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MONDAY RADIO COMMERCIAL SMACKDOWN: “Warming Up” Bad Copy = Warm Bad Copy

First, the Los Angeles market radio commercial.

Ironically, the only part of the sales message the audience might hear is contained in the announcer tag.

But no one will listen long enough to hear it.

Someone who’s more of a techie than I can explain what kind of processing should have been used to make it so the music didn’t compete with the voice. But any good radio producer (even without technical wizardly) would have known (and cared enough) to say to the engineer, “Hey, her audio is muddy.”

Advertising Solves Problems. Do you see any consumer problems being solved below?

“Incredibly low prices.” Well, if the advertiser says the prices are incredibly low, they must be.

“Their selection is massive.” Oh? Compared to…?

“There’s more choice than you can imagine.” That’s what I look for in an appliance/plumbing/home theater store: more choice than I can imagine. You too?

“Customer service is Priority One.” It wasn’t until the fifth or sixth time I listened that I realized (I think) she’s saying, “Customer Service,” not “Custom Service.”

What does that actually mean? If they’re trying to say, “Our #1 focus is providing great customer service,” why did they first talk about their low prices, massive selection, and your inability to imagine how much choice they offer? How about showing us how their customer service is so extraordinary?

Their knowledgeable staff.” Yes, someone — presumably calling himself or herself a “copywriter” — actually took the time and effort to write that.

“Get a great deal.”

Remember their “incredibly low prices”? Guess what: They’re still “incredibly low.”

Because their prices are still incredibly low, “you can shop with confidence.” Really? Incredibly low prices = confidence?

Probably the copywriter meant, “So you don’t have to worry that you could get the same merchandise cheaper somewhere else,” but we’ll never know for sure.

“The staff will help you with the details” of making a purchase. Wow! Not only is the staff knowledgeable, but they’ll write up the order, too.

“Incredible service.” Okay, let’s be fair. If only there were some adjective other than “incredible.” But until the dictionary people invent more adjectives, we’re stuck with “incredible” — three times in 30 seconds.

“Massive selection” — in case you didn’t understand earlier when they said, “Their selection is massive.”

Bonus Commercial Copywriting Tip

Copywriters have been taught not to say “dollars,” and in some cases that’s good advice.

For example, when in the tag the announce says, “Only fifteen-twenty-eight,” that does sound less formidable than “one thousand five hundred twenty-eight dollars.”

On the other hand, talking about a “stainless steel kitchen package for under two thousand” unnecessarily distracts the audience because it forces them, for an instant, to translate “under two thousand” to “under two thousand dollars.”

They will translate the language the advertiser used into the language that they, the targeted listeners, use.

Don’t believe me? Ask three different people (separately, without explaining the context), “How much does a good refrigerator cost?

I don’t know what the quoted price will be, but I guarantee at least two of those three people will answer something very much like, “Oh, about 7 or 8 hundred dollars.”

Hint: Speak the language your targeted listener speaks.

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • Tad Shackles July 22, 2013, 11:33 am

    *side bar* they wanted to use an FFT filter to remove the subharmonics then use a dynamics processing to amp ALL her vocals up to the same level (sans low end)

    Great read! I see it all the time. The owner gave the sales person enough info to fill a :15 so they repeat it a few times and use frilly descriptive words to fill it in mixed with weird claims that make no sense.

    Your average salesperson is less interested in furthering a productive marketing campaign for a business than they are at getting paid. It’s sad. But the proof is in the copy.

  • Neal Angell July 22, 2013, 2:17 pm

    Sadly, the average salesperson probably doesn’t know the difference between good copy and bad copy. That must be the case, since there’s so much bad copy on the airwaves. (It can’t just be that they all don’t care…..right?)

    @Dan: LOL to your comment about “incredible service” and “until the dictionary people invent more adjectives.” Good thing my office door was closed or the salespeople would’ve heard my cackling halfway through the building.

  • Seabass July 22, 2013, 4:50 pm

    I think it underscores the lack of Talent in all areas of today’s radio industry. Cutting Talent has had its costs, syndication still doesn’t work, and the oldest radio complaint in history: “why do you play the same songs over and over?” is as true today as it ever was. And LOCAL?? rofl, doing a 2 hour ‘appearance’ that draws 4 listeners at a car dealership is not what is meant by ‘local’. Dan why do you waste your time trying to educate these ass clowns?

  • Simon Rushton July 26, 2013, 3:05 am

    The FVO to me sounds slightly lubricated. Did the producer have to buy her lunch to pluck up the courage to voice?

  • Dan O'Day July 26, 2013, 6:28 am

    @Simon Rushton: No, that particular talent has voiced thousands of commercials in this market over the past several decades.

  • Raymond Duke July 26, 2013, 10:05 am

    Oh man. That’s a great smackdown. The copywriter(?) that got hired for this probably used some template or… I don’t know. Maybe they didn’t even hire one and figured they would write it themselves.