Reality or Fiction?

Lonny Kocina — Marketing

It puts people on edge when I tell them they have been hypnotized by the media.  Some people think it sounds far-fetched.  Others think I’m making something out of nothing.  The common thread is that they don’t believe it.  The idea that someone else is manipulating their thinking is out of the question.

It’s been my company’s job for the last 19 years to create a camouflaged undercurrent of influence aimed at shaping peoples’ thoughts.  These almost invisible undercurrents are sales messages which PR firms carefully and deliberately wrap in mediagenic stories.

When you watch a movie, you temporarily suspend your disbelief.  You have to.  How else could you enjoy “Superman” or “Mary Poppins”?  You know it’s not true, but you let yourself believe for a moment that people can fly.  Not only can they fly, but one does it in blue tights with red trunks and the other with an umbrella.

A story on the evening news is far more believable than a movie.  In fact, these stories are accepted without question by most of the audience.  The subtle direction in which they push people is what the public relations revolution is all about.

Media Hypnosis, by Lonny Kocina

The Advertising Paradox

Lonny Kocina — Advertising

I’m a member of Prince of Peace, a wonderful church here in lovely Burnsville Minnesota. Last week pastor Foss made a comment in his sermon that I thought summed up the selling power of advertising today. To illustrate a point about listening for Jesus to speak to you, he said “I don’t know about you, but I don’t trust advertisements anymore. when a commercial comes on the TV, I’m as likely to walk out of the room as I am to hit the mute button.”

It’s quite a paradox. Advertising: the clear example of something we don’t listen to.

The days of introducing a new product through advertising are done. No one’s listening. It’s a grass roots world now. You can’t just buy time and shout your message. The key to introducing a new product today is finding the places people LISTEN.

Long-Form messaging really works

Lonny Kocina — Advertising

I have spent every day for the last twenty years thinking about advertising from a unique perspective. While most ad agencies distill sales messages down to 30-second spots or small ads, at my company we take sales messages and expand them. Instead of shortening the sales message into an ad, we turn it into information and then publish it.

Until recently, many businesses felt turning sales messages into information, such as newsletters and media coverage, was too much work. It was easier and faster to just list the features and benefits in ads, then blast them out to the public.

For a variety for reasons, the days of encapsulating the sales message into an ad are coming to a close. Advertising has gotten off course and in my opinion will never find it’s way back to the heyday it once enjoyed.

Super Bowl ads are a shining example of just how derailed advertising has become. If you look back at ads from the 30s, 40s, and 50s, you’ll see they are strikingly different than ads today.  Ads back then were designed to sell, not entertain. They were a list of features and benefits strung together in sentences to form a straightforward sales message.

In the 60s 70s, and 80s, our lives got busy. Ads became a nuisance and we started to look at them as pesky interruptions. We’ve gotten handy with the remote control and simply ignore what we can’t delete. To compensate, ad agencies added humor to keep the viewers attention. Not only does the ad have to sell, now it has to entertain.

In the 90s and 00s ads have become so convoluted by clever writers that it’s hard to find the sales message anymore. Agencies have turned advertising into an eye-catching but irrelevant form of entertainment. Many people now watch the Super bowl as much for the commercials as the game. The funny thing is, most people remember the ads but they can’t remember who the ads were for. That can’t be good for sales.

In defense of advertising, many brand-name products don’t need an explanation like they once did. Look at the features and benefits in this Coke ad from 1954. “In 31 countries around the globe, busy people relish the pause for ice-cold Coca-Cola. It’s the world’s favorite way to refresh, for Coke gives a bit of quick energy and with as few calories as half a juicy grapefruit. No wonder Coke is the most asked-for soft drink in the world.”

Imagine rehashing those slim benefits for the last fifty years. It’s no wonder they resort to cartoon polar bears sipping Coke as they slide on their butts across snowy slopes. I guess as long as we hear Coke fifty-bazillion times, we keep drinking the stuff.

But what about you? Most of our clients don’t have products that have been around 100 years. And most of you aren’t selling hamburgers or beer. You have products that need to be explained. Some are so complex, your customers could spend a week at a retreat complete with lectures, training and testing, and still not fully understand your product. But the thought of turning complex messages into catchy little ads is enticing. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could get some advertising wizkid to come up with a clever ad campaign that worked like magic? Each time your ad appeared, people would flock to you and order in droves. Your biggest problem would be filling the orders and counting the money.

I wonder how many billions of dollars have been wasted chasing this notion.

We have one client who spent $24 million on ads that produced $15 million in gross revenue. Last year they did much better. They spent $7 million to get $8 million in revenue. How much did they spend with us turning their sales message into information?  Almost nothing.  Could we have done better?  I can hardly contain myself when I think of the influence we could exert on the public with $32 million.

I urge you to consider spending more of your marketing dollars packaging your sales message as information rather than ads. Tell your sales story in national magazine and newspaper articles. Create a radio show and broadcast it on your Internet site. Write long sales letters and fax and email them to as many people as you can. Have books ghost written about your products and promote the heck out of them. Start your own magazine or newsletter. Turning your ads into information elevates the status of your sales message. Stories find their way into public conversation streams, not ads. This is the way to advertising in the 2000s.

