Easy way to improve research reliability 07/16/2010
Prevention Magazine just published results from a survey in which they asked consumers how much attention they pay to prescription drug advertising. Here are the highlights: • 79% of consumers say they saw and heard risks TV ads are required to cover. • 75% say they find the information useful. • With regard to print ads, 48% said they understood drug risks, and 52% said they understood benefits. Interesting results, perhaps suggestive. But they are not conclusive. Any good researcher, psychologist or marketer should know better than to rely on self-reporting to assess outcomes. When you ask people what they heard and didn’t hear, or understood and didn’t understand, their answers are more likely to reflect their self-concept than the facts. This research would have been more revealing had it included a simple quiz. It would be interesting to see if the 79% who said they saw and heard risks could answer quiz questions about the drugs that the 21% could not. —Steve Cuno Look who’s selling solar 07/15/2010
Actor Larry Hagman has reprised his role as oil magnate J.R. Ewing in a new commercial for a German company. Except this time, he’s eschewing oil and endorsing solar. In a New York Times interview, Hagman said he agreed to appear in the spot because he felt outraged over the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Hagman told the Times, “Since Sarah Palin is saying ‘Drill, baby, drill,’ I’m saying ‘Shine, baby, shine.’ It’s a lot cheaper and cleaner.” —Steve Cuno These are tough times. Even flimflammers want to hire us. Usually, flimflammers need no help selling flimflam. Yet in the past month alone we kicked out three from our office even as they tried to slither in. Their products are legal, although “not illegal” says it better. Anyone cursed with a conscience knows that “not illegal” is a far cry from “perfectly OK.” Don’t feel bad for them. They will have no trouble finding and hiring a capable direct marketer. Either one who doesn’t dig deep enough to see that the products are flimflam, or one who doesn’t care. We are keeping our doorstep clear for legitimate companies with legitimate products. I am pleased to report that one came a-calling today. Take that, Recession! —Steve Cuno How to do a crappy PowerPoint presentation 07/13/2010
There’s nothing quite like seeing an audience’s eyes glaze over as you fire up the projector. Though this form of torture is not quite as agonizing as waterboarding, even extreme Right Wing readers will concede the advantage that it is not nearly as messy. Want to render your audience comatose? Here’s how: 1 - Write down what you want to say. 2 - Copy and paste excerpts from your speech onto your slides. The longer the excerpts and the smaller the type, the better. 3 - The more photos, charts, graphs, etc. you cram onto a single slide, the more uninviting and confusing it will be. 4 - Use animations wantonly, just because you can. 5 - Speak in a monotone, eyes glued to your notes. For you renegades who want to engage your audience, here’s how to do a PowerPoint right:
—Steve Cuno Advertising used for good 07/12/2010
Everyone has a story about deceptive advertising, or ads that sell bad or needless products. But advertising does good things, too. Helping keep the economy moving is an obvious yet often overlooked example. Here’s an instance where direct mail advertising powerfully combats a heinous practice, as cited in the latest edition of Alan Rosenspan's Improve Your Response Newsletter: The Child Soldier Donation Appeal sent out official-looking draft notices to 10-year old children in Germany. The letters requested that the children report for army duty immediately. Parents were understandably outraged. Until they read the bottom of the notice: “Unthinkable in Germany. Common practice in other countries around the world.” The campaign generated a 6% response and raised a great deal of money for the cause. —Steve Cuno Dear Friends: Many of you asked me to let you know if my presentation at this year’s The Amaz!ng Meeting (TAM) will be streamed live, as it was last year. The answer is yes. In fact, all of TAM will be. You can watch your pick of speakers here, free. The keynote will be given by Richard Dawkins. Click here for a schedule of speakers and events. TAM is sponsored by the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF). While debunking unprovable claims is a major part of the JREF’s work, so is the positive promotion of humanistic values and rational thought. TAM is the largest convention of its kind. Last year’s event drew about 