Posts Tagged ‘ paraphernalia ’

Promotions - Thanksgiving

Jan 14th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Broadcast Promotions

Ham It Up

Here’s a promotion that can be used prior to Thanksgiving or Christmas. Find a local grocery store or meat market that will donate turkeys (for Thanksgiving) or ham (for Christmas). Each day, give away one turkey or ham to a listener who gives the correct answer to a trivia question related to either Thanksgiving or Christmas. For each turkey or ham you give to a listener, donate one to a local food bank in the listener’s name.

Thanksgiving Feast

Just prior to Thanksgiving, send your jocks out to local schools during lunch to eat with the kids and sample their Thanksgiving meals. Then, select the school with the tastiest Thanksgiving feast and award them with lunch from a local pizza or hamburger restaurant.

Food Bank Contributions

Team up with a local grocery store during the holiday season to arrange a live broadcast from their location. Encourage listeners to come down and shop, and pick up some extra items to donate to the local food bank. Have containers for the food at your remote…give away station paraphernalia and put shoppers on the air to make the event fun for everyone.

Dinner On The Mayflower

Sponsor a “Thanksgiving on the Mayflower” dinner during the holiday season. Have listeners register for this contest at a local grocery store (you can even place the sign-ups with a food collection container encouraging donations, and give the contents to a local food bank). Announce the winner during morning drive the week before Thanksgiving…the grand prize is an elegant Thanksgiving dinner for their family or friends, served by candlelight, on a Mayflower moving van.

Holiday Visibility

The year-end holidays creates good cheer and positive feelings. Connect your station with that holiday spirit by being a visible part of your community’s holiday events. Co-sponsor tree lightings, arrivals of Santa and holiday fund raisers. It’s a great time to contact event organizers and offer to help out by publicizing and being part of their holiday fun! Warning: beware of clutter from November through the middle of December; limit on-air commitments and strive to get visibility at the events.

Home For The Holidays

As the year-end holidays near, get together with a travel agency or airline and put together a “Home For the Holidays” package. Fly a college student home or send a family to Grandma’s house for Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner. Have them write or fax your station, in 50 words or less, why they or a loved one should win the trip.

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Promotions - National Days

Jan 14th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Broadcast Promotions

The Green Bagel Machine

On Saint Patrick’s Day, find a local bakery that produces green bagels and hand them out in bags with your station’s logo and call letters on them. These make great giveaways if you have a parade, Irish store or restaurant in your town.

Show Us Your Green Thing

Here’s a St. Patrick’s Day promotion which can take place at a local night club or as part of a remote: invite listeners to stop by and “Show us your green thing.” Award prizes in categories such as most creative green thing, ugliest green thing or biggest green thing. You’ll be amazed at what people show up with.

St. Patrick’s Day Breakfast Remote

St. Patrick’s Day has become a big adult party day, often associated with alcohol consumption. If this isn’t an image you want to connect too closely with your station, a good solution might be a St. Patrick’s Day breakfast remote. Choose a popular and accessible restaurant. Set up your morning team in a spot where it’s easy for people to stop by and chat. It’s a good chance to visit with listeners and do all those “Irish” things…from music to stories about leprechauns and Irish toasts. Doing a morning show remote makes sense, because you can promote other events coming up during the day…and have your listeners toasting themselves with green omelets instead of green beer!

A Taxing Situation

On tax day, April 15th, there will be at least one location in every town that’s open until midnight to postmark tax returns. Your station should be there to hand out stamps, cookies, hot chocolate and station paraphernalia.

Getting Back at Uncle Sam

On April 15th find a location that’s near a post office (one of your clients’ parking lots would be ideal) and have a dunking booth with someone in an IRS T-shirt in it. Invite people to “dunk the tax man” to help ease their frustrations.

Do I Really Want To Know?

On National Honesty Day in April invite listeners to call in and “bare it all” on the air, being honest about something they’ve never been honest about before. You can get a lot of really interesting stuff…just be careful to pre-screen the calls since this can get a little risqué.

Honoring the Office V.I.P.

