HOW TO WRITE AN
ADVERTISING SUCCESS CASE STUDY
Most success
letters published by the media regurgitate bland statements about how
advertising on a station, publication, or Web site gets results, but there is
rarely any useful information about how this wonderful situation came about.
Case studies
are much more effective selling tools than advertiser testimonials. They can give specific details on how a
station, system, publication, Web site, or network helped solve marketing and
advertising problems. Case studies can
be used by salespeople to demonstrate how a medium can marshal its resources
and expertise to help customers achieve their specific marketing
objectives. Case studies can be used by
salespeople to position themselves as problem solvers. Case studies are also excellent tools for
teaching salespeople the important elements of marketing and advertising.
Also,
advertising success case studies are an excellent way to get closer to a
customer and reinforce the value of your medium and your service to that
advertiser. By working with a customer
to create a case study, the customer’s commitment and loyalty to you and your
company will be solidified and will increase.
Elements of an
Effective Advertising Success Case Study
1.
The Marketing Environment: A good case study describes the marketing
environment: short-term and long-term developments and trends in the
advertiser's external environment such as changes in regulation, technology,
culture, economics, or demographics.
2.
The Competition: Define the advertiser's main direct and indirect
competitors, both current and potential.
Competitors should be described in terms of size, growth rate, market
share and primary strategies.
Competitors' major strengths and weaknesses should be noted. Competitors' positioning statements and
advertising strategies should be outlined.
3.
The Marketing Objectives: State the advertiser's marketing goals such as
“increase market share two points” or “increase weekday traffic by 20%” or
“attain a 30% share of mind (recall of stated benefits),” for example. Marketing objectives should be stated in
hierarchical order and quantified so that progress toward them can be measured.
4.
The Marketing Strategy: Outline the advertiser's primary marketing
strategy (segmentation, differentiation, or low-cost producer) and the
critical success factors in the execution of their strategy.
5.
The Advertising Objectives: Delineate the advertiser's advertising
objectives such as “create awareness” or “reinforce brand loyalty” or “increase
store traffic for next weekend’s sale by 15% over last year” or “increase usage
of canned dog food,” for example. Some
of the advertising objectives can be similar to the marketing objectives but
they should also be more short-term and media and campaign specific. Advertising objectives should be stated in
hierarchical order and quantified so that progress toward them can be
measured.
6.
The Advertiser's Competitive Positioning Statement (advertising objectives
put into the plain words of a consumer promise): Express the advertiser’s
positioning statement, not just the current slogan, but a positioning theme
that makes a definite promise to customers.
A positioning statement clearly defines “who we are.”
7.
The Problems that Advertising Can Solve: Lay out the advertising
problems from the advertiser's point of view.
The problems must be stated in a manner that is objective and not biased
to a particular point of view or does not imply an obvious answer.
8.
The Solutions to the Advertising Problems: Give details about the
specific solutions a station and its salesperson provided for the client:
A. Creative:
Ideas, strategy and execution.
B. Media:
Strategy, plans and execution, including merchandising, promotion, vendor
support, co-op coordination, research, copy testing, etc. Be sure to include
details of the exact schedules purchased, including reach and frequency
estimates.
9.
The Results: Summarize the results of an advertising campaign in
specific, measurable terms. The results section
answers the questions; “Did the campaign work?”
“Were the marketing and advertising objectives achieved?” “Were the results attributable to the
advertising campaign?” “Were the results
attributable to the medium used?” Graphs
and other visual presentations of results greatly increases their impact.
Make sure to secure the client's and agency's
permission to use the case. In some
cases clients are reluctant to give permission to use their names. They are afraid their competition will get
wind of and try to duplicate their success.
In such situations, write a case study using fictitious names and
organizations and change the conditions slightly in order to mask the identity
of the client. The principles, strategy,
and approximate results should remain the same.
When salespeople use the fictional case, they should tell prospects: “This
case is based on an actual situation, but the real client doesn’t want us to
use his name—the results were so terrific that he doesn’t want his competitors
to know about it.”
Stations should
have at least one case study that demonstrates how it worked as a partner with
an agency to solve a client's problem.
Stations should also organize an effort to have case studies in several
categories.
Advertising
success case studies can be written with a client or an agency as the
protagonist.
How to Write an
Effective Advertising Success Case Study
1.
Keep your audience in mind: Remember you are writing for potential
advertisers. Keep jargon to a minimum.
2.
Use short-story-writing techniques: A case has flesh-and-blood
characters who are intriguing.
3.
Openings: Grab the reader with a person facing his or her biggest
advertising problem. Set up the
conflict, the frustration. Remember,
clients are most interested in solutions to their advertising problems.
4.
Provide relevant details: After the opening that sets the situation,
give relevant details about objectives, problems, and solutions. Be stingy with numbers; do not give details
that are not applicable to the specific problem.
5.
Use as much dialogue as possible: Make people come alive with
dialogue. Straight narrative is boring.
6.
Make the salesperson the hero: Salespeople should be perceived as
marketing consultants, case studies in which they play this role help reinforce
this image—salespeople will use case studies more often when they are portrayed
as problem-solving heroes.
Case Studies as
Teaching Tools
Not only are
case studies excellent ways to walk clients through the problem-solving
process, but they are also one of the most effective ways to teach salespeople
about the marketing and advertising factors involved in designing successful
advertising campaigns. Developing case
studies is the best way to teach value-added and consultative selling techniques.
If two or three
salespeople are given a team assignment of writing a case study for a business
category, in the process of developing the case, they will not only become
experts in that category, but they will also have to learn a great deal about
the marketing and advertising process: objectives, strategies and execution.
Of course, once
a team develops a case study for a business category, the next logical step
(and one you will find they will take virtually automatically and
enthusiastically) is for the sales team to write a well-organized,
problem-solving sales presentation for that category.
Thus, case
studies teach value-added and consultative selling, marketing and advertising
principles, problem solving techniques, how to position your medium, and how to
write presentations. Advertising success
case studies are excellent teaching and selling tools.