Happy Friday, everyone! Here is this week's poll question:
What are your thoughts on remote broadcasts?
Are they worth doing, or is the client better off putting his money into an ad schedule only?
If remotes are worth doing, under what circumstances?
Looking forward to reading your answers!
We have found that remotes are a great way to establish a rapport with the client and air talent.
So many of our advertisers are buried in stopsets and rarely ever acknoweldged by the air staff.
Since remotes create a relationship, albeit short lived, between the client and announcer, the client gets acknowledged throught the live promos, an added value feature that most advertisers are denied.
In short, the remote is a small buy, but can open future doors for long term spending for clients that are luke warm about radio advertising. This is something that only radio can deliver as opposed to our biggest competitor...print.
I usually try to talk customers out of doing a remote unless there is a compelling reason for THEIR customers to come to their business... a new cellphone model or end of the month sale won't do it. Our country station is tops in the market, and unless we have concert tickets to give away, or another great prize, it just doesn't happen. Sometimes a grand opening works better, but there MUST be a real buy-in by the customer, as far as what THEY can bring to the table.
My belief on remotes is that they are effective if done correctly. I think the client needs to have something going on. Some businesses do remotes for the sake of doing remotes.-- to be able to say " we are having the radio station here live". Those kinds of remotes, to me, are pointless. I would much rather see the client invest the dollars into more radio spots or a long term website ad. With that said, if they have a big event going on, huge sale, grand opening, etc...then I believe they ARE worth it.
Here's an example of a great use of a remote in our market... I have a jewelry store that uses remote very wisely. We only do them around Valenties Day and around Christmas. We highlight one specific item during each remote break. More often then not, people will come in during the remote and say.. I want to see the item you just talked about. A lot of times he will "hide" an item from the DJ--say a HUGE diamond or an exceptionally amazing peice.. and show the DJ live on the air to get thier reaction. People will come in and want to see it.. with no intention of purchasing it.. just want to see the HUGE diamond we just talked about. Seem pointless? Not really.. it gets them in the door... most often the listener will at least look around out of obligation.lol. That "looking around" often leads to a purchase!
Now for an example of a horrible remote... We have a car dealer that no matter how much you tell them its not going to work they still do this... they schedule 4 or 5 days of a remote a day.... cook up hotdogs and offer a $5 Walmart gift card with each test drive. Thats it. No sale. No Special deals. Just want to have us there. People dont go thru the time and effort to test drive a vehicle for $5 at Walmart--heck that barely buys a gallon of milk anymore. They never ever have a good turnout. But yet they keep scheduling them. lol
One thing I have noticed with remotes, at least here in our market, is that the businesses will often see MORE response after we leave. I think people are afraid if they come during the remote, we are going to put them on the air. So I always make sure to tell my clients this fact. Then there's no room for disappointment during the remote if no one shows up.
It's interesting to me that almost everyone wants to judge the effectiveness of a remote with the traffic it draws. I have had an insurance agent who did a remote every year just before hail season. He liked the fact that he had the time to talk about his product in a conversational atmosphere. He also gave his sales staff the opportunity to be on the radio. Here's what he hoped to achieve:
He never expected anyone to show up at the agency during the remote. He promoted his remote with marriage mail in his billing, and with a heavy ad schedule before the remote, and he used excerpts from the remote (which we recorded for him) in follow up ads. As with any advertising schedule, managing expectations is important. But remotes can be used for much more than to build immediate traffic.
I was at a station where the GM had a no remotes sales policy. We were number one for 11 years and made a ton of money. While I am not saying that is the ONLY reason for our success, if you have a strong audinece and a superior product, you do not need to sell remotes.
Most remote breaks are tune outs to the audience anyway, since most are done on a phone line, it is aways item and price, and change your life right now for a t-shirt. If the remote goes poorlyly due to over estimated expectations the station image suffers.
Yes, they are an easy sell, or can be a strong plus for value added, but my experiece is that if you have a no remote policy, you have a better on air product whci can result in a larger audience and that can lead to more sales.
We price ours high (about 4 times what other stations charge) -- and we limit the number we do. We also discuss expectations. No one will drop what they're doing and run to you. But if you need a big dose of awareness of your business, your product or offer, what's better than 9 live :60s in 3 hours? We also insist on 3 hours with at least 30 :30s before and 20 :10s -- they can ADD to our package, but they can't subtract.
We have 3 vehicles on the streets - a cube truck, a former beer truck with TV's, speakers and an awning and a jeep for small spaces. For the love of pete, people, who would do a remote on the phone? We're radio -- there should be some show biz and that includes microphones!
Stations often prize remotes for the opportunity they afford to get out into the public eye, to gain valuable exposure and to demonstrate their involvement in their community. Visibility helps to make tangible the intangible. And it's done on the advertiser's nickel.
This is not to say that the advertiser doesn't get something out of it as well. Often they do.
That said, I really can't think of many situations with respect to my own clients where it made more sense to invest in a remote broadcast than in running a well-crafted commercial for equivalent dollars.
Your mileage, of course, may vary. ;>)
Never, never do a remote in an empty parking lot--like a car dealership where your remote is the sole attraction. All you do is feed the sales staff room temp pizza. I reccomend to car dealers NOT to do remotes unless they are hosting a big charity event and have allocated enough advertising to promote it well.
Always tie into other events, activities. Then it makes good sense for the client to use the remote to augment an activity or promotion. It also helps if there is additional advertising attached.
The exception would be: you bring in a national band, have ten grand in prizes and hold a listener party at a client's bar/restaurant. Our snow-delayed country station's listener Christmas party packed the biker bar--over 400 showed.
Good hunting,
Chris L
Before radio, I owned my own business...a pet store...LOL and I did a remote with the station that I now work for, and It actually did have people swarming in .. LOL but I think it all goes back to size of town, popularity of the station doing the remote, and keeping your remote live and entertaining so that it will grab the attention of passers by....
Also, if the remote staff can be entertaining, and work a crowd, then potential ad buyers may be watching as well.....I had occasion recently to take money for a remote. This is what I recommended instead. Your thoughts?
Share this page with your family and friends.