A promotion honoring secretaries is especially good for strong at-work listening stations. Hold an after work party on Secretary’s Day in April for all the secretaries who listen to you; you can have co-workers or supervisors call in to add their secretary’s name to the guest list. Get sponsors to donate gift certificates to local shops, boutiques, spas and restaurants. A variation of this would be to hold a Secretary’s Lunch instead of an after hours party.

I Cannot Tell A Lie…Or Can I?

On National Honesty Day, have your morning person announce three facts and one lie on a particular subject. Invite your listeners to call in; the first one to tell the DJ which one is a lie wins a prize.

A Parade…No Foolin’?

For a wacky April Fool’s Day promotion, broadcast on your station that there’s a parade in town on April first (which there really isn’t). Announce the time and place of the parade on the air and send someone from your station to that location to see if any listeners show up.

April Foolin’

If your station has a high-profile morning person or team, this can be a lot of fun. Choose another station in your coverage area that also has a popular morning person or team (try to choose a non-direct competitor) and with no pre- promotion, switch stations for the day. It’s a good promotion for you and one of your competitors, and if it’s a non-direct competitor, you can both win…it’s guaranteed to get listeners talking about your stations!

Dads and Daughters

Since Bring Your Daughter To Work Day is becoming more and more popular, have your air personalities bring in their kids or kids of people who work at your station to help do news, weather and sports during morning and afternoon drive. You can vary this by having a public figure like the mayor, police or fire chief stop
by with their daughters (if they have one).

Caesar Who?

To celebrate the Ides of March (March 15th) — the day Caesar was killed — get with a local restaurant and create the “World’s Largest Caesar Salad.” Invite listeners to stop by the restaurant and give away free Caesar salads with the purchase of an entree. You can give away prizes for the best Caesar-like hairstyle, bottles of Caesar salad dressing to every 15th customer, and enter anyone who wears a toga to the restaurant in a drawing for a weekend trip to…where else? Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas.

Thanks, Abe!

For President’s Day give away pictures of the presidents — which are, of course, found on money. You can do this on the air, giving away cash for correct answers to presidential trivia questions, or at a remote location like a shopping mall or grocery store. If you do this outside the station you can announce on the air that the first XX (your frequency) number of people to stop by a particular location will receive an envelope containing cash, which can be in any amount — from $1 to $1000.

The WXXX Hidden Treasure

Hold a scavenger hunt for prizes the week before Robinson Crusoe Day in February. Get local sponsors involved by setting up the hunt so that listeners have to register at different stores in the area to pick up clues to the treasure’s location. Work with sponsors so that listeners who register get a special deal at the merchants on that day, like “30% off on all merchandise to WXXX listeners.” Merchants can also give away prizes to the Xth (your frequency) registrant of the day. On the final day of the scavenger hunt give clues to make the location of the grand prize obvious. Then, the first person to show up at the right location wins. An appropriate grand prize would be a trip to a tropical island.

Spotting The King

To celebrate Elvis’ birthday on January 8th find someone who’s willing to dress up like The King. Hire a red and white limo and take him around to K-Marts, Wal- Marts, and shopping centers. Inform your listeners that Elvis has been spotted in the area, and the first person to call the station and report a sighting wins. Donuts, peanut butter and bananas can be part of the prize package.

A Kazoo For You

In honor of National Kazoo Day in January, hold a contest for listeners to call in and play their kazoo along with a CD. Air personalities can judge the entries and choose a winner. A great prize for this contest is an autographed cassette or CD containing the song they kazoo’d to.

Remembering The King

In honor of Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday (January 15th) air short bits from MLK’s famous speeches, followed by, “WXXX remembers Martin Luther King Jr.” This idea can also be used for other famous American figures like JFK and Malcolm X. Sell sponsorships to accompany these promos.

June Dates

The first drive-in theater opened on June 6th, 1933. Kick off outdoor movie season by sponsoring the first night at 1933 prices, compliments of WXXX.

Me And My Shadow

Two weeks prior to Groundhog Day ask listeners to send in their guesses as to whether the furry fellow will see his shadow or not and separate the “yes” and “no” responses in two boxes. Once the answer is known, hold a prize drawing from the box of correct answers. The prize should be appropriate to whether summer will come early or winter will be longer.

A Memorial 500

Invite listeners to call, fax or write to your station, listing their five favorite songs of all time. Tabulate the results and play them back in countdown form over Memorial Day weekend.

