Archive for October 2007

Back from the New Media Expo

Oct 18th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Podcast Consulting

I came back from California and met up with a guy whose mind was absolutely bursting at the seams with all this new data/information/ideas/shared experiences … at the New Media Expo. His name was Derek Ross. We exchanged a few words and then I got an e-mail from him. That was 2 weeks ago and I just saw it.

When I got back from CA I had a server blew up and I forgot it all… Well, it didn’t actually blow up, but it certainly seemed to implode.

Derek passed along a few resources…

I’m finally going through some notes… I wanted to share with you all a “mind mapping” piece of software that I
have used with great success ..

See the screen shots for how it looks - the main page that I am directing you to looks really techie …

But the freemind software itself is easy to use - and it is open source

Freemind:
http://freemind.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

Also a Great article in Wired on Getting Things Done:
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/magazine/15-10/ff_allen?currentPage=all

Some “interesting” things to look at explore: ( Disclaimer- Use at your own risk - Interesting means explore - make your own decisions ! )

Your Own Affiliate Program: Apparently free version works with 50 affiliates or less http://jam.jrox.com

DVD http://kunaki.com

Phone Services [the K7 - and Kall 8 - phone services (which I use)

I have been looking at these :
www.simplevoicebox.com
www.freeconferencecall.com

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Oprah hooey? Or something we should ALL read and/or watch?

Oct 18th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: New Earth and The Secret

I got an e-mail from Steve who turned me on to The Secret… very interesting. Steve said…

Hey ya’ll… I don’t want to make this a long discourse if you’re not interested. So, let me make it brief.

The hype surrounding the movie and book “The Secret” has been crazy. Too much in my opinion. It’s everywhere. Oprah’s talking about it. People are being interviewed, etc…

However, I picked up the book. I picked up the movie shortly after. I’m advising ALL OF YOU, regardless of theological belief and/or scientific persuasion to read the book and/or get the movie. NOW.

Even if it’s used as a “refresher” for you. Or, a brand new tool. Or, if you’re thinking it’s more Tony Robbins-esque believe in my teeth, believe in yourself minuatiae…I assure you, Tony’s not involved, and it is DEFINITELY something EASY TO UNDERSTAND and to follow. It’s a life changer - 1000 times more than what Dr. Phil “shows” you on television.

In a nutshell - I’m not a religious person - more scientifically focused. I do believe that The Universe reacts accordingly to what you “put out” to it - through your thoughts and actions. Guess what? FINALLY someone has come along and laid it out there pretty close to where I’m at and what I feel. It’s hard to explain the examples of what the book and movie (which is a documentary pretty much word for word from the book - only with more historical visuals) - suffice it to say, it’s pretty clear in the first few minutes what “The Secret” is, whether reading or watching.

“The Law Of Attraction” - it’s what’s for breakfast…lunch…and dinner from now on - and it’s made me take a real hard look at where I’m at - and where I’m going.

Steve, thanks for the e-mail… The Secret isn’t much of a secret after all is it?

Justin Kaiser
Creative Identity Group

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Why Are Yellow Pages Like Nursing Homes

Oct 18th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Broadcast Sales

Here is a forwarded converstation from a “Secret Society” called the Idea Bank…  Thought you would find it interesting…

Why are the Yellow Pages like nursing homes? They’re shockingly expensive, few people under 70 use them, and many who do are just a little out of it.

Moral of the story? When you invest in Yellow Pages ads, *you’re setting fire to money*.

Are we being a little harsh on this venerable (read: antique) information source? Hell no. This obsolete technology sucks millions of dollars away from more cost-effective marketing tools, while delivering less every year. There are better uses for your budget, especially if you market goods and services to people who *don’t* remember the Truman Administration.

*Way back in the 20th Century…*

The answer to *Where can I buy a refrigerator?* used to be *let your fingers do the walking*. But the only people who continue to walk those fingers in *this* millennium are the ones who got into that habit decades ago. Google and Yahoo, to cite two sites, offer vastly more information, from more sources, more quickly. Fresher info, too. Phone book accuracy
begins to decay the moment it comes off the printing press.