1100 attendees from all over the world, plus another 700 online. My presentation is scheduled for Sunday morning, July 11, 10:55-ish, give or take. (Remember that this is Pacific Time.) If you have nothing better to do and no more self-respect than to tune in for my 10 minutes (that’s all I get this year), I’d be honored. My presentation is Confessions of a Skeptical Advertising Man: How to “sell” critical thinking to friends and associates, a title I freely admit to having ripped off from Mr. Ogilvy. —Steve Cuno Kudos to Domino’s pizza. Henceforth no Domino’s food product photos will be retouched. What you see is what they baked. There was no mention, however, of doing away with food stylists, lighting experts, professional food photographers, showing only the best out of thousands of shots, and so forth. But it’s a start. Plus, you’ll be able to shoot and upload a pic of your pizza to a Domino’s “Show Us Your Pizza” website. If they use your pic in an ad, you’ll get $500. Excellent. There’s nothing like showing things as they really are to win consumer confidence. Assuming, of course, that your product still has a modicum of appeal when it hasn’t been retouched. * * * The milk mustache campaign is about to spill over into online media. Nothing like taking a costly campaign that has yet to affect milk sales and extending its reach at considerable expense. * * * Any interest in buying ABC? Rumor has it that Disney might part with it for $10 billion. * * * Musical agencies: Chrysler is hunting for a new advertising agency. JetBlue just switched to a new one. Sometimes switching agencies can help, but sometimes it’s a charade so you can tell your board of directors that you’ve “done something about marketing.” Switching agencies is like switching doctors. Your new doc may diagnose and treat something that had gone unnoticed. But sometimes the solution is for the patient to eat better and exercise more. Before you decide that a new agency will solve all your ills, be sure you have a product that works, that people want, and that gives your customers a positive buying experience. Ad campaigns can’t fix things like that. —Steve Cuno Want to improve your marketing skills? Attend the upcoming Amaz!ing Meeting, sponsored by the James Randi Educational Foundation. The Amaz!ng Meeting isn’t a marketing convention. It’s better. Marketing is rife with myths that get regurgitated and re-ingested at typical marketing conventions. (I expose quite a few in my book Prove It Before You Promote It .) By contrast, the Amaz!ng Meeting is about rational thinking. You’ll be blown away at how often and how easily you — yes, you — can be duped. You’ll pick up new skills for putting assumptions, including rampantly accepted ones, to the test, so that you’ll never be duped again. Sounds like a good idea for someone whose job is to wisely spend sizable marketing budgets. The Amaz!ng Meeting happens this week in Las Vegas. Main sessions are Friday and Saturday. Speakers include entertainers, biologists, physicists, astronomers, magicians, physicians, you name it. The keynote will be given by the inimitable Richard Dawkins. Attendance this year will top 1,100. Yours Truly will give a brief 10-minute presentation Sunday morning at 9:50 PT. But don’t let that put you off attending. You can, after all, skip my part. Leave behind those marketing conventions where cronies recycle the same old tripe and try something that challenges your thinking instead. The Amaz!ng Meeting is the most mind-clarifying and expanding event you can attend. Though the online registration deadline has passed, you can register in person. Short of that, you will be able to watch sessions online via a live feed. When the link becomes available, I’ll post it here. —Steve Cuno Cuno’s shortest definition ever of what is and isn’t a brand: “It’s important not to mistake a logo, look or tagline for a brand. Logos et al serve only to identify your products and services as Yours. You give the concept of Yours equity through consistent delivery. That means that it is the brand that gives the logo meaning, not the other way around. A solid brand is the by-product of doing things right.” —Steve Cuno I usually object when so-called experts presume to vote on things like “best slogan,” “best commercial,” etc. Advertising should be judged by market performance, not reviewed as an art form. But today when a bunch of prominent ad execs announced their ten all-time favorite jingles, I simply enjoyed the stroll down Memory Lane. Here are their choices, in order, in case you’d like to stroll with me:
|



RSS Feed






