≡ Menu

Newborn BabyHey, here’s a refreshing change: A Radio Mercury Award winning commercial that’s actually…

Good.

This campaign has been running for a long time. But because the human stories they tell are so vivid and so relatable, the campaign continues to work. (Unlike a certain other long running, always award winning beer campaign…)

Some subtle strengths:

• Unlike 99% of radio advertisers, they do not begin with the advertiser’s name. They are too smart to open with, “At Mount Sinai Hospital…”

• Listeners are not told they are going to hear two parallel stories. They figure it out for themselves.

• Listeners irresistibly are drawn into the “what happens next?” aspect of the storytelling.

• The voice representing the “other” hospital is just as empathetic as the voice representing the advertiser. No attempt is made to demonize the competition.

• Think about the pictures this spot painted for you: The doctors catching the problem and immediately performing heart valve surgery…The arrival of the healthy baby…In other words, the results the advertiser is selling.

There Is Only One Dumb Thing About This Commercial:

The Call To Action.

“For more information, call 1-800-MD-SINAI.”

Huh?

For more information about…what?

You think I’m being too harsh? Go ahead, dial 1-800-MD-SINAI and tell the operator, “I’m calling for more information.” See what happens.

(This spot is so well done that I suspect we’re hearing the heavy handed results of a client insisting upon including their phone number.)

They’re also using a dumb vanity number. No one will remember “1-800-MD-SINAI.”

A vanity number is used when it’s important to get people to remember it. If the goal of this spot is to make people remember their phone number, this spot will fail.

If the goal is to get people to call that number (again, for reasons that have not sufficiently been explained), you want to make it as easy as possible for them to call.

Before listeners can call 1-800-MD-SINAI, they’ll need to translate it into digits. Why put that obstacle between them and the telephone call?

{ 4 comments }

BOBBY OCEAN’S SUNDAY RADIO CARTOON

Bobby Ocean radio cartoons

Illustration © 2009 by Bobby Ocean

{ 6 comments }
Joseph Sugarman

What can I say?

He’s a big fan of mine.

{ 1 comment }

May, 1995: I conducted seminars on three continents this month, beginning with a couple of days in Albuquerque, where Dee Schelling had me present How To Create Maximum Impact Radio Advertising and Air Personality Plus+ for the New Mexico Broadcasters Association.

Albuquerque International Sunport Airport

Albuquerque International Sunport Airport

It was in Albuquerque that I discovered the World’s Least Comfortable Airport Waiting Seats, which are designed with a horizontal bar that cuts into the sitter’s back & shoulders. In other words, it is painful to use the chairs for their intended purpose: sitting.

(I hasten to add that Dee did not, to my knowledge, have anything to do with the design or purchase of those chairs.)

The next week kept me in the Southwest, as Larry Daniels brought me to Phoenix to work with the KNIX morning show. I was delighted to see the following sign — written by Larry and posted on the outside of the door to the on-air studio:

“IT CAN WAIT. A VERY IMPORTANT SHOW IS IN PROGRESS. PLEASE LET THEM DO THEIR JOBS WITHOUT INTERRUPTION.”

Next Week: On to Colombia, where airport security personnel were suspicious of the drugs in my carry-on bag.

{ 15 comments }

THE PERILS OF EMAIL

EmailPerils

Here is a blog posting that featured Ann DeWig doing three different visions of a script, per my direction.

You might already have seen that blog posting. But until now you didn’t know about the drama behind it.

Here is a recording of a long telephone conversation during which Ann and I explored the perils of email…from our own first-hand experience.

You can listen to the streaming version, or you can download the mp3.

Perhaps you’ll find it relevant to your experiences…?

{ 0 comments }