Active Advertising

Though many people think that advertising is what creates the need to buy a product in the customer’s mind, this isn’t true. For example, if you run a home improvement center, you’ve probably learned that the need to purchase a product arises out of necessity– because the customer’s garden hose burst this morning or a skunk dug up their lawn last night. Those events are what put the customer on the market for a new hose or some insecticide. And if they were exposed to your advertising just after those things happened, they are going to be very receptive to your message. Customers tend to respond to the last ad they saw or heard in the window of time after the need arose and just before they make their decision to purchase.

Since skunks don’t attack every lawn in your market the same week, not all customers know they need grub killer at exactly the same time. Some need it this week, some next week; some the week after. The week you’re not advertising, you miss the chance to influence the customers who have chosen to buy that week. Sure, there’s some residual effect from the advertising you did in the previous weeks, but the ad with the greatest impact is the one the customer heard most recently.

So, what does this mean for your advertising budget? Should you spend more? Can you spend less? The answer is a resounding “maybe.” The amount of spending isn’t the issue here. What’s most important is that you find a way to advertise as continuously as possible. Generally speaking, it’s preferable to spread a small budget over more weeks than to bunch it up for more exposure during a shorter period (commonly called flighting). Don’t spend your entire month’s budget on one full-page ad. Run one quarter-page ad every week for four weeks instead. Don’t run 300 radio spots in one week, then remain silent for the next five—schedule 50 spots each week for six weeks. Or even 25 per week for twelve weeks!

This is not to say that you need to advertise at a uniform level year ‘round.You should still vary the amount of exposure you buy according to the sales you expect to generate each period. Nor does this mean that you shouldn’t heavy-up for a weekend sale or other short-term promotion. What it does mean, though, is that one ad by itself doesn’t work. You need consistent repetition to make your advertising work the same way you need lots and lots of seeds to start a lawn.

About Dave Donelson

My careers as a broadcaster, entrepreneur, and writer have taken me to many interesting places, not the least of which is inside hundreds of American businesses. Since 1999, I have been a full time freelance writer, publishing numerous books and regularly contributing to national business magazines and dozens of trade publications serving industries from the automotive aftermarket to sporting goods retailing. I also speak regularly before groups of all sizes. In previous careers I’ve been an entrepreneur, sales trainer, and management consultant. My clients have included one of every seven commercial TV stations in the US, but I’ve also worked with companies engaged in heavy manufacturing, construction, engineering, industrial sales, general retailing, and consumer services. As an entrepreneur, I founded three companies, owned two TV stations, a steel fabricator, and a construction company, and assisted numerous other startups in various fields. If you’d like to learn more about me and my work, visit www.davedonelson.com.
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