I was blown away by an ad on KFI in Los Angeles today. It was one of Bill Handel’s “morning crew” doing an endorsement. I came into the middle of the ad and it sounded like Rich Marotta, the sports guy on KFI, but I’m not positive about that.
That’s not the point. The fact that Canon, a huge multinational corporation, is using endorsement radio is a very smart move.
The internet has commoditized everything, it seems. There are shopping sites, independent review sites (not to mention “independent” review sites), comparison sites, Brand sites, Brand microsites, affiliate sites, and the list goes on. If you find the right site, you can look at price comparisons, userability comparisons from actual purchasers and reviewers, and great offers on what you ultimately buy. You add all of Canon’s competitors to the mix, and you have a very hard time cracking the purchaser’s thick and jaded skull beyond price discounts. (And outside of maybe 2% of Americans, who’s really going to know the difference between one camera and another when you’re talking about the big brands?)
But if I’ve learned one thing, and I’ve probably learned at least two things, it’s that peer-to-peer reviews matter.
Enter radio endorsements. Again, in a very cluttered environment, by which I mean competitors and advertising as a whole, endorsement radio could be the difference between a flat year and a significant bump in holiday sales.
Take me, for example. I don’t know one camera versus another. But the ad I heard on KFI made it seem like if I’m going to buy a camera this season, I’d be foolish not to consider the Canon. At the very least, it put Canon in my consideration set…which is half the battle.
Awwwww snap, smart move Canon.
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