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Advertising 101 Please take detailed notes. Ask questions.
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Advertising 101

Feb 25, 2016

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Advertising 101. “News stories exist to inform readers. Ads exist to make money for the publishers. Can you guess which is more important? Right. Ads.” ~Tim Harrower. Funding. How do we get out funding? Ads? Sponsors? School? What are the benefits to raising our own funds? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Advertising 101

Advertising 101

Please take detailed notes. Ask questions.

Page 2: Advertising 101

“News stories exist to inform readers. Ads exist to make

money for the publishers. Can you guess which is more

important?

Right. Ads.” ~Tim Harrower

Page 3: Advertising 101

Funding How do we get out funding?

Ads? Sponsors? School?

What are the benefits to raising our own funds? What are the negatives?

Page 4: Advertising 101

The Budget PHS provides The Precedent with $4 thousand

to publish We publish eight issues per school year

We pay for No. 9 (April Fool’s) out of our ad money

AVG cost for 12-page BW issue is $420 AVG cost for 12-page issue with four pages of

4-color is approx $580 AVG cost for 12-page all 4-color issue approx

$1200

Page 5: Advertising 101

Harrower has a point,

doesn’t he?

Page 6: Advertising 101
Page 7: Advertising 101

Advertising Contract• This is a legal document

• Signed by the advertiser and the salesperson.• The contract should show the publication’s

name, school name, address and phone number.• It also should list your ad rates along with the ad

sizes you will accept and discounts you provide.• The contract must have space for the

advertiser’s name, address and phone number.• It needs to include the size of the ad purchase,

the dates the ad is to run, the price agreed upon and specific information about the ad.

Page 8: Advertising 101

Your School,Your Newspaper

Answers you should have about your newspaper What is the circulation? Does it go home to parents or into the

community? Do people subscribe to it? How frequently is it published? Has it won any awards? Can you design ads for customers? Is there an

extra cost? How many ads do you usually run in a year?

Page 9: Advertising 101

How This Helps…• If you can say that 400 couples attend the

prom, the staff can go with confidence to tux shops, flower shops, dress shops and limo rental services.

• If you can say that 1,000 students eat lunch off campus daily, or that 90% buy fast food twice a week, you can approach fast food restaurants with a good reason to put coupons in your paper. • If you can show that the average student spends

their money on videos and movies, you can approach the movie theaters and video stores with convention.

Page 10: Advertising 101

How This Helps…• If your survey shows girls spend about $500 a

year on clothes and there are 1,000 girls, the sum of clothing dollars available to local merchants is half a million dollars. And that’s only clothes!

• You’ll want to consider teen input to parents’ buying decisions too—choice of cars, food, leisure time activities, etc.

• Studies show where teen dollars go and why. There’s no doubt that teens have big money and spend it!

Page 11: Advertising 101

Why should your company advertise with us?

According to our sources, an average of $185 is spent on or by teenagers each week

PHS has approximately 3,200 students That’s $592 thousand per week That’s $2.4 million per month

That’s $28 million per year from PHS families

Page 12: Advertising 101

Things to remember This is a business. Our paper is a business

which can help them increase their sales. Preparation is key. Know the ad packet. Maintain proper body language: eye contact,

firm handshake, businesslike stance (and dress)!

Treat the advertiser with respect. Leave cordially.

Page 13: Advertising 101

Making the Sale Ask to see the manager or the employee who is responsible for

placing ads. It is a waste of time to talk to anyone else. Record this person’s name and the times he is available in case it is necessary to contact him at a later date

Don’t begin your pitch to the prospect with the words, “Do you want to buy and ad?”

• Introduce yourself and the purpose of your call. Say, “Hello. My name is Robby Smith and I am on the staff of The Precedent, the Perry High School newspaper. Good afternoon Mr._________. What a wonderful store you have! Our newspaper offers merchants like you an opportunity to sell students products and services. Our students spend more than $2 million a week in this area---and a lot of it goes for things you sell.

• If he is ready to sign, get his signature on a contract. Don’t keep talking.

Page 14: Advertising 101

It is our job to convince businesses that they have to advertise with our newspaper. Do they have a connection to our school? Do students shop there? Do parents, teachers and other adults who see

our paper shop there?

Why should your company advertise with us?