Look at your brand message: how can you best tell your story? If you can draw prospects - via broadcast or print ads, good search engine rankings, or sponsored search - to your website, you can offer information precisely tailored to those prospects, with as much drill-down information as they desire. And pictures. And video. And animations. Even pages of technical specs if prospects need them. Bingo. Yahtzee. Home run. Hibachi.

Note carefully: we said “prospects” three times in that last paragraph, and not by chance. In branding, we pay less attention to your customers. * Customers*’ attitudes toward you are contaminated by reality; product performance will dictate repeat purchases. The bigger lever to your growth is to create a powerful brand, to influence positively the collective perception of your best *prospects*.

Given that, why would you want to spend a king’s ransom on Yellow Pages display ads? Those rectangles of static, limited information will be . this is where your investment gets monumentally unproductive . *surrounded by every competitor you have*. You’ve spent good money just to set off a round of comparison-shopping phone calls. If you’re the one called first, you can’t close the sale; if you’re called second or third, you have to be the low-price spread. It’s a lose-lose. You may even be ignored totally if the prospect focuses on your competitor and never sees you. YP is a “put two dollars in, get one dollar out” crapshoot.

*Measure your ROBI* Companies try to analyze Return On Investment to justify their continued YP use, comparing the cost of the ads to the sales attributed to the medium, but this is deeply flawed, for two reasons.

The first flaw is the dilemma discussed in the last paragraph: you’re spending money to be compared to every competitor, right there on the same page. It’s impossible to measure but easy to imagine *how many sales you lost* that way, greatly reducing your ROBI (Return On Bad Investment). Let’s get real: is your YP ad so magnetic that you will capture a reader’s eyes totally? So powerful she won’t even look at the ad next door?

The second flaw? Too many sales are attributed to Yellow Pages: Prospect A has seen your magazine ads and bus sides, heard your radio spots, and decides to call. If he looks up your phone number, the answer to “where did you hear about us?” will often be misattributed to that thing sitting in front of him. Look at your numbers. If you’re a YP advertiser, you’re
probably seeing declines from year to year, a trend we predict will continue. The total number of YP users will decline, because, as a tobacco client once put it to us about their brand’s diminishing number of loyal users, every year a portion of them “leave the market.”

*It’s an addiction, and fear of withdrawal is what keeps the Yellow Pages on life support.* All the smoke-and-mirror fear tactics of “combined rates” and “volume discounts” and implied threats to banish you to a “bad position” if you reduce the size of your ads miss the point: they are all bad positions - overpriced, underperforming, and outdated. Join the revolution:  you should keep a simple line listing for older people who need to look up your phone number, but quit display ads cold turkey. Start now, because it will take 12 to 18 months to recapture and redeploy those budgets.

Consider anyone who says “oh, our company has always used the Yellow Pages” as a person failing to adapt to changing times. That’s understandable, actually, because *none of this would have been true ten years ago*. Even five years ago, before high-speed connectivity got so widespread, it was not a slam dunk. Many of the clients we speak to admit their YP results are in year-to-year decline, but they persist out of fear.

*Are there exceptions? Of course.* If you’re a locksmith, or a computer repair shop, you must advertise there: your prospects are temporarily deprived of search engine access. Likewise, if you’re marketing to the elderly or to the poor  credit furniture, payday loans, monthly-pay car insurance, bankruptcy counseling …) YP might be cost-effective - might be.

*Your best media strategy?* Assuming you’re not one of those rare exceptions, your most effective, most leveraged approach to media can best be planned by brand strategists with the help of media planning specialists, considering your  service or product, your geography, the demographics and psychographics of your primary and secondary market segments, your seasonality, budget, research . it gets even more complicated than that, but we’ll be happy to help you sort it out, to get you into *this* century’s best branding practices.

One thing is fairly straightforward and immediate: if you’re spending more than the very minimum on YP, it’s time to kick the habit.

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In the Mix - Tips to Make You Jump Out of It

Oct 18th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Audio Production Techniques

John P is one of our associates and we recently had a discussion on mixing for voice… He offered some great tips…

First - Learn EQ and Compression backward and forward. That is the key to mixing.

When it comes to mixing its always better to take away then to ad. Also, learn your frequency range…usually males fall in the 2500-3200 range. Also, theres just many frequencies allowed in the spectrum, so if you have a song that peaks around 2800 and your voice is peaking in the same range you have to cut the frequency of the music in that range. Makes sence huh. So basically you are making a whole for your voice to fit in. That way you dont have to duck the music that much.

