketing" , a   powerful tool for creating traffic & increasing sales using proven marketing, promotions & improved operations techniques. Details here.


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