Originally posted by french frank
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The Eternal Breakfast Debate in a New Place
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostPerhaps I need to clarify. I am not saying that trails are ineffective full stop, I am however questioning their effectiveness/relevance on R3. I don't think that what works for visual media is directly applicable or comparable to audio in terms of results and I also think that the way people listen to R3 , the type of programme,(for the most part!) and the content is too different from say R1 and R2 for extrapolation there either.
The R3 presenters flag up concerts, programmes and performers linked to items broadcast in their various programmes which in my view is far more likely to have the result claimed for trails, not least for being immediate - hear the piece/performer then the details then information as to further listening etc. I don't see how blanket repetition of something with no connection to what has been heard is considered preferable to that in terms of results (whether that is listeners, ticket buyers or someone having a Damascene classical moment) - not least as I am not convinced those results exist for R3 specifically.
Ps yes you are right presenter endorsement (research suggests ) is more effective than trailing . Even more effective recommendations from friends through social media or word of mouth . Social media is def not to be trusted esp Instagram ..there’s so much unheralded funded promotion.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe irony in all this is despite listening to Radio 3 very often from 09.00 to 22.00 every day I’ve only heard this highly controversial trail once . I don’t know when this concert goes out. I’ve gone right through the schedules and googled Bruckner 9 and can’t find it. If only they’d run that trail a bit more frequently.I mean really….
Ps yes you are right presenter endorsement (research suggests ) is more effective than trailing . Even more effective recommendations from friends through social media or word of mouth . Social media is def not to be trusted esp Instagram ..there’s so much unheralded funded promotion.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostSo - was it game playing, hornet nest poking or ineptitude I wonder?!
I’ve only heard this Bruckner 9 trail once and would be quite keen in knowing when the concert is so if you know perhaps you could tell me?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostNot sure what you’re driving at but I honestly believe carefully produced and scheduled trails work and I have seen quite a bit of evidence to suggest they are effective. That is overwhelmingly the evidence from the directly comparable world of advertising and there is little evidence to suggest that the Radio 3 audience is any less susceptible to advertising than any other.
I’ve only heard this Bruckner 9 trail once and would be quite keen in knowing when the concert is so if you know perhaps you could tell me?
Martin's verbal trail for it is here at 1:40:00.Last edited by kernelbogey; 23-05-22, 04:44.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostPerhaps I need to clarify. I am not saying that trails are ineffective full stop, I am however questioning their effectiveness/relevance on R3.
The R3 presenters flag up concerts, programmes and performers linked to items broadcast in their various programmes which in my view is far more likely to have the result claimed for trails, not least for being immediate - hear the piece/performer then the details then information as to further listening etc.
Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI don't see how blanket repetition of something with no connection to what has been heard is considered preferable to that in terms of results (whether that is listeners, ticket buyers or someone having a Damascene classical moment) - not least as I am not convinced those results exist for R3 specifically.
(They are a bit like producing an advert for a Ferrari, pointing out that it has a petrol-driven engine which makes it handy for getting from A to B.)Last edited by kernelbogey; 23-05-22, 04:48.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostNot sure what you’re driving at but I honestly believe carefully produced and scheduled trails work and I have seen quite a bit of evidence to suggest they are effective. That is overwhelmingly the evidence from the directly comparable world of advertising and there is little evidence to suggest that the Radio 3 audience is any less susceptible to advertising than any other.
I’ve only heard this Bruckner 9 trail once and would be quite keen in knowing when the concert is so if you know perhaps you could tell me?
Glad to see that kb can help with the Bruckner item that kicked this off - asking me is a non-starter as I'm not set up for repeat listening and in any case said composer is very much not on my listening radar so I would have ignored it!
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostExactly so: thought induced in me by trail "Oh it's a long time since I heard any Ludwig van Hoffmenstal, I'll try to listen on Thursday.'
The pre-recorded 30-second trailers are clearly produced by a marketing dept (cue superlatives uttered by slightly street-cred voice and musical extract ending with applause and cheers) and obviously with a non-informed, non-regular R3 listener in mind: i.e. they are designed to shift a non-traditional R3 listener from R1/2/4/6 to R3. What many regular R3 listeners object to is their repeated use on R3; here, the presenter-linked 'suggestion' is likely, as Heldenleben says, to be far more effective - and doesn't need a 'bleeding chunk' to be shoe-horned in since we've just heard something else by that composer.
(They are a bit like producing an advert for a Ferrari, pointing out that it has a petrol-driven engine which makes it handy for getting from A to B.)
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I don’t mind the occasional trailer between programmes, as long as they don’t simper too much, but when they appear as a kind of commercial break in the middle of a programme (especially during Record Review) it can be very irritating.
However, when the advert is superimposed over music in an incompetent way (similar to the introduction of “This Classical Life”, then the whole process can be counterproductive. One can decipher neither the message nor the music.
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Originally posted by Hanners View PostThis was a so-called ‘Written Trail’ when we build script round a musical or verbal clip. The music duration was probably something like 50” - as it would be in a ‘built’ trail where the whole package is prerecorded. So the clip of Bruckner 9 was no different to the musical background in any ‘built’ trail. It’s not a ‘new’ low however you view it. To me it seems a bit extreme to change channels because of a brief trail. If that trail gets anyone to listen to the concert who wouldn’t otherwise have done so, and then maybe introduces them to Bruckner, then surely it will have done the job it’s meant to do…
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostExactly so: thought induced in me by trail "Oh it's a long time since I heard any Ludwig van Hoffmenstal, I'll try to listen on Thursday.'