Page 15: Advertising 101

Remember! Make sure they know your name at the

introduction. If you, or your school have a connection with

the company, make sure they know it!

Page 16: Advertising 101

What to do when theysay “no”

Page 17: Advertising 101

Making the Sale• If the advertiser says “No”

• Listen for the reason he refuses to buy and answer that objection with the facts you’ve learned about your students and their buying habits.

• Stress the benefits advertising could bring him. Use facts which will convince him to buy your advertising space—dates of upcoming events that could stimulate his sales, facts about the kinds and amounts of products students buy, facts about student preferences and reading and listening.

Page 18: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “We don’t advertise in school

publications”• Ask him “Why not?” Doesn’t he want some of

the business that teenagers bring to the community? Tell him how much how much students at your school spend and point out that perhaps he is missing out on his share.

Page 19: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “All of our advertising budget is used

up”• Ask, “When do you begin your new budget or

start your fiscal year? Make a note of this for your newspaper’s files so that the staff can approach him at the right time the following year.

Page 20: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “We have to much advertising”

• Ask, “Is it bringing you too much business? Are you reaching the Central HS students? They spend…Our surveys show that they don’t read…or listen to…and they do read our publication. They may even keep it for weeks or years because it is about themselves and their friends.”

Page 21: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “I won’t support your publication

because I never get any business from your school district”• Tell him that the district is bound by law to

accept the lowest bids. But students are not bound by such laws and they can buy anywhere they wish. If they know about the products this store offers, they might be very happy to buy from him.

Page 22: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “If we did it for you, we would have

to do it for all the school publications in this area”• Tell him that your publication is the only way to

reach your student body. If he advertises in another school’s publication, he will reach a different 2,000 buyers.

Page 23: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “I can’t afford it right now.”

• Tell him that you can understand that business has been bad recently. But when is his busy season? Is he preparing for the Easter rush? Or Valentine’s day? If students know about the great new products this store will be getting in, you are sure they would be interested. Besides, it is time for our Prom, and many of our students will be purchasing just the kind of goods or services he sells.

Page 24: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “If we did it for you, we would have

to do it for all the school publications in this area”• Tell him that your publication is the only way to

reach your student body. If he advertises in another school’s publication, he will reach a different 2,000 buyers.

Page 25: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “I can’t afford it right now.”

• Tell him that you can understand that business has been bad recently. But when is his busy season? Is he preparing for the Easter rush? Or Valentine’s day? If students know about the great new products this store will be getting in, you are sure they would be interested. Besides, it is time for our Prom, and many of our students will be purchasing just the kind of goods or services he sells.

Page 26: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “School kids are too young to buy

anything”• Tell him you have taken surveys at your school

to find out just what students spend and give him the facts.

Page 27: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “Advertising money comes right out

of my own pocket.”• Explain that the law allows him to deduct the

cost of advertising as a business expense before he figures out his business profit. He only pays taxes on his profit.

Page 28: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “I advertised in your publication last

year, and I didn’t get any new customers.”• Say it is hard to tell just how a customer learns

about a store? Did he ask each customer how he learned about the store? Couldn’t some of them read his ad, come in and not made a big thing about it? Perhaps they heard about the store from someone else who had seen the publication’s ad? Sometimes it take awhile for people to respond to an ad that interested them.

Page 29: Advertising 101

Responses to No…• If he says “We are merely a franchise of a

national business. I have no local authority to authorize ads.”• You should ask for the name and address of the

person you should contact. Call from the school phone with a well-organized sales presentation or send a letter giving your sales pitch and a copy of your publication.

Page 30: Advertising 101

Completing the sales call

• Do not persist if the merchant is clearly reluctant. After the third “No”—back off

• Don’t be hurt if a merchant doesn’t buy. Thanks them courteously for their time and continue to be friendly.

• Always leave the packet, whether or not the store buys an ad. The manager who said “No” might change his mind and want to get in touch.

Page 31: Advertising 101

The Media Kit Ad contract

Ad rate/size sheet w/ deadlines

Publication samples

Advertising policy

Refusal form

Page 32: Advertising 101

Where do we go from here?

Page 33: Advertising 101

Always be thinking of advertising

Always be thinking of why a business that you visit would want to advertise in your newspaper? What’s in it for them?

Always survey staff members and peers about companies they frequent.