A Laughing Matter

On April Fool’s Day your music programming can be lighter and sillier than usual. Tie in a promotion to have your listeners submit the worst ten songs ever recorded. Tally the results and count ‘em down on April Fool’s Night! If you don’t want to break format, select songs from your regular rotation that could be related to April Fool’s: Fool (If You Think It’s Over), Fooling Yourself, I’m A Fool To Care, Fool #1, Fooled Around And Fell In Love, Fool To Cry, What A Fool Believes, and Everybody Plays The Fool.

You Look Mahvelous, Ma’am

Celebrate Canada’s Victoria Day with a Queen Victoria look-alike contest, held at a local mall. You can also hold “Victrivia” contests running hourly during the promotion, with trivia questions relating to the queen or Canadian history.

Guess the Jackpot

For President’s Day, set up a cash jackpot but don’t tell the amount; let listeners know only that it’s made up of ‘presidents’ — $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100 bills. At regular intervals on President’s Day invite listeners to call in and guess the jackpot amount. If they guess incorrectly, have the voice of George or Abe say, “Sorry, your guess is too high (or too low)” and award a consolation prize. If the guess is right, Abe says “Congratulations, you win $125 from WXXX.”

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Promotions - Daily Promotions

Jan 14th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Broadcast Promotions

Spice up Your Spouse

Invite listeners to write or fax your station in 50 words or less why their spouse needs a makeover. Winners could receive things like a pedicure, manicure, hair cut and style, new glasses or contacts and new clothes. Read some of the most creative letters on the air.

Charity Auctions

If your station receives lots of autographed holiday cards from famous performers, here’s a great way to put them to good use: hold an auction at a local restaurant with all money raised going to a local charity or food bank. If you don’t want to sell them, cards can be given away on the air to the Xth caller, or for answering a trivia question correctly. This idea isn’t limited to cards…you can auction off any autographed items your station has.

Mall Remotes

Tie in remotes with a local mall. Develop themes such as lawn and garden, home improvement or gourmet cooking and get sponsorships from merchants in the mall. If the theme is lawn and garden, get sponsorships from florists, lawnmower shops and gardening stores; if it’s home improvement get sponsorships from hardware and lumber stores; gourmet cooking sponsorships could come from kitchen shops or gourmet food stores in the mall.

Oh Yes It’s Ladies’ Night

If you’re a station that targets women, hold a “Ladies Night Out” drawing once a month. Ask female listeners to fax or call in the “song of the day” which is played at 8 AM to enter them in the drawing for a night on the town with five of their friends. This could include manicures, dinner and a movie for the group. Local restaurants, theaters and clubs would make great sponsors for this event.

The Ultimate Redneck Night

Have listeners submit their names for a drawing to be part of the Ultimate Redneck Night. Pick up the winning listener and their date in a 4-wheel-drive truck, take them bowling, have dinner at a local deli or hamburger spot and for dessert take them to Wal-Mart for Twizzlers. You could also have large belt buckles made with your station’s logo on them which the winners have to wear. What’s in a Song?

Progressive Trivia

Set a specified time each weekday morning when a trivia question is asked. Award small prizes to winners Monday through Thursday, telling your listeners to write down the answers to questions from those four days. On Friday, award a grand prize to the listener who can answer Friday’s trivia question, plus give the answers to questions from the four previous days.

A Strip-”Tease”

Have your female listeners call in to register for a night with a stripper for themself and three of their friends. Hold a drawing from the names and send the winner and friends out for a night of wild and crazy fun…with a paint stripper from a local paint store or remodeling company (this could make a great April Fool’s promotion).

Bad Impression

Have a “Bad Impression Weekend” where listeners call in and give the on-air jock their worst impression of a well-known person (this could be a local or national celebrity). If the jock can guess who the caller is impersonating, the caller wins a prize.

WXXX Pays For A’s

Encourage students to get good grades with a “WXXX Pays for A’s” promotion that can continue through the school year. Students who get A’s on their report cards can mail or fax them to your station. Draw names from the report cards and award prizes to students whose grades improved.

