Direct response television

Direct response television (DRTV) is any television advertising that asks consumers to respond directly to the company — usually either by calling an toll-free telephone number, sending an SMS message, or by visiting a web site. This is a form of direct response marketing.

There are two types of direct response television, short form, and long form. Short form is any DRTV commercial that is two minutes or less in length. Long form direct response is any television commercial longer than two minutes. This was the accepted term for an infomercial from 1984 until "infomercial" came into vogue in 1988. The most common time period available for purchase as "long form" infomercial media is 28 minutes, 30 seconds in length. Long form is used for products that need to educate the consumer to create awareness and typically have a higher price. A relatively small amount or media time may be purchased in lengths less than 30 minutes but more than 2 minutes. Five minutes is the most commonly available time of these lengths.

Direct response television campaigns are commonly managed by specialist Direct Response or DRTV agencies with a full range of strategic, creative, production, media, and campaign services. They may also be managed by media buying agencies who specialize in direct response. In either case, these agencies purchase two types of air-time in two ways. The first is to purchase off of a station or broadcast network's rate-card for time. The second is to purchase remnant airtime, which is time that stations were not able to sell, and need to fill quickly or cheaply to avoid broadcasting dead-air. This is cheaper for agencies, but they have less control over when their commercials will run. As DRTV has gained presence outside of its start in the United States, local agencies have developed in many countries.

To qualify as DRTV, the advertising must ask the consumer to contact the advertiser directly by phone, by text message, or via the web. In the early days of DRTV, this was nearly always to purchase the product. Over time, a wide range of consumer actions have become used. And, many consumers watch the advertising but choose to purchase at retail without ever contacting the company. Typically for every unit sold on TV, anywhere from 3 to as high as 15 units might be sold at retail depending on retail distribution.[1]

DRTV as sales channel

When it first appeared, DRTV was used to market goods and services directly from the manufacturer or wholesaler to the consumer, bypassing retail. Over time, it has also become used as a more general advertising medium and is now used by a wide range of companies --- often to support retail distribution. Non-profit organizations also benefit from DRTV by making a direct appeal to viewers to make a donation[2].

Many types of companies use DRTV. Marketing companies who specialize in DRTV continue to use the format to offer product exclusively sold through TV. Many of these items find their way to retail shelves once their television campaign has ended or has matured. For example, the Dirt Devil Broom Vac was only available on TV for three months before retail launch. Mass merchant retailers often have "as seen on TV" sections in their stores.

DRTV as advertising for brand marketers and retailers

Starting in the 1990s, many brand manufacturers began to use DRTV as a part of their advertising mix. In these cases, most products featured on DRTV are also available at retail. The DRTV campaigns ask for direct consumer action either to purchase the product or to obtain a coupon which they can use at the retail store. Companies who have used DRTV for these purposes include DuPont (Teflon),[3] Hamilton-Beach, Space Bag, Rubbermaid, P&G, Toyota, Philips Consumer Electronics, Bissell, Evinrude, and Sears (Craftsman brand).

DRTV has also become a commonly used advertising medium for insurance companies, mortgage companies, cell phone providers, credit card companies, and a host of other services. Companies using this approach include Blue Shield, AAA Insurance (CSAA),[4] Bank of America,[5] Citibank Credit Cards, DirecTV, Dish Network, and many more.

Lead generation has become a large segment of many DRTV campaigns. Typically these campaigns collect leads and close the sale at a later date via direct mail, email, or phone specialists. Other uses of DRTV include branding via hybrid campaigns, whereas you create awareness of the product and drive retail sales with no firm response goal. This is sometimes called Brand Response TV, (BRTV).

DRTV Advertising Agencies

There are numerous DRTV advertising agencies that specialize in short form and long form direct response advertising.

Atomic Direct is a DRTV specialist which has pioneered campaigns which maximize the combination of direct and retail sales driven by DRTV and created campaigns for Kobalt Tools (Lowe's), AAA of California, Rubbermaid, the Mission Towel, and DuPont. Atomic has extensive experience in the categories of home, hardware, and automotive.