The pre-recorded 30-second trailers are clearly produced by a marketing dept (cue superlatives uttered by slightly street-cred voice and musical extract ending with applause and cheers) and obviously with a non-informed, non-regular R3 listener in mind: i.e. they are designed to shift a non-traditional R3 listener from R1/2/4/6 to R3. What many regular R3 listeners object to is their repeated use on R3; here, the presenter-linked 'suggestion' is likely, as Heldenleben says, to be far more effective - and doesn't need a 'bleeding chunk' to be shoe-horned in since we've just heard something else by that composer.
(They are a bit like producing an advert for a Ferrari, pointing out that it has a petrol-driven engine which makes it handy for getting from A to B.)
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI have no reason to doubt that, as a general statement, but it isn't what I'm trying to get at. Where is the evidence that R3 listeners respond positively ie take useful action in response to the adverts. More to the point where is the evidence that the positive reaction is sufficient to balance out the negative ie stop listening, whether that is temporary or more permanent. Advertising companies and the managements which buy their products aren't infallible and are quite capable of getting things wrong as we see when ad campaigns are withdrawn. The "no such thing as bad publicity" mantra doesn't always counterbalance the adverse reactions either in such cases I suspect now that social media responses can be whipped up to a frenzy very quickly to push consumer actions.
Glad to see that kb can help with the Bruckner item that kicked this off - asking me is a non-starter as I'm not set up for repeat listening and in any case said composer is very much not on my listening radar so I would have ignored it!
If you did have an accurate measure of Radio broken down into 15 minute sequence you might have a fighting chance of running a reasonably robust experiment - on Radio that is . The problem with demonstrating whether TV trails work is that you can never be sure whether it was the trail , the subject matter , the myriad competing tv channels offering something better that is having the impact. I had the advantage of working on a very long running series that had relatively stable competing programmes and there were fewer competitors. l could more or less predict what subjects would be a turn off for viewers. I could also see the impact of comprehensive trailing particularly aided by editorial endorsements on other outlets (talk ups in broadcast slang). Series returns were marked by big trail campaigns and they often got the highest audiences - other things remaining equal. Though not as high as when inclement weather forced everyone indoors. TV producers , like farmers , pray for rain - except when they are filming.
Anyway back to Radio . My experiment would be based on the fact that Radio listeners are much more loyal than TV viewers. Many never even move the dial from their station. The audience peaks are 06.30 to 9.30 So the technique on Radio is (or should be ) to run the trails in these peak periods . There’s little point running them after noon when the audience falls away. So if you have a million listening at 08.00 - if you can get just one percent to tune into an evening programme that’s 10,000 people . That might well be 10 per cent of the evening audience .
One experiment would be to take two evening concerts with similar fare ( say relatively popular 19th cent Romantic) on the same day a week apart .Trail one relentlessly with particular emphasis on Sounds Catchup and the other not at all ( sorry musicians and producer). Then look at the Sounds requests. These are very granular to use the jargon - right down to the email addresses of the requests. To complicate matters you would also need to scan the TV schedules to make sure there’s nothing like a major incident on any of the evening soaps or a big sporting event.
The only flaw is that I don’t know how much Sounds catch-up listening there is on Radio 3 and whether it’s an accurate proxy. I see no reason why it shouldn’t be. I listen to it all the time now. One day of course the Sounds audience will be bigger than the live. Then trail makers really will have robust data to play with.
With regard to this Fridays Bruckner concert I see it’s live from the Barbican. I see there are quite a few tickets left. Another “experiment “ would be to see if the trailing shifts any tickets. But sadly I have other things to do this week.
One final thought. During lockdown broadcasters received record numbers of complaints - they were very largely about offensive material, impartiality etc. Very few are about trails - there are more about things like sound levels on dramas - a big bone of contention. There is , believe it not, research evidence that some people like trails.They want to know what’s in the schedule and they don’t have the time to go through the Radio Times and circle programmes with a biro like I used to.
Final, Final thought . Last Bond film ‘ No Time To Die ‘ production cost $250 million . Marketing spend $100 million. The world has gone mad….
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI thought that the version of ‘Spring can really hang you up the most’ by Mark Murphy was a vocal mauling of a really good song - there are many good recordings of this song around and a better choice could have been made. This is a personal view and others may disagree!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostYou should ask Proctor and Gamble rather than Barwise and Ehrenberg about whether TV advertising works. Did you know that many of the programmes on C4 , ITV and C5 are funded directly by advertisers ? I don’t mean funded by the ad breaks - the advertisers pay for the programmes and the broadcasters get them for free.
Why do people get so annoyed about trails? Perhaps because it is seen as a monopoly advertiser: the BBC advertising itself. People are annoyed by repetitive trails, Radio 3 listeners seem particularly sensitive to snippets of classical music being included, especially as a bit of background music.
Whether one is personally annoyed or not is irrelevant to the issue: 'people' do get very annoyed. The same 'people' will admit that now and again they are alerted to a programme they are interested in listening to, but it doesn't change their minds about trails. And as I've said, programme information at the junctions between programmes seems a better idea. But then, once you've reduced 'programmes' to long 2-3 hour sequences of presenter-CD-trail-news-listener opinion-presenter-CD-news-trail it's difficult to make them any more annoying … (in my view, of course).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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