Midterm Madness

If your station is located in a college town, contact the local school(s) to find out when midterms (or finals) are scheduled. Team up with local sponsors and put together midterm survival kits to give away to students on the air. Contents could include coffee and a station mug, study snacks, pens, pencils and paper, vitamins, or a gift certificate to a local hot spot for celebrating the end of midterms.

Let’s Do Lunch

Hold a contest for your younger listeners…ask elementary school students to write, in 50 words or less, why their class deserves “Lunch on WXXX.” Read the most creative entries on the air. The winning entry’s class wins lunch from a local restaurant.

You’re Cookin’ Now

Put together a “WXXX Cookbook.” Have listeners submit their favorite recipes in exchange for a copy of the cookbook. Sell additional copies at a local bookstore or at station remotes, with all proceeds going to charity. Make the last few pages of the cookbook tear-outs with coupons from the sponsors of this project.

Rainy Day Pool Party

Host a “Rainy Day Pool Party.” Team up with a local Boys & Girls Club or YMCA so that when the forecast calls for rain they’ll open up their pool tables for the kids. Have someone from your station present to give away hats, bumper stickers and other station paraphernalia.

Fans For Fans

Give away fans with “I’m a WXXX Fan” printed on them. Aside from outdoor events such as fairs and concerts, these work particularly well at nightclubs where it’s hot inside. It gets your call letters all over the place, even if you don’t “own” the event.

Charity Of The Month

Choose a “Charity Of The Month,” sponsored by your station. During that month, sell your station T-shirts with all proceeds going to a local charity. This is a good promotion for stations that can’t justify spending lots of money on shirts just to give away.

Open Air Movie Night

Invite your listeners to an “Open Air Movie Night,” showing films on the side of a building (or hang a large canvas sheet off a building and project onto it). During the next day’s morning show, ask trivia questions based on things that happened during “Movie Night,” and award prizes to listeners who call in with the correct answers.

A Picture is Worth 1,000 Listeners

Here’s an oldie but a goodie! Gather photographs of nice looking men, women and/or families who fit into your target demo. Place their picture in the control room and in front of the microphone so whenever the on-air personalities open up the mike, they can visualize speaking directly to an individual listener. Alternate photos to retain freshness.

The 60 Second Survey

Here is an idea for getting great quantitative and qualitative research information without spending a fortune. Talk to the manager of your local mall and obtain permission to conduct a 60 second survey consisting of seven multiple choice and open-ended questions printed on a small index card. Register those people who’ve completed the survey for a weekend getaway. Have your sales manager work a deal with one of the department stores or cosmetic companies to give away samples of their products as well. Try to coordinate this on a weekend when the mall is having family events or crafts shows, which tend to raise attendance.

Clip Here

Many stations agree that coupon books are a valuable way to promote themselves and their sponsors. Allow an advertiser a coupon or two in your book when they purchase time on the station. Make the books available at participating sponsors and convenient locations in town. To give books extra value, number them and broadcast one daily for a bonus prize. Don’t forget expiration dates and be sure to promote your station, special programming and air personalities on alternating pages.

Co-Operation

If you have an under-performing AM, turn unsold weekend inventory into money with creative block programming! Set up a cooperative arrangement with a local business and allow them to do their own talk show. For example, a local nursery would air a gardening show and pay a flat rate for the entire time slot(s). In turn, you sell time to their vendors as sponsorships (such as plant food companies and lawn care product manufacturers). Vendors who buy time on the nursery show will get better shelf placement in the store. It can be a win-win-win situation.

Friday Flicks

Work out a trade with a local theater and give away pairs of movie tickets every Friday whenever you play songs from movies. Listeners will be thinking about weekend entertainment and they’ll stay tuned to your station to try and win. Give away as many tickets as you like, but limit the number of winners by giving away the tickets to the Xth caller.

Would You Like Fries With That?

Here’s a promotion if your station has a stunt person or wacky air personality. Have the stunt person go to a local drive-thru restaurant, but don’t let your listeners know the location. Invite your audience to stop by drive-thrus and say something silly like “Sam the Stunt Guy is my breakfast buddy.” The first person to stop by the correct drive thru and say the magic words wins a prize. You can invite listeners who stopped by the wrong drive-thrus to call in and tell about the reactions they got from people taking their orders too.