Media Reactions is a DRTV specialist focusing on media-buying for non-profit organizations. It augments traditional ad agency's abilities by adding tracking metrics that integrate web and call-center data with FCC run-times to determine which ads are responsible for producing results over which response channel. Success stories include the Wounded Warrior Project

212 Degrees Fahrenheit - A full service DRTV advertising agency that has created campaigns for MetLife, Trikke, BuyBelize.com, USAA Insurance, Experian, Travelocity, and AIG

Canella Response - A media buying agency responsible for such DRTV success stories as CarMd, Hip Hop Abs, Jillian Michaels Body Revolution and Topsy Turvy.

Eicoff - Eicoff is a large, prominent DRTV agency that has created campaigns for Lumber Liquidators, Tommie Copper, Quicken Loans and 800-Pet-Meds.

- Crescendo is a full service Direct Response advertising agency that has created highly successful DRTV campaigns for large and emerging brands such as Covidien/Medtronic (Barrx Procedure), AARP, Kelly Moore Paints, HearUSA , Accuray CyberKnife and many more.

Icon Media Direct - Founded by direct response industry veteran, Nancy Lazkani, Icon Media Direct is one of the Top Women-Owned businesses in Greater Los Angeles, ranking #1 among ad agencies. Icon Media Direct manages campaigns for top brands in their categories like OxiClean, Proactiv, Nutrisystem, zulily and more.

•Lockard & Wechsler Direct is a full-service, fully integrated direct marketing agency with over $450 million in annual billings and a wide range of satisfied clients[6]. The agency was founded in 1967 by *** Wechsler[7]

•The DRTV Centre (Direct Response Television Centre) is one of the leading UK advertising agencies specialising in direct response television.[8] The company writes and produces DRTV scripts and purchases TV airtime on the many hundreds of UK commercial TV channels.[9][10]

DRTV Research companies

  • DRMetrix - Company provides competitive media research and airings verification to the direct response television (DRTV), infomercial, and brand/direct industry.

Awards

Several award programs recognize excellence in DRTV advertising. Awards are sponsored by the Electronic Retailing Association (ERA) who honor both short-form and long-form DRTV advertising at their annual Moxie Awards Gala in conjunction with the ERA D2C Convention. Annually the Jordan-Whitney Greensheet offers a range of DRTV recognition awards. And even general advertising and production award shows, like the Telly's, WorldFest and Davey's, include categories for long form TV Infomercial and DRTV work. For short-form television direct marketing, the DMA (Direct Marketing Association) recognizes program excellence via the A. Eicoff Broadcast Innovation Award, named for DRTV pioneer and DMA Hall of fame member, Alvin Eicoff.

Super Bowl and direct response television

Many advertisements during the Super Bowl have been DRTV ads and encouraged direct response via websites and 800 numbers. These include ads for web services ranging from Cars.Com to Pets.com and Monster.com. The eTrade advertisement shown during the 2008 Super Bowl featured both an 800 number and a website for response[11] In 2000, Netpliance aired a 30-second advertisement driving phone calls to 1-800-iopener or Netpliance.com in Super Bowl XXXIV. Anticipating high response they obtained additional web hosting services in order to support direct response web traffic from the advertisement.[12] During the 2009 Super Bowl XLIII, Cash 4 Gold ran a national advertisement during the Super Bowl. This was erroneously reported to be the first DRTV ad in Super Bowl history.[13]

References

  1. Retail Impact
  2. Haire, Thomas. "DuPont's Teflon Slides Into DRTV," Response, September 1, 2006.
  3. (CSAA)
  4. Hawthorne, Timothy R., The Complete Guide to Infomercial Marketing. NTC Business Books, 1997.
  5. "Lockard & Wechsler Promotes Two". Issuu. 9 April 2015. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  6. "Who We Are". lwdirect. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  7. Brand Republic white paper
  8. Divorce Online campaign
  9. Energy Helpline campaign
  10. See these ads at this link

Further reading

  • Nathanson, Jon (November 14, 2013). "The Economics of Infomercials". Priceonomics. Retrieved November 15, 2013.
  • Response Magazine’s 21st Annual State of the Industry Report 1 September 2016
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