MEDIA PLANNING
WHAT IS MEDIA PLANNING?
Today’s marketers are often tasked with balancing campaign efforts across a range of different media platforms and assets. This can make it challenging to effectively track each tactic’s success and overall impact on the business’s bottom line. With a thorough media planning strategy in place, teams can more accurately and holistically monitor campaign success and make informed decisions about how to optimize performance in the future. Let’s take a look at some of the key considerations to keep in mind when building a media plan:
What
is Media Planning?
Media planning is the
process by which marketers determine where, when, and how often they will run
an advertisement in order to maximize engagements and ROI. The media plan might
split advertising spend and resources between various online and offline
channels such as broadcast, print, paid ads, video ads or native content.
In
today’s competitive marketing landscape, marketers need to serve consumers
with the right message, at the right time, on the right channel in order to see
engagements. Media planning is where marketers determine what these
“rights” are.
What
is a Media Plan?
An effective media plan will
result in a set of advertising opportunities that target a specific audience
and fit in with the organization’s marketing budget. When establishing a media
plan, marketers will often factor in the following considerations:
- Who does
the ad need to reach?
- What is the
marketing budget?
- Conversion
goals
- Frequency
of the message
- Reach of
the message
- How to
define success
Media
planning is most often done by media planners at advertising agencies. Media
planners must work with media buyers and the client organizations to develop a
strategy to maximize ROI on media spend. Media planners are required to
have a firm understanding of the organization’s brand and target audience,
various media platforms and developing media trends.
Media planning is more
involved with formulating a strategy, evaluating its effectiveness, and
adjusting, while buying is the execution of the strategy.
As
noted, the media planner will evaluate brand and audience to determine the
correct combination of messaging and media mix on which to advertise in order to reach
consumers in a positive, impactful way.
What
Are the Benefits of Media Planning?
Today’s
modern marketing often requires marketers to leverage multiple forms of media,
and a data-driven media plan provides marketers with
centralized information across all platforms. This helps to optimize campaigns
and messaging, as well as streamline the campaign review process.
What are the Objectives of Media Planning?
Media
planners need to identify the combination of ads to achieve a specific result.
Their objectives generally align with business goals, such as long-term growth and improving ROI. Media planning will
often utilize a wide range of tactics to increase brand awareness, generate
leads, or drive conversions to help their organizations accomplish these goals.
Media
Planning vs. Media Buying
Media buying is the process of purchasing ad space across
various channels and platforms in coordination with the agreed-upon media plans
and monitoring campaigns as they run. This means evaluating platform formats
and rates to ensure they coincide with the plan, negotiating costs, keeping
abreast of media trends and building relationships with counterparts at various
channels and platforms. Media buying often leverages one of the following
popular strategies:
- Manual
bidding
- Direct buys
- Programmatic
buys
- Real-time
bidding
Challenges
of Media Planning
Media planning can be
challenging because there are so many contributing factors that must be
accounted for, and because many believe that media planning strategies and
processes have not modernized along with marketing.
Challenges include but are
not limited to:
- Consumer-Level
Targeting: The media
plan must understand consumers at a granular level to determine what types
of messages resonate with them, requiring in-depth marketing analytics.
- Platform
Preference: Brands
must also know the various channels and platforms that target audience members engage with
and when. This will allow them to effectively choose media on which to run
campaigns. All of this must be done with budget and media spend in mind.
- Heavy
Budget Focus: Media planning continues to revolve around budget
rather than customer engagement. There is limited flexibility in a budget
and plan to allow marketers to course correct as campaigns run and new
insights are discovered. Modern media planning requires the flexibility to
allocate budget to different channels if they prove to be more successful.
- Integrating
Measurements: Because
there are so many channels online and
offline, it has become infinitely more difficult for marketers
to measure the success of these campaigns alongside each other to
determine which are most effective and which should be updated.
Today,
media planning has to adapt to focus on the consumer experience using flexible
budgets and real-time, unified measurements that allow for media plan
optimizations in-campaign.
How to Write a Media Plan for Advertising
Creating a media plan is a
detailed process that requires planners to consider the needs of target
consumers as well as the goals of the business. Here are the essential steps
and considerations marketers must make when creating a media plan.
Step 1. Determine Media Goals and Objectives
It
might be easy to assume that the goal is to drive conversions or engagement;
however, that would oversimplify this step. Goals may vary by department, or
there might be multiple objectives for one campaign. For example, for the sales
team and sales goals, increased revenue is the objective. However, marketing
objectives might be to increase brand awareness. Knowing the main goal of the
campaign will determine how it runs, as well as messaging.
Once clear goals are
established, media planners must conduct research into market trends and the
competitive landscape. This research will offer visibility into where similar
brands and goals have achieved success in the past, informing planning
decisions. For example, perhaps a brand has long relied on email campaigns but
research reveals that competitors have had greater success with native ads.
This demonstrates how the organization should shift its plan.
Of course, when determining
goals and setting objectives, media plans must factor in budgets. However,
marketers should try to avoid assigning strict dollar amounts to specific
channels. Rather, a flexible approach to marketing budget will allow for
optimizations to be made as campaigns run.
Step 2. Determine Target Audience
Marketing
today is driven by creating positive customer experiences. This means that when developing
messaging and selecting where to display those messages across the media mix,
marketers need to be focusing on specific audience needs.
First,
marketers need to examine which segment of the overall audience they are trying
to engage. From there, marketers need to look at attribution measurements and
engagement analytics to understand the types of ads these users engage with,
which creative is most effective, and importantly, which channels these
consumers use. While marketers often consult demographic information such as
age, location,
general interests, etc., they should be sure to incorporate person-level data gathered through a unified
measurement approach to get the most tailored results.