Personal Invitation

A few days before a remote, send a letter signed by the talent scheduled to appear to the zip codes in your database near the location. For example, “I’m going to be in your neighborhood this Saturday at noon.” This personal invite is a great way to increase traffic on remote day. Looking for a different grand prize for a concert giveaway? Award a telephone answering machine with a personalized greeting from the star of the show.

Parties On Pavement

If there’s a big concert or event coming to town, find parking lots near the event and buy the spaces in advance. Then, offer free parking to listeners who display your bumper sticker on their vehicle. The parking lots also make great locations for station-sponsored tailgate parties.

Pulverized Beyond Recognition

Find a local car dealer who takes in competitors’ models as trade ins. Ask him or her to donate a used vehicle to be smashed into a junkyard square. Find a towing company willing to haul the smashed square to remotes for several weekends. Invite your listeners to come to the remotes and guess what make, model and year the vehicle is, and award a grand prize to the best guess. If necessary, use the mileage on the vehicle as a tie breaker. Sell two remotes each weekend for eight weeks to generate revenue.

Stop The Violence

Stopping violent crime has become a priority with both federal and local government. Start a “Stop The Violence” campaign on your station. Work with local businesses and police departments to publicize the campaign and come up with incentives to get people to turn in their hand guns. You can come up with lots of incentives with help from concerned local businesses. Have the guns melted down and create a memorial to victims.

Day By Day

Offer to publish the annual business calendar for the local Chamber of Commerce or business association. List all the key retail sales dates, special town events, holidays, and — of course — your station promotions. Distribute the calendar to every business in your area so it can be posted to provide year- round promotion for your station.

The Beast and The Beauty

Find an old car from a junk yard and invite listeners to come and see “The Beast.” Then, over the course of six weeks, sell remote packages to body shops, auto painters, detail shops, auto parts stores, car dealers, auto repair facilities, service stations and car washes. Have each of these sponsors add a feature or fix something on the car, and remind listeners to come watch the metamorphosis. Invite them to register and listen for their name to be called to win what is becoming “The Beauty.”

A Sweet Promotion

Place candy jars emblazoned with your station’s logo and call letters in businesses throughout the community. Have your salespeople carry candy refills with them as they make their sales rounds. It’s a great way to have people notice the station’s call letters, and a perfect reason for the salesperson to make regular stops at each advertiser.

The World’s Biggest Newspaper Drive

Many charities rely on annual newspaper drives to raise funds. Make plans to set the Guinness Book of World Records mark for the biggest newspaper drive ever. This can be a sales and programming project. Plan a weekend-long broadcast from a client location, and find a moving company willing to donate a semi-truck or two. Find a local charity to provide some manpower and be the beneficiary of money raised. Alert local newspapers and television stations to your plan…perhaps the local newspaper would give you a donation of unsold issues to kick off the drive. Give this event as much pre-promotion as possible so people can stockpile their papers. You might want to have pony rides for the kids, a live band or some other activity to encourage people to stop by. Collect newspapers all weekend long The more excitement you can generate on-air, the more people will want to come and donate. Plan promotional pictures with your key air talent buried in newspaper. You’ll be doing something great for the environment and your community!

A Little Pick-up For Your Station

Stage a promotion to show listeners that your station cares about the environment…and get them involved too! Arrange a “Community Clean-up Day” where station personalities join with your listeners in a litter pick-up effort. Choose a location near a highway, park or beach where littering is a problem. Hand out station T-shirts to everyone who shows up at the event with trash bag in hand (you can pre-print litter bags with your logo/call letters on them, then distribute them free at sponsor locations); broadcast live at the location, and encourage everyone listening to come down and join in the fun. Prizes can be awarded for the most unique article of trash or for the biggest bag of litter. Be sure to separate recyclable items from the rest of the trash.

Foiled Again!

Have a competition among community or school groups to gather aluminum foil for six weeks and roll it into one big ball. At the deadline, have groups bring their foil balls to a station event at a recycling center to see which group has rolled up the winning entry. The winning group gets their aluminum weight matched in dollars by the station or a co-sponsor.

Talkin’ Trash

Have a contest to see who can come up with the most interesting use for a common household item, or the best use for something hard to recycle. Invite school art or science classes to get involved too, and let newspapers and TV stations know about the contest…entries could make great pictures for the five- o’clock news!

