SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  4
Houseal 1
Matt Houseal
Dr. Charles Jobs
MK-325-01 Advertising & Promotional Communication
December 4, 2015
YouTube TrueView: “Decide to Care” Campaign
Target Market Segment
The target market I have selected strongly reflects the DeSales’ student population in
terms of location, race, age, sex, religion, etc. The TrueView advertisement will be broadcasted
to Southeastern Pennsylvania and Northern New Jersey, two regions with the highest
concentrations of DSU students. East/Southeast PA will include the following counties: Bucks,
Philadelphia, Delaware, Montgomery, Chester, Franklin, Adams, Cumberland, York, Dauphin,
Lancaster, Lebanon, Berks, Bucks, Lehigh, and Northampton. By choosing this area, we will be
reaching the largest audience as 8 of the 10 most populous counties in PA are in Southeastern
PA. Northern NJ will include the following counties: Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, Passaic,
Sussex, and Warren. This ad will target all races in these areas because DeSales is always
looking to diversify its student population of 81.6% Caucasian, 11.5% Hispanic, and 6.9% other
minority individuals. In the ad, races will be portrayed equally to attract a rich demographic.
The advertisement will appeal to both males and females, since DeSales is currently 57%
female and 43% male. Male and female students portrayed in the ad will be equally distributed,
with a heavier focus on male athletics due to our recent athletic expansion, now in an attempt to
strengthen the male population. The intended age group for the commercial will be between 17-
30, with high school students in the college search process, young adults looking to transfer, and
non-traditional students looking to participate in the ACCESS or MBA programs. The ad will
also target the age range of 40-65, the age spectrum of the majority of college student parents
and many ACCESS/MBA program participants. It is important to not only target the students
that are looking at colleges, but also the decision makers and bill payers who have a high degree
of external influence in this process. Out of the adult population, households which make more
than $75,000 annually will be targeted as DeSales tuition may by unaffordable for some. In the
2015-2016 school year, resident tuition is $48,178 and commuter tuition is $37,888. Since
DeSales is a Catholic institution offering a Salesian education, we want to reach the Catholic
demographic as most students come from a prior religious education at private high schools.
This advertisement will reach the target market segment through a YouTube TrueView
in-stream video, in which the ad can be skipped after 5 seconds. By using this service, we can
specify our viewing demographic in terms of age, gender, and parental status before video
release. We can also identify them through their searched interests, where we can filter through
Houseal 2
different provided categories, such as: education, college athletics, religion, etc. to make
ourselves as visible as possible. We can also use more exact keyword searches, such as:
Catholicism, DeSales, college, division three college sports, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, etc.
Format
Our TrueView ad will run pre-roll. This means that the commercial will be shown before
the content and the user will then have 5 seconds to choose to opt out of viewing the ad. I believe
the first restaurant scene will be alluring and unique enough that it will entice our audience to
watch the full ad to see what product or service is being offered. Mid-roll ads are usually found
in longer videos, which would limit our viewing audience regarding the length of videos they
watch. Instead, pre-roll ads catch the viewer off-guard and have the opportunity to draw them in.
One form of pre-roll advertising can be seen in the in-stream ads we will be utilizing. As
previously mentioned, the user can choose to skip the advertisement after 5 seconds of watching.
This seems to be the most appropriate format for a scripted 30 second video, as opposed to in-
display or in-search advertisements. In these two settings, the way you are charged remains
relatively the same, you pay for views or interactions, but the video format would leave the most
effective impression through 5 seconds of visual stimulation.
The Script
Our “Decide to Care” script will reflect a 30 second video commercial. The first scene
will be at a staged restaurant set in the DeSales University Center between a young, teenage
couple. After being asked what she would like to order, the young woman gives an odd response,
causing the two gentlemen to share a confusing look. The second scene, shot in Billera, shows a
fictional, college basketball team in a huddle with their coach looking at a scoreboard showing
the other team’s 20 point lead at halftime. When the point guard asks the coach for instruction
and gets an alarming reply, the team looks puzzlingly at each other. In the third scene, a man in