In the same respect, the human voice is only audible in the 150- 15k range ( any lower and your Barry White) so try cuting your voice with a high pass filter around 80-120, then compress it bit to even it out and your gold. It may sound thin, but remember the low end in the music will make up for it will cut through. Most TV spots are mixed exactly that way. Sometimes cutting it around 200 or even more. You have to play around with your voice to see what sounds best.

Second: Compression, the most over used tool in the industry. Compression if used right will make magic, wrong and you got crap!! Compression is more then setting a threshold and ratio. With the wrong attack and release time you can really mess things up. (TIP: Fast attack slow release for voice: Attack around 25-50 ms Release around 200-250. Mastering…attack 100 release 300) recently I have set up a templete in audition so I dont have to do much, I really like it and it has loosenup my work.

Just remember your work has to pass through the on air processing chain so if it sounds awesome in the prod room… chances are its too mastered or processed for air.

Compression and EQ–learn it, love it, live it. The rest is easy!

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FCC Inspections

Oct 18th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Broadcast Engineering

Del Dayton is our AM RF engineer and comes to IL from Eau Claire, WI.  He offered some tips from recent FCC inspections…

If you’ve had a state broadcast voluntary inspection and passed in the last 2-3 years, you probably will only have to show the FCC the certificate, and they will be on their way (EXCEPTIONS: if the inspection is NOT a routine inspection, i.e. a complaint, interference, or obvious condition such as EAS not being sent, monitor points being out, overmodulation, etc-things they can see or measure outside the station).

You will want to go over the checklist, as it seems different inspections I’ve heard about are emphasizing different areas.

The BIGGIES I’ve seen and heard about from the engineers who have been inspectect in the recent inspections are:

AT TOWERS:

1. Antenna Structure Registration numbers Posted conspicuously at each tower base.
2. Tower lights working and being inspected daily.
3. Tower location agrees with license (GPS Coordinates)
3. Tower painting correct and paint not faded excessively.

TRANSMITTERS:

1. DOCUMENTATION: Licenses,STA’s etc are current and posted or in a manual at the “remote control point”
(can be in a file, just be sure someone knows where they are kept in case you aren’t in the office). I generally recommend COPIES be kept in the public file.

Makes them readily accessible, but DON’T put originals there, in case they get misplaced.

ALSO, NRSC measurements should be readily available, with the last 2 years kept on record.

2. FM Power correct. Rules require it to be as close to 100% as possible, with 90 to 105% as extremes.
Also, you would need to explain the method of determination (direct off meter-I believe we use this method; or indirect using formula plate voltage X current = Power (this is usually from a chart). It is important the inspector feels you KNOW exactly how your power is being determined when you log it and that you are aware of te 90-100-105% info above.

3. AM Power correct (same limits as FM, but it will be measured as the Common Point AMPS on the phasor. They will also check the antenna monitor readings to be within 5% on the ratios and 3 degrees (STA will exempt this requirement-but NOT the monitor point readings!) on the phase and will want you to take them to the Monitor Points and insure they are in limits. Your knowledge you have gained over the years on this matter will be invaluable in this case!

4. AM transmitter is switching power at correct times.  Low power transmitter is going off the air at the proper time (Did you get a chance to set up the second timer on it?). Unplugging it is fine in the months that it never gets used (it is the cord you would have plugged into the NEW timer).

AT STUDIO

1. EAS System working properly and monitoring correct stations. 2 tests being received and one sent each week plus Monthly test being received and sent every month. Any missing tests received or sent should have a note in that week’s log explaining why and what was done to correct the problem.

2. EAS Checklist (downloadable from FCC website) is posted in the control room and operators are aware of procedures.

3. The State’s EAS plan should also be available. Most state EAS plans are available through your broadcast association or EAS websites.

Public File

All info, but a couple areas some stations seem to tend to overlook:

1. The Public and Broadcasting, a procedure manual. Downloadable from the FCC website.

2. Quarterly Issues and Programs report (not up to date or insufficient or incomplete)

3. Latest Ownership Reports

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