Klondike Marketing, Inc.
Issue 60: Small Intelligent Choices Equal a Potful of Cash! )
 Your Electronic Goldmine-Igniting Worldwide Sales August 2002 
in this issue
Dear Reader,

One fear I want dispel in this discussion is the common client misconception: If things go sour the client will lose hundreds of thousands of dollars on media. First, the more money that is being funneled into the roll-out, or the larger the media buy the less the risk of loss. The less money that has been spent on media (in the roll-out phase one) the greater the potential for loss.

The More You Spend The Less You Lose

We have started the roll-out, and it is this starting point that I define as phase one. Phase one is the most challenging for the media buyer, because all of his/her creative energies are put to the test. The buyer must be alert to every success and failure, and be able to interpret what to do next. Basically buy success and terminate failure. Along with managing past decisions, the buyer must also make decisions anticipating future results.

If station KXYZ at 9:00am on Saturday morning brought in a decent result, does it make sense to test station KZYX at 10:00am on Sunday in the same market? In the Phase one this decision making process recurs over and over again, and more and more times on different stations are tested. As the successes increase and more airdates are added to the schedule, the buyers knowledge of what media produces successful results increases.

Last Week's Issue 59:Creating a Million Dollar Roll-out One Media Buy at a Time

Results You Can Count On
An important point in this process should be understood. In direct response television when a daypart or a 30 minute timeslot is successful, then the degree to which that media creates profit is reliable. So, if the airtime is producing three (3) dollars for every one (1) dollar you spend in media-it is a safe bet that you can buy that time three times over and still produce profit. The performance of the media does not change like the stock market, here today and gone tomorrow. The profitability of a media time erodes slowly or according to the results you experience in the past, not suddenly and at a total loss.

It is this behavior-the more success and media dollars you add to a weekly media budget the less risk you are at loss. The greater the weekly buy climbs too the less likely you are to be in a risky position. A media buyer will be more comfortable at spending $500,000 per week than $20,000 per week.

 

Glory and Mountain Climbing
Phase one is the mountain climbing phase. You are attempting to exploit every single media opportunity that will make money for the project. Phase one is a glorified test, because everything that is purchased and airs is up for adding or terminating according to the results produced. As this process grows the media buyer will find what works and what doesn't. It is this knowledge that makes up your media buy, and is the basis upon which your entire product roll-out depends.

 

 

Ring The Bell
The growth of phase one looks like the first half of a bell curve. The line keeps climbing until it finally reaches it's peak, and now the top of the bell begins to emerge. It is at this point when very little new media is added, but rather only the past successful media continues to air that the first phase ends. This could amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars per week and hundreds of media purchases airing each week.

 

 

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