his late 20’s is found popping the question to his girlfriend, and finds her astonishing response to
be neither yes nor no. This leads to the phrase, “When you have a choice, decide to care”.
Accompanied by “feel good” guitar music, a compilation of photos of DeSales students,
faculty, and campus will be shown while an announcer gives information about the school. In the
first three scenarios, someone was faced with a decision at a different stage in their life. Whether
big or small, it was imperative that each individual had the responsibility to consciously reflect
and genuinely care about their choice. Choosing where to spend the next 4 to 5 years of your life
is typically the biggest decision a young adult is faced with. This process involves caring, and as
much as they care about their final choice, we care about their academic, social, and religious
future with us. “When you have a choice, decide to care. Think DeSales”.
Houseal 3
Call to Action
CTA’s or Call-to-Action Overlays are provided in YouTube TrueView in-stream ads and
urge our audience to take an interest in DeSales at the beginning of the video. Through the CTA
overlay, we can request that users go a step further. He or she is prompted to learn more about
DeSales, follow us on Twitter @DeSales, or set up a campus tour. If the commercial has its
intended effect, the viewer will start researching DeSales or connect with us on social media. We
can quantify our success by the increased number of campus visits and the number of new
followers on social media. DeSales, a member of Twitter since 2008, currently has 2,709
followers. If that number reaches 3,000 followers in one year and the number of tours increases
by a similar 10%, this marketing campaign can be considered a working success.
If our TrueView advertising is showing positive results and brings in a substantial
number of new visitors and new Twitter followers, we can eventually expand our marketing to
both in-stream and in-display formats. After reaching our audience through videos, we can also
have a larger presence on sidebars and YouTube partner sites. This would once again only be
successful if our profits increase over the course of one year, hopefully giving our budget room
for future expansion.
Measurement of Success
TrueView video ads are priced by bidding through Cost-Per-View, or CPV. When
working with AdWords, a Google service, we pay for video views, Call to Actions, and other
interactions. With the in-stream formatting, we pay when a viewer watches 30 seconds of our
video or engages with our video, whichever comes first. We set a maximum bid, or the most
we’ll be charged for an impression, and watch our ad move up in rank to reach more viewers.
Regional CPV bids range from $0.10-$0.30. In this strategy, DeSales will pay $0.22 as a max bid
in order to reach 36,360 viewers. This will maximize our viewing capabilities while supporting
our video with an above average rank for a fighting chance. This was calculated considering a
$10,000 budget, with $2,000 spent on production, and $295.95 spent on music:
36,360 x 0.22 = 7,700.20. To have in-stream, 30 second ad exposure to over 36,000 people in
our sought-after demographic would be well worth the bidding price. Also, at any time we can
adjust our bid to reflect recent Internet traffic, and new promotional or seasonal campaigns.
Content Generation
We will contract with local ASR Media Productions, a video productions agency
headquartered in Bethlehem, PA to shoot our advertisement. ASR Media has experience working
with college commercial production through past Cedar Crest College projects. DeSales
University’s ad will be a high quality video with distinguishable clarity in both sight and sound.
Our school is a respectable institution, and the quality of our advertisement should reflect the
quality of our character. We will allocate $2,000 of our $10,000 budget to professional
production and editing. Thankfully, we will save money by using only DeSales students and
Houseal 4
faculty in the production, and by shooting the first three “confusing looks” scenes on-campus
instead of at public venues.
Though the first three scenes consist of simply dialogue in terms of audio, the collection
of DeSales pictures is accompanied by “Black Sunglasses” by “Mdeman”. This music has a
relaxed, positive theme with acoustic guitar, piano, and light percussion. Its television
advertising license, for national commercial broadcast, can be purchased for $295.95 on
AudioMicro.com, a legal stock audio library of discounted musical compilations. This music will
softly play in the background for the last 18 seconds of the 30 second advertisement,
accompanying the script, read by a male, DeSales student with a deep voice.
Our budget is as follows:
$7,700 spent on YouTube TrueView advertising with a vacillating bid around $0.22
$2,000 spent on high-quality video production through ASR Media Productions
$299.95 towards the “Black Sunglasses” television advertising license from AudioMicro
$9,999.95 total

