Get an Unfair
Advantage Over Your Competitors
By Dick Marendt
Click on the links to hear the following jingles. (MP3 Player Required)
If you are an
owner/operator of an independent pizza shop, you begin your business
with a handicap as soon as your sign goes up. Unlike franchisees of
the major chains, you have a monumental task ahead: building name recognition.
In my last column,
I promised I would tell you how to: 1) permanently implant your company's
name in the minds of radio listeners; and 2) make your radio
commercials sound every bit as expensive as the major national pizza
advertisers at a fraction of the cost.
You can accomplish
both of these seemingly insurmountable tasks by using an advertising
tool that is unique to radio and television. Although it can be used
quite effectively in conjunction with other media, this tool is the
most effective one you can use to gain name recognition quickly. What
is it? It's a jingle!
When you hear the
name of a business or product set to music and rhyme, there's no
forgetting it. It makes a permanent impression in your mind. Want
proof? When you hear the opening bars to a song that was popular many
years ago, don't you instantly recognize it and start humming along,
even if you haven't heard it in decades? Want further proof? Ask
people to name the current advertising slogan of Winston cigarettes
and you will get only blank stares...unless you ask someone over 40
years old. They won't give you the right answer, but they'll be able
to tell you the most famous one Winston has ever used. They won't
just tell you the slogan; they'll sing it! "Winston tastes
good like a (clap, clap) cigarette should." Would you
believe that that simple little tune hasn't been heard for thirty
years! That's because cigarette advertising was banned from
broadcasting in 1971. Despite ever increasing print advertising
budgets through the years, Winston has never been able to recapture
its status as the number one selling cigarette in America since then.
Music is a great
memory device. That's why such major advertisers as Coca-Cola, McDonald's
and Chevrolet use advertising jingles. You can learn from their
research and experience to level the pizza-marketing playing field in
your area. Then you can compete with "the big boys."
"But,"
you object, "aren't jingles really expensive? "What costs
more: placing a series of ads in the newspaper and a string of ho-hum
radio spots that don't get noticed; or, purchasing a catchy jingle
that gets listeners' attention and running that on a couple of radio
stations in conjunction with your newspaper ads? Another point to
consider: You can pay off the cost of jingle production over several
years. Depending on the studio you select, expect to pay, say, $1500
to $2800 for a "re-sing" and anywhere from $2500 to $6000
for an original song.
Where do you go to
obtain a memorable, positive-image-building advertising song? Oh,
sure, your brother-in-law's best friend's son is a musician and he
would be happy to come up with one in exchange for a few free pizzas.
Hold it! Don't even think about it. You wouldn't consider using an
Easy-Bake Oven instead of a commercial unit, would you? Your jingle
is just as important to your livelihood as is the right choice of oven.
There are many
jingle shops around the country (ARCA in Little Rock, Arkansas, comes
to mind; of course, I AM prejudiced). Find these companies on the
Internet or ask a couple of radio station sales reps for a few names
and numbers. Call them, ask for demos of their work-especially
restaurant jingles-and inquire about price.
The jingle
producer will want to know many things about your business. Be
prepared to explain what makes your pizza and your establishment
different from your competitors. Do you already have a slogan to use
in your jingle? What sort of image do you want your pizza parlor to project?
Few local
businesses use professionally created jingles, so your well-produced,
catchy, memorable tune will break through the clutter and demand
attention. Your pizza shop will sound every bit as big as any major
franchise competitor.
For the
first two weeks, run the full sing version of the jingle frequently
so listeners will be able to learn the words and begin singing along.
When you later use a version that gives you lots of time for copy
points-even the instrumental only-listeners will identify the message
as being about your shop. The music makes every commercial an
identifiable part of a consistent advertising campaign. You should
also incorporate the jingle into your telephone message-on-hold to
further strengthen your marketing.
Your jingle IS
your image. For your present and future customers, it is your
friendly, familiar identity. It's the song that will pop into their
heads often, especially when they think of pizza. Your jingle gives
you an unfair advantage over your competitors...even the big ones!
In the next issue, I'll
try to persuade you to hire an independent audio production firm to
create award-winning radio spots that SELL! As a bonus, ARCA's
creative writers will give you a clever script you can have your
local radio station produce for free! PMQ
THINGS TO KNOW
Before you call,
there are some things you should know about the jingle industry.
Make sure that
your jingle is produced with no fewer than 12 mixes in both 60- and
30- second versions.
You do not have
the kind of money the major advertisers have, so you will not "own"
the jingle you decide to "buy." Instead, the company that
creates the music for you retains ownership and maintains the
copyright. Essentially, the jingle firm "leases" you the
exclusive right to use the song in your market area, either in
perpetuity (forever) or for a specified period of time. They are then
free to "ease" the same music bed (and, possibly, some of
the same lyrics) to other clients in other areas of the country
without infringing on your territory.
Assuming you
operate in one city, you will qualify for the lowest rate.
Still, you will probably be quoted two prices: one for an "original"
jingle which is created "from scratch," just for you (and
later leased to others); and a lower rate for a "re-sing."
You may hear a jingle on a demo you really like that was created for
a pizza firm in another part of the nation. Because the music bed has
already been created, the musicians paid and the lyrics composed, you
can save money and time. Perhaps only a few words need to be changed,
your name substituted for the one you heard on the demo, and then the
studio singers simply "re-sing" over the existing music.