Step 3. Consider Frequency & Reach
Another key component of a
media plan is considering reach and frequency. Reach refers to how many people
the campaign will be in front of over a specific amount of time. Frequency
refers to how many times the consumer will be exposed to the ad over the course
of the campaign.
There are a few popular
approaches that marketers take when selecting frequency.
- Continuity: This approach to frequency means
that ads will run on a consistent schedule over the course of the
campaign: for example, two ads per week. This strategy is often used for
goods that are not seasonal and require regular reinforcement to stay top
of mind.
- Flighting: “Flights” refer to internment or
alternating periods of advertisements followed by pauses in advertising on
the channel altogether. This strategy works well for seasonal products or
for those with less ad budget. For example, when there is a pause in a
flighted television campaign, marketers may choose to run print ads
instead.
- Pulsing: This is a combination of
flighting and continuity. Pulsed campaigns will incorporate low-intensity
consistent advertising that is augmented by flights of higher-intensity
ads during times when additional messaging can have a high impact.
Step 4: Analyze and Optimize Campaign
Performance
One of the most important
steps to building a media planning strategy is to continuously monitor, track,
and analyze performance. Marketing campaigns are not “set-it-and-forget-it,”
instead, they require ongoing management to drive maximum ROI. This hands-on
approach allows teams to identify opportunities to optimize performance in
real-time based on what is or isn’t working for each campaign.
Selecting the Right Media Channels
There
are a variety of online and offline channels for marketers to choose
from, and they must use the information they gathered in the research and goal-setting
phases to determine which channels will bring them the most success.
Here are some of the most
popular channels that marketers choose when media planning, along with their
attributes.
Offline Media
- Magazines: Magazines have a long shelf life and
often stay in a consumer’s possession for two to four weeks after being
read. Information in this medium tends to be retained longer, since people
read faster than they can listen. Research has shown there is a higher
amount of trust in magazine ads than in other forms of media (60 percent of readers trusted the
advertisements they saw in magazines).
Consumers are also less
resistant to these kinds of advertisements, as these often tie in with their
interests. Publications tend to be very targeted (e.g., running magazines or
cooking magazines). They reach a secondary audience in addition to the target audience,
since they are passed along to family and friends.
- Newspapers: Advertising with local newspapers
is a great way to ensure a brand’s message stays local. When selecting
this medium, marketers can choose which section of the newspaper ads are
placed for further targeting. If they want to target those interested in
fashion, they can select that section of the newspaper for their ad.
Additionally, newspaper
readers are more likely to have higher education and 7 out of 10 of households earning above $100,000 read the
newspaper. This can be important when selecting ad space based on
demographics.
- Radio: Radio ads have a local appeal,
allowing you to target specific areas or regions of the country. It is
also an easy medium to build frequency with your target audience, and is
considered a lower-cost medium.. According to research, exposure to a
radio ad and time to purchase is the shortest of any medium. Additionally,
if paired with other forms of media, the overall campaigns were more effective.
- TV &
Cable: This media
is highly visual and can demonstrate products in everyday life. For
example, if you sell a cleaning product, consumers can see the benefits of
your product and how these can be applied in their home. This medium is
very prevalent, as the average American watches approximately five hours of television a day.
- Out of
Home: Media such
as billboards are large and get attention. In a busy area, your message
can reach 10,000 people in a month. Out of home
isn’t limited by billboards, only your creativity is. Out-of-home is also
an extremely mobile option. (e.g., using displays to advertise luggage at
an airport).
Online Media
- Digital
Publications: Many digital publications have opportunities for you
to email their database through a personalized email or newsletter. They
can track open rates and understand conversion rates to your site or
asset. These are often specialized publications, making it easy to reach
your target audience, and are great tools for lead generation campaigns.
- PPC: Advertisers can capitalize on search
intent. Advertisers can retarget people who have visited their site. PPC
is an extremely cost-effective medium.
- Social
Media: Like PPC,
social media is an extremely cost-effective medium. It is also extremely
targeted, allowing marketers to target by interests, age, marriage status,
etc. Social platforms are constructed on a basis of community, which
allows your brand to connect more personally with consumers. It also gives
your brand the chance for content to go viral.
- Programmatic
Advertising: Programmatic advertising is extremely targeted, using
an algorithm to find and target specific audiences across digital
platforms. When looking into this, there are two methods to consider:
- Programmatic
Bidding -
uses demand side platforms to buy ads on the digital market based on
target audience.
- Real-Time
Bidding - allows
advertisers to bid on impressions to their target audience. If their bid
wins, the ad is displayed right away.
Tips for Building a Media Planning
Strategy
As marketers begin to
strategize on new media plans, they should keep these ideas in mind:
- Reach: Select outlets and times that
will best reach your target audience. For example, buying ad space during
a live televised event (such as a sports game) ensures that viewers will
be watching the program live and not fast forward through the commercials.
- Establish
clear goals: Is this a
branding campaign, or are you looking to generate leads? How many people
are you looking to reach?
- Engagement: How do you encourage people to
talk about your brand? Make sure creative has clear direction on what
would resonate with this target audience based on demographics and
viewership. Additionally, make sure you have a way to test the
effectiveness of creative.
- Attribution
Models: Make sure
that your team is using a marketing attribution model that
can effectively track offline and online media. Using the right attribution
model can ensure your team is making choices that make sense when planning
media.


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