Contenu connexe

Similaire à Advertising TrueView Paper

Radio Adverting Campaign
Radio Adverting Campaign Radio Adverting Campaign
Radio Adverting Campaign harveypounds_
 
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGNFULL TEAM CAMPAIGN
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGNMaxCheshire
 
PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)
PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)
PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)Andrew P. Lucy
 
Full campaign m edia unit21
Full campaign   m edia unit21Full campaign   m edia unit21
Full campaign m edia unit21ChrisReynolds123
 
Final Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docx
Final Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docxFinal Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docx
Final Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docxcharlottej5
 
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)MaxCheshire
 
Full campaign media unit21
Full campaign media unit21Full campaign media unit21
Full campaign media unit21bradleyvgmedia
 
Full campaign m edia unit21
Full campaign   m edia unit21Full campaign   m edia unit21
Full campaign m edia unit21ChrisReynolds123
 
Full Radio Advert Campaign
Full Radio Advert Campaign Full Radio Advert Campaign
Full Radio Advert Campaign harveypounds_
 
myStartinLife.com - Concept brief
myStartinLife.com - Concept briefmyStartinLife.com - Concept brief
myStartinLife.com - Concept briefdfordca
 
Mlk jr. hip hop awards sponsorship packet
Mlk jr. hip hop awards  sponsorship packetMlk jr. hip hop awards  sponsorship packet
Mlk jr. hip hop awards sponsorship packetPatrick Diamitani
 
Critical approaches
Critical approachesCritical approaches
Critical approachesChris Bailey
 
Global teen talk powerpoint 1
Global teen talk powerpoint 1Global teen talk powerpoint 1
Global teen talk powerpoint 1guestfcebc5
 
MBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis Case Study .docx
MBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis  Case Study    .docxMBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis  Case Study    .docx
MBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis Case Study .docxARIV4
 
Group campaign
Group campaignGroup campaign
Group campaignjamiehamer
 
Group campaign Tasks A-D
Group campaign Tasks A-DGroup campaign Tasks A-D
Group campaign Tasks A-DTomCutlerMedia1
 

Similaire à Advertising TrueView Paper (20)

Business plan rev216
Business plan rev216Business plan rev216
Business plan rev216
 
Radio Adverting Campaign
Radio Adverting Campaign Radio Adverting Campaign
Radio Adverting Campaign
 
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGNFULL TEAM CAMPAIGN
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN
 
PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)
PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)
PGA Media Kit 2017 (Ek-LC)
 
Full campaign m edia unit21
Full campaign   m edia unit21Full campaign   m edia unit21
Full campaign m edia unit21
 
Final Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docx
Final Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docxFinal Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docx
Final Digital Marketing PlanFinal Digital Marketing .docx
 
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)
FULL TEAM CAMPAIGN (SECTION A-D)
 
Full campaign media unit21
Full campaign media unit21Full campaign media unit21
Full campaign media unit21
 
Full campaign m edia unit21
Full campaign   m edia unit21Full campaign   m edia unit21
Full campaign m edia unit21
 
Full Radio Advert Campaign
Full Radio Advert Campaign Full Radio Advert Campaign
Full Radio Advert Campaign
 
myStartinLife.com - Concept brief
myStartinLife.com - Concept briefmyStartinLife.com - Concept brief
myStartinLife.com - Concept brief
 
Mlk jr. hip hop awards sponsorship packet
Mlk jr. hip hop awards  sponsorship packetMlk jr. hip hop awards  sponsorship packet
Mlk jr. hip hop awards sponsorship packet
 
Critical approaches
Critical approachesCritical approaches
Critical approaches
 
Global teen talk powerpoint 1
Global teen talk powerpoint 1Global teen talk powerpoint 1
Global teen talk powerpoint 1
 
Career player low_res
Career player low_resCareer player low_res
Career player low_res
 
Target audience
Target audienceTarget audience
Target audience
 
MBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis Case Study .docx
MBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis  Case Study    .docxMBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis  Case Study    .docx
MBA 525 - Module 3 Case Study Analysis Case Study .docx
 