Environment on Wheels

Have your promotions person find local businesses and organizations that are active with environmental concerns. Work with them to create a traveling Environmental Fair to take to local schools. Have each group provide a speaker and materials, and ask the school to assign each group to a different classroom. Students go from room to room, learning about each topic. You can also use the school’s gym to set up areas for each topic. Train some of your personnel to work with the organizations so your station is represented at the fair. Give schools flyers to send home with students inviting parents to participate. Use your public service time to promote the fair, and let listeners know where you’ll be. Run promos containing positive comments from students, teachers and parents.

Yes You Can

Hold a fun afternoon event where your listeners compete to build towers or castles out of empty pop cans at a shopping mall, a roped-off section of a retail store’s parking, or a park. Award sponsor-donated prizes for winning structures in categories like biggest, tallest and most creative. Encourage teams or clubs to collect cans from all their friends and neighbors prior to the event. Weigh or count the cans as competitors register and find a soft drink company willing to buy back the cans with all proceeds going to a local charity or food bank. To comply with lottery laws (”no purchase necessary”), be sure to have extra cans available at the site — the soft drink company can supply them or you can arrange for a bin at the retail site during the pre-promotion period encouraging can donations. Recycle the cans at the end of the competition.

Welcome Developments

Each format has core artists that represent its music. When one of these artists comes to town for a concert and the promoter won’t affiliate any one station with the show, your station should still “welcome” the artist. Produce promos and liners that make you sound as official as possible. Follow up with tangible things like contests to win tickets, on-site giveaways and pre-concert parties at appropriate clubs.

The Secret Contest

Look for events in your community that are going to attract the demo your station is targeting. Print flyers to place on windshields of vehicles at those events inviting potential listeners to try your station. Say something like: “The staff and management of WXXX would like to invite you to try our radio station, and we’ll pay you to do it!! Tune in WXXX (plus dial position) and listen for (song). When you hear that song, call (station phone number) and be the Xth caller, and we’ll give you (dollar amount) just for trying our station. This contest will not be announced on the air. It is exclusively for recipients of this flyer. Thanks for trying WXXX!”

Cleaning the Prize Closet

If you’ve got a closet full of “nearly good prizes” left over from past contests, here’s a good way to get rid of them: create a “Station Janitor” character who’s charged by the boss with cleaning out the prize closet. You can have him come in (taped) to show off his latest find and give it away on air.

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Invite a car dealer to co-sponsor a Good, Bad, and Ugly Car Show and Contest. Choose a panel of judges from your station and the sponsor’s staff. Prizes can be simple or extravagant but should relate to the categories:

The Good: The cleanest, nicest-looking cars.
The Bad: The best customized car or hot rod, judged on quality of workmanship.
The Ugly: For old, dirty, smashed, trashed or just plain tacky cars.
Turn this into a weekend remote at the dealer’s location; have free hot dogs and pop for everyone who stops by.

You Auto Do a Coupon Book

Since couponing continues to be very popular with both radio and print retailers, present a package of radio ads and coupon books for car care products and services. Give away the coupon books at sponsor locations to increase retailers’ foot traffic.

Baby, Can We Drive Your Car?

Find a local car dealer willing to supply a vehicle to be driven by each station personality for a week. After all your personalities have had their turn, invite listeners to guess how many miles the jocks put on the car during the contest. The closest guesser wins the lease of the car for anywhere from three months to a year (it’s up to your dealer). Note: check with your insurance carrier for coverage before you start this promotion.

Sticker-Spotting

If you have station bumper stickers, try a license plate spotter contest. Several times a day announce a license number of a car spotted with your station’s sticker on it. Give the owner of the vehicle a set amount of time to call the station and claim their prize. Sticker-spotters can be station employees on their way to work; you don’t necessarily need a spotter on the road all the time.

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Promotions - Sum Sum Summertime

Jan 14th, 2007 | By Justin Kaiser | Category: Broadcast Promotions

We�re Cookin� Now!

Stage a �WXXX Cookout� where the entire station staff puts on an evening or weekend barbecue for listeners. Trade with sponsors for food and drink items. You can turn this into a contest for groups or offices: have them write, in 25 words or less, whey they deserve a �WXXX Cookout� for their friends. Hold the cookout in a popular public location for high station visibility.

