Promo - December 2007 - (Page 28) PROMO: Isn’t the television business a lot more complicated than it used to be? MILLER: I’ve been running NBC’s advertising and promotion department since 1985. Back then, ABC, CBS and NBC took a 90 share of the audience. If you were below a 30 share, you were headed towards cancellation. Today if you get a 15 share, you’re a massive hit. P: How did you promote in the old days? M: Back in 1985 [Bill] Cosby was coming back to television. We’d say, ‘Cosby’s back,’ show a little bit of the show and get a 48 share. And TV Guide reached 20 million homes, and your ad would hit 25% of the TV households. Now it’s 3.5 million. From late August to the first week in October, the five [broadcast] television networks spent close to $200 million to launch new shows, all at the same time. Over the course of the summer between 70 and 100 original cable shows launched. P: How do you cut through the clutter? M: You use on-air, print, radio, digital media, viral activities, cross marketing with other companies, online sampling efforts, DVDs and Barnum & Bailey stunts just to get some attention. P: How did you get fans of NBC’s ‘My Name Is Earl’ to recently protest in front of a Kentucky Fried Chicken in Philadelphia? M: We were trying to figure out how to create some attention for a show that’s two or three years old. One of our guys suggested that we could have something like ‘We Are the World,’ and instead try to get Earl out of jail (a series storyline). We invited the Earl fan e-mail list to be in a video. We did a behind-the-scenes mock documentary on the making of the video, put it online and then put it on the air. P: How did KFC get involved? M: We were already doing a KFC Karma promotion that was lined up six months ago. We modified the promotion to bring it into ‘Free Earl,’ and gave KFC all the posters and banners. KFC did a lot of good business that day. It created so much traffic that the police had to direct it around this KFC. ‘Access Hollywood’ (NBC) and ‘Entertainment Tonight’ (CBS) covered it. We just wanted to get a good photo opportunity. P: How does NBC take advantage of fans on the Internet? M: For ‘Heroes,’ there were 40 fan Web sites before we even launched the show. We offered some guy $10,000 for Heroestheseries.com and were turned down. But they remained loyal to the show. P: Any other recent promotions for other NBC shows? M: ‘Friday Night Lights’ has very strong grassroots appeal. There are some really avid fans for it. We went to houseparty.com, which takes online registrations for house parties. We created a special house party kit for the show. So fans were asked to invite up to 15 friends to watch the season premiere about two weeks ahead of time. We offered paraphernalia and DVDs of season one. We thought we’d get a thousand parties. As it turned out, we had nearly 4,000 registrants. We had a member of the cast go down to one. We created an army of evangelistic supporters to begin to talk it up. P: What was the wildest stunt you ever ran? M: About 10 years ago, we had a show called ‘Asteroid.’ I went to our special effects people and told them I wanted to make it look like an asteroid hit NBC—make it look like the letters were falling down and pieces of concrete around. It got picked up by USA Today and several newspapers. It was a $2,000 special effects job, but got me probably P a half-million dollars of exposure. l W For more on consumer promotions, go to www.promomagazine.com RSS Webinar Conference Podcast How does a veteran TV exec promote hit shows? NBC’s John Miller does everything from viral marketing to sampling. And he recently conducted a live event—a ‘protest’ at a Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet. Newsletter Web 28 DECEMBER 2007 / WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM / Promo http://Heroestheseries.com http://www.promomagazine.com http://www.promomagazine.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - December 2007 Promo - December 2007 Contents Editor's Note Urban Refuge Digital Directive Soft Soap Voice Lessons Jordan's Monster Deal College Bowl Sprawl Good Deeds Commentary Blue Christmas Q&A: Clutter Cutter Widgets? They're Easy The Agency Center Resource Center Secret Weapon Index of Advertisers Promo - December 2007 Promo - December 2007 - Promo - December 2007 (Page Cover1) Promo - December 2007 - Promo - December 2007 (Page Cover2) Promo - December 2007 - Contents (Page 3) Promo - December 2007 - Contents (Page 4) Promo - December 2007 - Contents (Page 5) Promo - December 2007 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - December 2007 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - December 2007 - Urban Refuge (Page 8) Promo - December 2007 - Urban Refuge (Page 9) Promo - December 2007 - Digital Directive (Page 10) Promo - December 2007 - Digital Directive (Page 11) Promo - December 2007 - Soft Soap (Page 12) Promo - December 2007 - Voice Lessons (Page 13) Promo - December 2007 - Voice Lessons (Page 14) Promo - December 2007 - Jordan's Monster Deal (Page 15) Promo - December 2007 - College Bowl Sprawl (Page 16) Promo - December 2007 - College Bowl Sprawl (Page 17) Promo - December 2007 - Good Deeds (Page 18) Promo - December 2007 - Good Deeds (Page 19) Promo - December 2007 - Commentary (Page 20) Promo - December 2007 - Commentary (Page 21) Promo - December 2007 - Commentary (Page 22) Promo - December 2007 - Commentary (Page 23) Promo - December 2007 - Blue Christmas (Page 24) Promo - December 2007 - Blue Christmas (Page 25) Promo - December 2007 - Blue Christmas (Page 26) Promo - December 2007 - Blue Christmas (Page 27) Promo - December 2007 - Q&A: Clutter Cutter (Page 28) Promo - December 2007 - Q&A: Clutter Cutter (Page 29) Promo - December 2007 - Widgets? They're Easy (Page 30) Promo - December 2007 - Widgets? They're Easy (Page 31) Promo - December 2007 - Widgets? They're Easy (Page 32) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 33) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 34) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 35) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 36) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 37) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 38) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 39) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 40) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 41) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 42) Promo - December 2007 - Resource Center (Page 43) Promo - December 2007 - Secret Weapon (Page 44) Promo - December 2007 - Secret Weapon (Page 45) Promo - December 2007 - Secret Weapon (Page 46) Promo - December 2007 - Secret Weapon (Page 47) Promo - December 2007 - Secret Weapon (Page 48) Promo - December 2007 - Index of Advertisers (Page 49) Promo - December 2007 - Index of Advertisers (Page 50) Promo - December 2007 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - December 2007 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.