Is print media the best resource for reaching your key audience?

by Charlie 1/20/2010 10:48:00 AM

I saw this article in The Times at the end of December revealing that advertising in print is twice as effective as TV. It got me thinking about the relevance of this to PR. According to the article, for every £1 spent on print advertising, £5 in revenue is returned.

I’d be interested to find out how this was calculated: this kind of information is invaluable to PRs when evaluating the effectiveness of their efforts.

Here at Metrica we’ve found that more and more clients are looking at ways to show the wider marketing disciplines the effect of PR on sales. We’ve been able to provide data which has then been run alongside other marketing outputs, directly proving the ratio of influencers on sales, giving a hugely valuable ROI.

Taking this report at face value, it looks as though PRs should focus all their attention on print (a strange conclusion given the decline of print sales) to improve PR’s effect on sales.

Joel Dawson, head of online marketing at Boots says in The Times article that “Print is very good for targeting specific audiences and getting eyeballs on key products”.

However, PR efforts on TV appear in the programme the vieweris watching rather than the ad breaks, which the viewer can increasingly turn off or ignore using their PVRs (Sky Plus / Tivo for example). This, many would argue, is why TV advertising is becoming less and less effective.

So perhaps taking the conclusions in this report and trying to match them with PR is inadvisable. I would argue that an individualistic approach – each campaign directed to the appropriate audience for that campaign– is the way forward. And, while you’re at it, feed your output into marketing modeling to prove the effectiveness of your work. 

Hazel Blears resigns from the cabinet

by Charlie 6/3/2009 12:55:00 PM

I found out about Hazel Blears' resignation this morning. It sparked a conversation in the Finance Team at Metrica about the power of the media to influence our opinion of the government. If we had any doubts about the influence of the media on politics, the level of coverage generated by the Telegraph scoop dispelled them.

The influential role of the media on public opinion was backed up by findings in the most recent Globescan report. This found that more people trust the media than their governments.

What’s remarkable about this whole scandal, as Peter Wilby points out in The Guardian, is that in recent weeks we have seen the return of the ‘old-fashioned scoop’ – details revealed in daily installments of print versions of The Telegraph have added weight to our mistrust of MPs and we now know it’s a feeling shared throughout the UK. A recent poll by The Times revealed that the share of Labour’s vote in the European elections could fall as low as 16%.

 

Do you think this is a direct result of the media furore over the expenses scandal?

 

Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.4.0.0

About Measurement Matters

A blog about media analysis & evaluation, PR planning, PR measurement and marketing measurement in general.

follow Metrica for media evaluation updates

Our 5 latest tweets:
The remote server returned an error: (401) Unauthorized.
Follow us on Twitter
Add to Technorati Favorites
<

Calendar

<<  September 2010  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
303112345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930123
45678910

View posts in large calendar

Recent comments

Tags

Login

Sign in

Business
Blogging Fusion
Blog Directory
Public Relations Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
blog directory
Blog Flux Directory
British Blogs
Wil's Domain Weblog
Dmegs Directory
Blog Directory
Business blogs
BlogDir
blogburst logo
Blog Directory
Top Spots Links
See blogs and businesses for United Kingdom