Neighborhood Block Party

Block parties can be popular during the summer months. Your station can put together instructions on how to hold a block party and provide official block party signs with your logos or call letters on them. Stage your own block parties throughout the summer months, inviting listeners and their friends to join you. Arrange for local police officers or firefighters to drop in and say hello to all the children.

There Is Such A Thing As Free Lunch!

During summer months, do live remote broadcasts from a popular beaches or public pools. Team up with a local deli or sandwich shop and put together boxed lunches (order however many match your frequency � 101, 95, 104) and give them out to the first people to arrive at the location. Include station paraphernalia such as bumper stickers or pins inside each lunch box. In a selected few boxes, insert bigger prizes such as gift certificates or movie passes. If possible, have the lunch boxes custom made with your station logo and call letters on them.

Mall Shopping

As summer temperatures climb, people will escape into cool and comfortable shopping malls. Set up a booth and hand out promotional material like bumper stickers and key chains and have a drawing for prizes such as a weekend getaway or tickets to an upcoming show. Use it as a remote opportunity as well. This need not be an expensive event, just a reminder that your station is around.

Pits Are The Life

Here�s a fun summertime contest: hold a �WXXX Cherry Pit Spitting Contest.� Invite listeners of all ages to join in the fun. Entrants simply eat a cherry and spit the pit as far as they can�it�s best to use a flat, paved surface. Award prizes according to age group categories. Hold the event in a place like a grocery store parking lot and broadcast a remote of the exciting play-by-play action.

Hooked On Headphones

Use summer events like county fairs or weekend festivals where lots of people gather to obtain some data. Get your engineer to connect a tape playback configuration with ten sets of headphones. During the event, have people put on the headphones and listen to 20 song hooks (which would take three to four minutes). Provide a score sheet for listeners to rate the songs. Change the set of hooks regularly to collect more information, and be sure to ask some qualitative questions about your station, your competition and the person�s listening habits.

Briquettes In The Morning

Hold an official summer kick-off Barbecue, where your morning show personalities host an early morning BBQ in the parking lot of a store at a busy intersection. Invite your listeners to stop by and sample the food. Invite special guests to stop by, like chefs, local celebrities and the Mayor.

The Good Old Days

Set up a noontime oldies show that focuses on music from five, ten, twenty and twenty-five years ago. Invite listeners to call in with memories of their high school years and promote the summer�s upcoming class reunions. This will work great for a number of stations, regardless of music format.

Bow Wow and Meow

With kids on summer vacation, it�s a perfect time for your listeners to adopt a pet. Broadcast puppies and kittens available from local humane societies and offer a month�s supply of pet food, collars and pet toys through a tie-in with pet supply retailers to listeners who adopt a pet.

Mystery Song

Music-intensive stations looking for a good summer promotion should consider reviving the �mystery song� contest if it hasn�t been done in your market recently. Put a summer spin on the contest by splicing together the word �sun� (or �son�) from a dozen or so titles and challenge your audience to identify each title in the mystery song. For forced listening, play the mystery song at fixed positions during the day. If your song is really hard to identify, provide clues to help move the promotion along. To generate revenue with the contest, entrants should be required to fill out forms at participating sponsors. If you are using clues, they can be posted at the sponsor�s as well.

Downright Neighborly

Summertime means vacation time, and families often struggle with who�ll look after their house, pets and yard while they�re away. Get together with a local junior high or church group and find kids who are available to vacationers to watch over residences during the summer. With the approval of school or church officials and a verifying background check, the students, known as the �WXXX Watchers,� can earn their way into this group with the completion of successful projects during the school year and through involvement in extra-curricular activities. It�s extra money for kids, peace of mind for travelers and community involvement for your station.

Those Were The Days

Does your station target an audience between ages 28 and 58? If so, they�ve got something in common � summer high school reunions. Spring is the planning time for these 10, 20, 30 and 40 year reunions. Be sure your station is �Class Reunion Headquarters.� Make announcements for groups organizing theirs and offer to provide talent and emcees for the events.

