By Bob
McCurdy
In marketing, there’s something known as the “Law of Large Numbers”
which plays to one of radio’s major strengths — reach.
The
concept behind Large Numbers is that when it comes to generating advertising
results, it helps to make sure as many prospects as possible — i.e. the “long
tail” — know about the offer. It plays to Erwin Ephron’s “recency” planning
philosophy which states it’s better to reach many, than preach to a few.
There
are many things in marketing we could debate, but one thing that’s not
debatable is that a consumer can only take advantage of an offer or sale if
they are aware of it. This “law” came to mind last week while discussing
an opportunity with a Philadelphia account executive. This AE’s client’s
intention was to utilize Pandora exclusively to promote a key sales event.
Our
contention was that to make the sale as successful as possible, AM/FM radio
should also be utilized, stressing that the market data simply didn’t support
the exclusive use of an audio platform with limited reach.
We kept the math simple.
There are 4,187,249 people A18+ in the Philadelphia MSA, of which, according to Scarborough, 836,575 or 19.9% tune to Pandora weekly. AM/FM’s weekly reach figure, according to Nielsen, is 3,826,500 or 91.3% of all A18+.
I then
applied the Law of Large Numbers concept to these figures to further make my
case.We kept the math simple.
There are 4,187,249 people A18+ in the Philadelphia MSA, of which, according to Scarborough, 836,575 or 19.9% tune to Pandora weekly. AM/FM’s weekly reach figure, according to Nielsen, is 3,826,500 or 91.3% of all A18+.
For the
following comparison these assumptions were put forth:
— The commercial responsiveness of the Pandora listener and the AM/FM radio listener is approximately the same.
—
Pandora and AM/FM radio’s ability to reach their respective listener bases is
approximately the same.— The commercial responsiveness of the Pandora listener and the AM/FM radio listener is approximately the same.
— AM/FM
and Pandora are priced similarly in terms of CPM or CPP.
— They
both air the same creative.
We
continued the arithmetic with a hypothetical schedule on Pandora and AM/FM that
reached 20% of their respective weekly listeners, which resulted in 1% of those
exposed to respond.
Based
on Pandora’s weekly Philadelphia listenership, this equates to 1,673 consumers
responding to the Pandora commercial (836,575 x.20 x.01). Based on AM/FM’s
weekly Philadelphia listenership, this equates to 7,653 consumers responding to
the AM/FM commercial (3,826,500 x .20 x .01), or 4.6x more customers than the
Pandora campaign.
This
means that Pandora’s commercials would need to be 4.6x more effective than
AM/FM’s to generate the same number of customers as the AM/FM campaign. To
state that this is highly unlikely is a massive understatement.
Doing
the math for several other markets shows that in Boston there’s a 5.1x
advantage for AM/FM, a 4.8x advantage in Charlotte, a 5.2x advantage in
Detroit, a 4.2x advantage in Las Vegas, a 4.9x advantage in Tampa, and a 6.1x
advantage in Ft. Myers.
When
doing this same exercise with Spotify the AM/FM advantage is considerably
greater.
We were also able to highlight to this advertiser via Scarborough data, that the Pandora listener in Philadelphia was +6% more likely to be among the heaviest of AM/FM listeners (P1), +11% more likely to be heavy AM/FM listeners (P2), and -33% less likely to be amongst the lightest listeners to AM/FM (P5).
Based
on this data one could easily make the case that an AM/FM radio campaign would
likely reach the Pandora listener by not even using Pandora.We were also able to highlight to this advertiser via Scarborough data, that the Pandora listener in Philadelphia was +6% more likely to be among the heaviest of AM/FM listeners (P1), +11% more likely to be heavy AM/FM listeners (P2), and -33% less likely to be amongst the lightest listeners to AM/FM (P5).
In summary:
— The dramatically increased response rates required by lower reach Pandora campaigns to generate the same results of the larger reach AM/FM campaigns are impractical to ever expect.
— In
Philadelphia, the Pandora listener is also the heavy AM/FM listener.— The dramatically increased response rates required by lower reach Pandora campaigns to generate the same results of the larger reach AM/FM campaigns are impractical to ever expect.
— If
the goal is to sell product with audio in Philadelphia, AM/FM is the vehicle to
utilize.
The
above is based upon reasonable top-line assumptions and math utilizing specific
market usage data and is, at an absolute minimum, directionally correct in
terms of its conclusion. It is easy to replicate and understand and makes our
case.
All
audio advertising is effective and clearly a terrific way to promote a product,
service or sale, but in 2018, online audio should remain a “supplement to,” not
a “substitute for,” AM/FM radio.
This
advertiser ultimately agreed.
Bob
McCurdy is The Vice President of Sales for The Beasley Media Group and can be
reached at bob.mccurdy@bbgi.com
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