Group campaign
Group campaignGroup campaign
Group campaign
 
Group campaign
Group campaignGroup campaign
Group campaign
 
Group campaign Tasks A-D
Group campaign Tasks A-DGroup campaign Tasks A-D
Group campaign Tasks A-D
 

Advertising TrueView Paper

  • 1. Houseal 1 Matt Houseal Dr. Charles Jobs MK-325-01 Advertising & Promotional Communication December 4, 2015 YouTube TrueView: “Decide to Care” Campaign Target Market Segment The target market I have selected strongly reflects the DeSales’ student population in terms of location, race, age, sex, religion, etc. The TrueView advertisement will be broadcasted to Southeastern Pennsylvania and Northern New Jersey, two regions with the highest concentrations of DSU students. East/Southeast PA will include the following counties: Bucks, Philadelphia, Delaware, Montgomery, Chester, Franklin, Adams, Cumberland, York, Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon, Berks, Bucks, Lehigh, and Northampton. By choosing this area, we will be reaching the largest audience as 8 of the 10 most populous counties in PA are in Southeastern PA. Northern NJ will include the following counties: Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, Passaic, Sussex, and Warren. This ad will target all races in these areas because DeSales is always looking to diversify its student population of 81.6% Caucasian, 11.5% Hispanic, and 6.9% other minority individuals. In the ad, races will be portrayed equally to attract a rich demographic. The advertisement will appeal to both males and females, since DeSales is currently 57% female and 43% male. Male and female students portrayed in the ad will be equally distributed, with a heavier focus on male athletics due to our recent athletic expansion, now in an attempt to strengthen the male population. The intended age group for the commercial will be between 17- 30, with high school students in the college search process, young adults looking to transfer, and non-traditional students looking to participate in the ACCESS or MBA programs. The ad will also target the age range of 40-65, the age spectrum of the majority of college student parents and many ACCESS/MBA program participants. It is important to not only target the students that are looking at colleges, but also the decision makers and bill payers who have a high degree of external influence in this process. Out of the adult population, households which make more than $75,000 annually will be targeted as DeSales tuition may by unaffordable for some. In the 2015-2016 school year, resident tuition is $48,178 and commuter tuition is $37,888. Since DeSales is a Catholic institution offering a Salesian education, we want to reach the Catholic demographic as most students come from a prior religious education at private high schools. This advertisement will reach the target market segment through a YouTube TrueView in-stream video, in which the ad can be skipped after 5 seconds. By using this service, we can specify our viewing demographic in terms of age, gender, and parental status before video release. We can also identify them through their searched interests, where we can filter through
  • 2. Houseal 2 different provided categories, such as: education, college athletics, religion, etc. to make ourselves as visible as possible. We can also use more exact keyword searches, such as: Catholicism, DeSales, college, division three college sports, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, etc. Format Our TrueView ad will run pre-roll. This means that the commercial will be shown before the content and the user will then have 5 seconds to choose to opt out of viewing the ad. I believe the first restaurant scene will be alluring and unique enough that it will entice our audience to watch the full ad to see what product or service is being offered. Mid-roll ads are usually found in longer videos, which would limit our viewing audience regarding the length of videos they watch. Instead, pre-roll ads catch the viewer off-guard and have the opportunity to draw them in. One form of pre-roll advertising can be seen in the in-stream ads we will be utilizing. As previously mentioned, the user can choose to skip the advertisement after 5 seconds of watching. This seems to be the most appropriate format for a scripted 30 second video, as opposed to in- display or in-search advertisements. In these two settings, the way you are charged remains relatively the same, you pay for views or interactions, but the video format would leave the most effective impression through 5 seconds of visual stimulation. The Script Our “Decide to Care” script will reflect a 30 second video commercial. The first scene will be at a staged restaurant set in the DeSales University Center between a young, teenage couple. After being asked what she would like to order, the young woman gives an odd response, causing the two gentlemen to share a confusing look. The second scene, shot in Billera, shows a fictional, college basketball team in a huddle with their coach looking at a scoreboard showing the other team’s 20 point lead at halftime. When the point guard asks the coach for