Must Miss TV

Filed under: Design & Development, General Marketing, Off Topic, Offline Advertising on Wednesday, August 27th, 2008 by John Rhea

My wife and I have been watching the Olympics whenever we could over the past two weeks.  We’d watched almost any sport that was on and usually enjoyed it.  But on Saturday, NBC did something I couldn’t believe.  They aired about two hours and ten minutes straight of the most boring TV I have ever sat through (and why I did, I’m not totally sure).  They aired every minute of the men’s marathon run.

Now, I have nothing but respect for anyone who can run 26.2 miles straight.  I’d be hard pressed to run 26.2 feet - let alone recreate Pheidippides’ historic run.   But, that doesn’t mean that I’d like to spend 2 hours watching someone else do it.  I’d have been fine with watching the first ten minutes, cutting back to it every twenty minutes, and then watching the end. 

But seriously, why would you televise the entire race?  Show me something, anything else!  Watching linoleum curl would have been more interesting (if nothing else for that cool/geeky science aspect).  Plus, commentators run out of interesting things to say in an exciting sport so you can only imagine what they came up with during this riveting spectacle.  “Look they’re at a water station.”  “It really cools them down when they pour it on their heads.”  “Yeah, they sure like water, Bob.” or “These runners are really… running…”  I was on the edge of my seat.

So, why would NBC in its infinite wisdom show such fascinating TV during prime time? (Granted it was on Saturday, which is not a historically high-rated TV night).  I can only come up with two reasons:

1. They thought live-and-boring would trump taped-and-interesting or…

2. They didn’t think it through.  In either case, I think number 2 applies.

So, the moral of this story?  When you spend billions (or just hundreds) of dollars on a marketing campaign, think through how the audience will see it/hear it/understand it.  Throwing  money at anything only makes you poor.  Make sure your campaign is thoroughly thought through (say that three times fast). 

Try to look at it from the perspective of your target audience.  If I was X target audience demographic, how would I interact with Y marketing materials whether it’s a print piece, a Web piece, or a TV/Radio piece.  Don’t assume they’ll jump through whatever hoops you’ve laid out. 

Think about how you would react to the same sort of materials if you were in someone else’s target demographic.  If you take the time to think through every aspect of the life cycle of your campaign, you’ll see better responses, happier customers, and possibly a blacker bottom line.

Remember slow and steady (and thought through) wins the marathon (sorry, I just had to).

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