Showing posts with label Comcast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comcast. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

What Do a Family Restaurant in Oregon and a Car Dealer in Texas Have in Common?

What do a family restaurant in Oregon, a car dealer in Texas and a building supply store in Massachusetts have in common? They've found successful ways to capture the attention of customers spending more time than ever with "screens"—TVs, phones, tablets and computers. 

Those businesses joined others during a recent webcast, Take Five for Your Future, presented by Comcast Spotlight, the advertising sales division of Comcast Cable. The companies participated in Comcast Spotlight's LAMP Awards, which recognize multi-screen advertising—combining television and digital marketing. 

The benefit is two-fold: some prospective customers will see a message on one screen that they missed on the other, while another group will see the message on both screens, and thus hear that message more often. 

Amy Schearer, Chief Marketing Officer of the Philadelphia Zoo, said during the webcast that this approach allowed the tourist attraction to "reach people at multiple points during the day." The zoo's multi-screen campaign, highlighting a new exhibit for children, contributed to one of the best years for total attendance. The growth came despite a harsh winter and spring, which dampens attendance. Once Mother Nature relented, though, the campaign worked its magic. 

A recurring theme from webcast participants was the ability of cable TV and digital advertising to reach specific neighborhoods. For People's Federal Savings Bank in Massachusetts, it turned out that their network of branches aligned well with Comcast Spotlight's zones, or groupings of neighborhoods, in the market. 

According to Thomas Long, Principal of the Long Group, the bank's marketing agency, a targeted approach meant their advertising "worked smarter and harder." The result of the campaign was a 250% increase in monthly checking account sales. Also noteworthy was that the new customers coming to the bank were, on average, 16 years younger than the bank's existing customers, meaning a new generation of consumers was getting the message as a result of TV advertising on networks like ABC Family and Bravo coupled with the same commercial appearing before online video and in banner advertisements on XFINITY.com. 

That approach also worked wonders for Chace Building Supply, the Massachusetts retailer. Chace competes with several national, "big-box" retailers, a challenge for many small businesses. In addition to being able to focus advertising near its store location, what also benefited the store was the ability to reach both men and women. For men, it meant commercials in programs like ESPN's Monday Night Football and Boston Bruins games; for women, networks like Lifetime, E! and Food Network hit the mark. 

For Elmer's, the Portland restaurant chain, reaching multiple audiences meant something different: attracting new customers, including those new to the region and not familiar with Elmer's 55-year history, while appealing to long-time guests. Like other webcast participants, Elmer's took advantage of the cost savings by using its existing commercial as an online advertisement, and added a little something extra to the online ads: pictures of seasonal menu items. That had customers clicking to learn more: 12% of the 12,000+ people who watched the online video visited Elmer's website. In the hyper-competitive restaurant business, Elmer's recorded a five percent increase in total sales, a figure Director of Restaurant Support Jill Ramos called "truly a win in the restaurant industry

." Some businesses take a hybrid approach to local advertising. Ron Carter Cadillac, the Texas auto dealer, aired advertising throughout the full Houston market, with additional commercials focused on the area immediately surrounding the dealership. It was an effective strategy to maximize the marketing budget, and included a mix of morning, primetime and weekend time periods. Ron Ross also wanted to reach a younger audience than is typically thought of as a Cadillac customer, so networks like ESPN, TNT and USA were a key component in its plan. The digital advertising element of the media plan did its job, nearly doubling traffic to Ron Carter's website, while overall vehicle sales increased about 50%. Chris Premant, E-commerce and Business Development Manager for the dealer noted that those results underscore "the reality that traditional drives digital" when it comes to advertising. 


Comcast Spotlight recently began accepting entries for this year's LAMP Awards, and will announce the winners this fall.



Monday, May 18, 2015

MSNBC hits a new low (GOOD NEWS FOR ALL OF US)

The mind boggles at the mentality on evidence at the Comcast-owned news network. Kudos to Kristinn Taylor at Gateway Pundit for noticing, publicizing, and saving the evidence after a grown-up (apparently there still is one) at MSNBC deleted the tweet.

Here is the tweet posted after the Savannah, Georgia police released video of a cop being dragged by car he had stopped for questioning.
To add to the hilarity, the video had clown music added to it, as the police officer was dragged along, imperiling his life.

This is National Police Week, murders of police are up 80 some percent and the network is making light of a life-threatening incident of an attack against a police officer.

Will any heads roll? I am not holding my breath. As my colleague Rick Moran puts it, “They are becoming a parody of themselves.”  And I guess they know their (diminishing) audience.

Via: American Thinker

Continue Reading....