Sam Walton says, “If you are confused in business, go to your customers. They have all the answers and all the money.” Will your customer stop to watch your commercial? Would you? My hunch is, you flip the channels when the ads come on just like everyone else. And if you spend time reading ads in your newspaper, you’re an odd duck. I’ll bet you hate the blow in cards that fall out of your magazines, and the chances you bought something because you saw it on a billboard are slim to none.

Why not expand your sales message?  Why not package it as information.  That’s what people want.

My business goal is simple: Help clients use information rather than ads to sell their products.

There are three primary ways to publish information: print, broadcast and person-to-person.

Sincerely,

Lonny Kocina

CEO

PS. Here’s a little direct marketing trick you can use. Start throwing your junk mail in a box by your desk. Eventually you will notice that you keep getting some pieces over and over. The ones that come over and over are the ones that work. I’ve done this now for twenty years and have gained some good insight.

You are getting sleepy…

Lonny Kocina — Public Relations

The world is led by invisible generals who work inside the Trojan horse we call the media.  Their people have more control over your life than you know.  Unless you choose to live in total isolation, they will have an influence on you.

Does that sound too Orwellian?  My company works with these invisible generals every day.  I’ve seen the way they shape peoples’ realities.  In fact, my company exists in order to help companies shape this reality.

We’re hypnotists in a sense.  I’ve thought this for years.  Who do we hypnotize? You.  We do it every single day.  Our medium could be television news, radio, newspapers, magazines - it doesn’t matter, they all work.  And just as a good hypnotist persuades his willing participants to behave as he tells them, we will soon have you making plans to do just what we want you to do.

We have almost finished laying the plans to carefully craft another small addition to your reality.  You’ll bite - you’re hungry for information, for entertainment.  And we’ll deliver.  But you’ll get more than you bargained for.  You always do.

Media Hypnosis, by Lonny Kocina  

Public Relations: an underused resource

Lonny Kocina — Public Relations

Company executives do not typically think of public relations as a vehicle for marketing and selling a product.  They view public relations as an expense associated with problems - a non-revenue generator. 

Where do they get this idea?  They get it from the public relations industry itself.  The public relations practitioners and counselors of today think of themselves as ivory-tower intellectuals, rather than salespeople.

It’s hard to imagine an industry more off track than public relations.  The industry is so grounded in the past it’s a wonder business uses PR at all.  That needs to change if PR is to flourish.  The Internet now provides a wonderful opportunity to sell products through a full explanation of features and benefits.  But will PR firms rise up to control Internet content?  Only time will tell.

Media Hypnosis, by Lonny Kocina

Use media interviews to support investor relations

Lonny Kocina — Public Relations

Media interviews can be an integral part of investor relations activities.  A feature story can give a good overview of your company.  Additionally, it helps reassure investors that you are applying serious marketing support to your product.

Often times media clips are shown at meetings with brokers and favored clients.

Using print media coverage in your annual reports is another good way to leverage your articles.  You can also do this with electronic media interviews by pulling quotes or capturing a frame of video and printing it.

Respect your elders

Lonny Kocina — Marketing

Are you considering marketing to seniors? If not, you should be.

In the next 25 years the senior market (age 60+) will grow by 81%, while the remaining adult market (18-59 years of age) will grow by only 7%. If you don’t think your business can profit by marketing to this group, better reconsider!

To reach seniors, keep your sales messages straightforward and benefit-oriented. Show seniors in your ads and on your Web site. Use larger type and an uncluttered design. Seniors understand the value of saving money. If you offer senior discounts, let them know! Use a very strong call to action.

Make a good first impression

Lonny Kocina — Events and Expos

Many companies market to the public at expos. The booths that do really well seem to understand that first impressions are made in less than 10 seconds. Booth design, graphics, presentation and promotions are valuable tools in communicating with potential customers. A customer needs to know who you are, what you’re selling, and why they need it. So if you’re going to be an exhibitor, look for visual ways to separate your business from exhibitors with similar products.

If you need some ideas, contact the good folks at Mid-America Events & Expos at www.101expos.com. Tell them I sent you.

Put your Web site to work for you

Lonny Kocina — Internet

How often do you want to update your Web site?

I tried to buy something the other day and was told it was no longer available and “should have been taken off months ago.” It’s important to keep your site current. For those areas of your site that change frequently, you may want the ability to input the updates yourself. With the right programming up front, this can be done with limited or no HTML experience. You almost have to think of your Web site as a living, breathing thing that needs constant attention.

Over the last 10 years the Web has changed dramatically. Have you changed with it? Look at your Web site and ask yourself if it is helping you generate business. If the answer is no, then you need to update it and make it an asset to your business rather than just a place for information.

When should you advertise?

Lonny Kocina — Advertising

Advertising  has been traditionally positioned as the focal point of marketing campaigns, but times have changed.  Now, advertising is better used to support other forms of communications that allow a company to tell its story. For example, using publicity and the Internet gives you space to expound on a product’s features and benefits in formats that hold the attention of your audience. Advertising should be dedicated to reinforcing the messages that are communicated in other ways.