instruction and gets an alarming reply, the team looks puzzlingly at each other. In the third scene, a man in his late 20’s is found popping the question to his girlfriend, and finds her astonishing response to be neither yes nor no. This leads to the phrase, “When you have a choice, decide to care”. Accompanied by “feel good” guitar music, a compilation of photos of DeSales students, faculty, and campus will be shown while an announcer gives information about the school. In the first three scenarios, someone was faced with a decision at a different stage in their life. Whether big or small, it was imperative that each individual had the responsibility to consciously reflect and genuinely care about their choice. Choosing where to spend the next 4 to 5 years of your life is typically the biggest decision a young adult is faced with. This process involves caring, and as much as they care about their final choice, we care about their academic, social, and religious future with us. “When you have a choice, decide to care. Think DeSales”.
  • 3. Houseal 3 Call to Action CTA’s or Call-to-Action Overlays are provided in YouTube TrueView in-stream ads and urge our audience to take an interest in DeSales at the beginning of the video. Through the CTA overlay, we can request that users go a step further. He or she is prompted to learn more about DeSales, follow us on Twitter @DeSales, or set up a campus tour. If the commercial has its intended effect, the viewer will start researching DeSales or connect with us on social media. We can quantify our success by the increased number of campus visits and the number of new followers on social media. DeSales, a member of Twitter since 2008, currently has 2,709 followers. If that number reaches 3,000 followers in one year and the number of tours increases by a similar 10%, this marketing campaign can be considered a working success. If our TrueView advertising is showing positive results and brings in a substantial number of new visitors and new Twitter followers, we can eventually expand our marketing to both in-stream and in-display formats. After reaching our audience through videos, we can also have a larger presence on sidebars and YouTube partner sites. This would once again only be successful if our profits increase over the course of one year, hopefully giving our budget room for future expansion. Measurement of Success TrueView video ads are priced by bidding through Cost-Per-View, or CPV. When working with AdWords, a Google service, we pay for video views, Call to Actions, and other interactions. With the in-stream formatting, we pay when a viewer watches 30 seconds of our video or engages with our video, whichever comes first. We set a maximum bid, or the most we’ll be charged for an impression, and watch our ad move up in rank to reach more viewers. Regional CPV bids range from $0.10-$0.30. In this strategy, DeSales will pay $0.22 as a max bid in order to reach 36,360 viewers. This will maximize our viewing capabilities while supporting our video with an above average rank for a fighting chance. This was calculated considering a $10,000 budget, with $2,000 spent on production, and $295.95 spent on music: 36,360 x 0.22 = 7,700.20. To have in-stream, 30 second ad exposure to over 36,000 people in our sought-after demographic would be well worth the bidding price. Also, at any time we can adjust our bid to reflect recent Internet traffic, and new promotional or seasonal campaigns. Content Generation We will contract with local ASR Media Productions, a video productions agency headquartered in Bethlehem, PA to shoot our advertisement. ASR Media has experience working with college commercial production through past Cedar Crest College projects. DeSales University’s ad will be a high quality video with distinguishable clarity in both sight and sound. Our school is a respectable institution, and the quality of our advertisement should reflect the quality of our character. We will allocate $2,000 of our $10,000 budget to professional production and editing. Thankfully, we will save money by using only DeSales students and
  • 4. Houseal 4 faculty in the production, and by shooting the first three “confusing looks” scenes on-campus instead of at public venues. Though the first three scenes consist of simply dialogue in terms of audio, the collection of DeSales pictures is accompanied by “Black Sunglasses” by “Mdeman”. This music has a relaxed, positive theme with acoustic guitar, piano, and light percussion. Its television advertising license, for national commercial broadcast, can be purchased for $295.95 on AudioMicro.com, a legal stock audio library of discounted musical compilations. This music will softly play in the background for the last 18 seconds of the 30 second advertisement, accompanying the script, read by a male, DeSales student with a deep voice. Our budget is as follows: $7,700 spent on YouTube TrueView advertising with a vacillating bid around $0.22 $2,000 spent on high-quality video production through ASR Media Productions $299.95 towards the “Black Sunglasses” television advertising license from AudioMicro $9,999.95 total