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Comcast ‘Doesn’t Give a F*ck About You’

Cable giant Comcast is on the verge of acquiring other cable giant Time Warner Cable and many people, including Sen. Al Franken (D-MN), are concerned about one company controlling such a large percentage of the TV and internet market. This new video from Funny or Die pretty much sums why the lack of competition in this space could be so problematic.
As the fake spokesperson for Comcast says in the video below, “No matter what happens, we don’t give a fuck about you.” He goes on explain that abandoning cable TV for Netflix or Hulu won’t work either because Comcast owns Hulu and makes Netflix pay them extra for streaming content. Basically, you will never be able to escape Comcast’s grasp.
“So thank you for choosing Comcast,” he says with a laugh. “You don’t have a choice. Hey America, go fuck yourselves.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

FCC Orders Cable Co. to Switch Lineup, Cites Channel Flipping Phenomenon

In a recent example of Obama government run amok, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)—with five presidentially appointed commissioners—has ordered a private cable company to put a paid news channel in a particular spot on the lineup.

It seems bizarre that a federal agency is wasting resources meddling into such matters, but this is government on heavy duty steroids. Since Obama moved into the White House, the bloated government has taken over the nation’s healthcare system (ordering private citizens to purchase a product or service they may not want), banned school bake sales to control our kids’ diet and intruded into many other aspects of private life.

Heck, the administration even violated the nation’s cherished free press by secretly obtaining the work and personal phone records of reporters and editors at one of the nation’s largest news organizations. This is the sort of thing you see in communist regimes and dictatorships (like China and Cuba), a deplorable act few imagined would ever take place in the United States. Even liberals who otherwise praise Obama called the spying an “unacceptable abuse of power.”

It’s as if there is no stopping the madness of this unprecedented government intrusion into private life. So, why not tell cable companies where to place channels? Seems benign compared to some of the other stuff Big Brother has done since Obama became the nation’s commander-in-chief. The FCC, which governs mass media communication via television, radio, cable, satellite and wire, didn’t like where one major cable company placed a certain financial news outlet so it ordered the private business to move the channel.

Because of the government shutdown the FCC’s website is unavailable so the order can’t be accessed, but a news reportoutlines how it all went down. Cable companies often group channels with similar themes so that they are located in adjacent spots in the lineup. In this case the cable company, Comcast, isolated Bloomberg News in a neighborhood far away from other news outlets and the company claimed it was hurting business. Bloomberg hired a bunch of lobbyists to pressure the FCC, claiming discrimination because Comcast owns the business news channel CNBC, a popular competitor that has a great spot on the lineup.


Monday, September 9, 2013

Americans Being Forced to Pay for Al Jazeera

Two weeks ago, Al Jazeera America launched, beaming into 48 million homes across the country. The media company that allowed Osama bin Laden to use it as a vehicle to communicate with jihadists around the world is now on your TV screen and you are paying for it. The network pushed its way onto basic cable packages with several providers. If you subscribe to Verizon, Comcast, Dish Network or DirecTV, you are forced to subsidize Al Jazeera's propaganda as part of your cable bill whether you like it or not.

I represent a district about 70 miles north of where the Twin Towers once stood. Thousands of my constituents commute to Manhattan every day.  People from this area perished in the savage attacks of September 11, 2001.  Serviceman from our community made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan fighting to prevent another attack.  Four Marines I served with left everything they had on the battlefields of Iraq.  When constituents contacted my office to express outrage that Al Jazeera America is now part of their basic cable package, I took it very seriously.
We should not have to fund Al Jazeera through our cable bills. Americans do not want to pay for their vile propaganda. I'm launching a petition drive calling on cable companies to drop Al Jazeera from their basic cable packages.

Via: American Thinker


Continue Reading....

Friday, August 23, 2013

[VIDEO] Tea Party Group Urges People to Dump Comcast: 'You're Paying Al Sharpton's Salary!'

The Tea Party organization FreedomWorks is ramping up pressure on the NBC/MSNBC-owning cable provider Comcast.
On Thursday, the group launched a campaign to get the 22 million households that subscribe to Comcast to dump the provider saying in an email and a video, "You're paying for Al Sharpton's salary" (video follows with commentary):
"It's a disgrace Sharpton has his own TV show. It's even worse that your money is making him rich."
That video is also going to become part of a commercial to air in certain parts of the country where Comcast is a dominant cable provider.
The organization's "Stop Funding Comcast Media Bias" page reads:
Comcast’s news organizations, especially MSNBC, have aggressively promoted President Obama’s political agenda through its biased news coverage. MSNBC’s hosts have consistently gone beyond responsible journalism by manipulating news events to advance a left-wing political agenda. Comcast cable subscribers can take action against Comcast CEO Brian Roberts and his biased media empire by changing their cable TV service provider. By exercising marketplace choice, consumers can prevent their money from supporting media propaganda and paying the salaries of Al Sharpton and Chris Matthews.


Popular Posts