A Day In The Park

Now�s the time to plan �A Day In The Park� hosted by your station. Pick one of the three long weekends this summer: Memorial Day, Fourth of July or Labor Day. Pick a popular local park and invite your listeners to join you, as a �thank you� for their support. Have live music, contests, games and food at the event.

Making Waves With Your Station

In markets located near lakes and oceans, take advantage of your geographical situation this summer and head for the water. Find a local yacht company to sponsor a boat that will take your station�s air personalities out on the water. Have them hand out T-shirts, bumper stickers and other prizes to boaters who have their radios tuned to your station. For you land lovers, stage the same promotion at local beaches or picnic areas and hand out prizes to anyone with their radio tuned to your station.

Piggy-back Remotes?

While summertime remotes offer stations the chance to generate great revenue, they may also stretch your staff and air sound a little thin. One good alternative is a �combo� remote using more than one advertiser. Offer a small discount on remote packages that lets you combine one client�s product with a remote at another client�s location. For example, broadcast a remote from a car dealer�s and offer discount coupons for the local Subway sandwich shop. Your air talent delivers a combined spot for both advertisers during cut-ins, and you reduce clutter and avoid running two back-to-back remotes.

The Cardboard Castle Build-Off

Not every station has a beach or a year-round supply of accessible sand. So, converge on the local park and have a cardboard castle build-off. Participants are given ten-by-ten foot areas in which to construct the most unusual, tallest or most grandiose cardboard castle they can. Hold the contest in the morning, judge in the early afternoon, and award prizes. Then, tear �em down and haul the cardboard to your local recycling center. Have the recycler co-promote the contest or get prizes from merchants as incentives to get involved�and make sure to have a station team of listeners picked from random callers on the air to compete.

End of Summer Jam

Invite local or regional bands play to play in a day-long concert at a nearby race track, stadium or park. Charge one admission fee that will covers all bands. Broadcast live from the concert and encourage listeners to come down and join in the fun. You can sell or give away T-shirts, hats, cups and sunglasses, with all proceeds going to a local charity.

Take a Stand in the Sand

As summer arrives and listeners head for the beach armed with portable stereos, encourage them to take your station along. Air promos that �WXXX undercover beach surveillance crews will be scanning the sand at (location) for sunbathers tuned to (frequency/call letters).� Station personalities or representatives can patrol local beaches listening for radios tuned to your station. Give away water bottles and beach towels with your station�s logo on them, or bigger prizes like portable stereos, concert tickets or gift certificates.

Everybody In!

During the summer months host �Pool Party Weekends� and give away summer survival kits. The kits should include things like six packs of pop, suntan lotion, beach balls, beach towels and a couple of CDs. Qualify all kit winners for a big �Summer Survival Get-Away,� a trip to a sunny destination that they can take during the winter months.

Balloons for Summer

Summer is the time for outdoor promotions and opportunities to increase your station�s visibility. Helium balloons are a great way to do this. Print your logo on one side of your balloons, and an advertiser�s logo on the other side, sharing the cost of the balloons and helium. The advertiser�s employees could fill and distribute the balloons at outdoor functions you participate in. It�s a great way to stay top-of-mind with your listeners!

The Joy of Dunking

A great county fair event is a dunk tank, featuring local celebrities as the targets. Set up a station-sponsored dunk tank at summer events with proceeds going to a local charity or food bank. Station personalities can broadcast from the booth to encourage participation, or even be in the booth if they�re brave enough.

WEEKEND SPECIALS:

Here is an outline of weekend specials to consider for the Summer:

May

1-360 hours of 60s Weekend
8-10All-Request Mother�s Day Weekend
15-17Twin Spin Weekend
22-24Memorial Day 500 Weekend
29-31British Invasion Weekend

June

5-7Graduation Weekend
12-14All-Request Father�s Day Weekend
19-21Summer Songs Weekend (summer begins 6/21)
26-28Soul Patrol Weekend

July

3-5Made in America Weekend (Independence Day)
10-12Girl Group Weekend
17-19Beatles Twin Spin Weekend (anniversary of first US release)
24-26Sing For Your Oldies Weekend
31-260 Hours of 60s Weekend

August

7-9Motown Weekend
14-16Class Reunion Weekend
21-23Elvis is the King Weekend (tied in with anniversary of death)
28-30British Invasion Weekend

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