Do you want to buy the lowest CPMs available in a market? Sometimes, you get what you pay for.
When I transitioned from being a brand awareness radio buyer to a direct response radio buyer, I felt liberated.
In my brand buying days – it was all about CPM. It works like this:
You get proposals from every station in the market.
You negotiate each separately.
You divide your share of spend based on the lowest targeted CPM.
If you’re slightly more sophisticated, you consider diminishing returns of reach at the station and market level, but most do not.
Great, you got your low CPM. Congratulations. And it didn’t matter where your spots landed, as long as it was cheap. Country? Rock? Talk? Hip Hop? New station? Old Station? Diary? PPM? How did your buy perform? Who cares, really? You’re job was to negotiate the hell out of the market and that’s what you did – according to the PPM and the Arbitron diaries. If the market didn’t see a lift, it was probably the creative’s fault, right?
In DR buying – you do care how the buy did. In fact, you obsess about it. But with DR endorsement radio buying, CPM isn’t the “end all, be all”. In endorsement radio buying – everything matters: the copy, the offer, the call to action, who the endorser is, what their show is about, what they’ve said in the past about your product category, who their other sponsors are, how long they’ve been on, what their rating trend is, what else is going on in the world – and sometimes, CPM.
I’m not saying CPM doesn’t matter, despite my Yiddish-like title. There is a decent correlation between lower CPM programming fairing better than higher CPM programming. But this is certainly not always true.
Two of my longest buys – both 5+ years, are working with two hosts that have stratospheric CPMs. One of those buys continues to be the most profitable buy that we do. In both cases, I would have laughed the sales reps out of the room in my Brand buying days. I’ll admit that it was tough to sign the contract, holding onto the notion that I can only buy CPMs of $7 or lower.
The point is, they can charge a lot because they work so well for so many advertisers.
Now, obviously, you still negotiate your pants off (and their shirts off). You still try to get everything you can, in terms of added value, bonus, website presence, etc. But could I make a CPM of over $20 work? I’m doing it right now quite well, thank you very much. Some of the hosts we work with can flat-out sell!
Plus, when you’re tracking results correctly, you’ll understand what CPM will work for you. So you start at a high CPM but learn that you’re only going to break even at $10. So you can put it to the station/network: listen, if we’re going to stay, we’re only going to be able to pay $8. Unless it’s a host in huge demand, they’ll often work with you. Money on the table tends to be snapped up these days.
So you brand advertisers can buy your low CPMs. I’ll take the stuff that works.