GREGG W. SIMONSEN

RADIO MARKETING  |  PROMOTIONS  |  SPECIAL EVENTS

GREGG@CRNWEST.COM  |  (206) 236-5145

Thanks for visiting ...  I've set out to do a page that addresses my background in radio, TV and promotions.

I've got an affinity with local events and, above all, community involvement.

I'm also pretty handy in putting together sales presentations, web pages and other collateral materials that are professional looking.

In the end ...  I know what works.  I have a commitment to excellence ... and excellence can work.   I have a commitment to community.  I have plenty of experience in promotional tactics.  I understand operations.               

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My immediate goal is to situate myself in a sales-oriented radio station with a commitment to local programming, community involvement, promotions and to excellence.

The above components can be combined for profit.

Radio can be excellent and radio can be fun!

       _______________________________________________________

What follows are qualifications, experiences, web links and other things to give you an idea about who I am.   

                                                      Best regards,

                                                         Gregg                             

 Presented in no particular order ...

Scrapbook ...

This is the closest thing to a traditional resume:  MARCH 2011  (PDF)

The emphasis here is local promotions for national advertisers.

I worked for this company, as an independent, for 15 years or so.

Along the way I learned everything about doing events and the fine art of  "winner management" and about anything else that can go wrong (and how to make it not go wrong).

   For Example:

 1.  Never give away a travel prize that includes "airfare" ... If you say "air transportation" that can't be interpreted as having a cash value, no matter how difficult a winner becomes.

 2.  Always put live broadcasts, personal appearances, and other station events on a riser to "show-biz it up."

 3.  Always document everything a sponsor gets in a promotion.  If they don't know it happened, and remember that it happened, it might as well not have.

 

A Diatribe ... (A Missive) ... (A Manifesto) ... (A Rant) ... (A Pontification) ... (An Essay) ... (you decide) ...

  AN EXPANDED, EASIER TO READ, VERSION OF ALL THIS   

On Radio ... and Excellence ... and Fun ...

Depending on how you keep score, in a few short years, there will only be two kinds of radio stations — Internet and Local, or Successful and Not-So.

I know I have some thoughts on the topic.

Internet Radio

With the web destined to be on everyone's dashboard within five years, (not to mention on every home media center too) a consumer will have far more programming options than they'll even be able to comprehend. 

With the Internet, IF they want a mix of reggae and Latin, it will be there for them ... IF they want to hear a big-time, national personality, it will be there for them ... IF they want to influence their music they hear by pushing a button now and then to show their preferences, it will be there for them. 

Conversely, if they want to hear a watered down version of a heritage radio station, playing a mish mosh of highly-tested, formulaic, nationally-programmed, voice-tracked terrestrial radio with 12 minutes of commercials ... or if they want a "news/talk" station carrying an assortment of the clichéd national diatribes ... traditional radio will be there for that audience. 

Note I said traditional, not local.  The "suits" must be confident that enough people will tune into the traditional stations ... confident that listeners will continue to take what's offered up by the accountants and corporate managers instead of programmers.

The truth is listeners have never tuned into a station based on its cash flow, debt ratios, stock prices or anything like that.  Listeners choose from among what they are being offered ... and that spectrum of offerings is widening.

Internet streams can and will eventually be successful ... even with the lower advertising loads that consumers are insisting upon.  Internet streams can quantify listeners down to the person and deliver very highly targeted ad messages.  That means things like synchronized ad tiles make it easy for a listener to respond to a call-to-action and video pre-rolls can be markedly more effective and quantifiable!

Local Radio

Now, if a listener wants to hear pertinent news, local dialog. local sports and other information of specific interest to them, they will be grossly disappointed by anything available to them only on the web.

Who are you betting on?

Excellence works.  Local radio has already been invented, there is a tremendous knowledge base on what works.  There are even many radio stations out there that ARE working, that will continue to work and will prevail in the next generation of listening.

There will always be constraints.  Truth of the matter is that every operator today has to deal with the realities of the market, debt service, station prices that in retrospect "might-have-could-have-maybe" been looked at differently.

Local radio stations can and will continue to be successful.  The reality is many stations will survive and prevail, even with more limited resources, and even with the Internet competing for share-of-ear.  Remember there is technology in place to stretch limited resources farther than we might have dreamt ... even five years ago!  The trick is to put those resources to work with the right commitment to being local and to being excellent.

The very good news:  Market size doesn't matter.  It is almost easier to prevail in the new economy in a smaller market.  And the good news for me is that smaller markets are my favorite.

Finally, every Internet stream isn't "radio" ... any more than a jukebox is radio.  There's a difference and if you'd like I can direct you to others who have written about that topic.

I guess the point of this is it is important to know who we are and who we are competing against ... and who we aren't competing against.

Why put this on a resume page ???

Quite simple.  I'm not, and I doubt any prospective employer is, eager to make a new hire that might be a mis-alignment.  In this day and age, you have the right to know as much about me as possible ... certainly more than a flat "copy and paste" resume might reveal.

For a good fit, we might as well enter the ring fighting the same battle.  Although that cliché just fell out of my fingertips, the analogy is good, because it is a battle, it is a war we're fighting out there -- against ourselves, against the competition, against the satellites, and the www.

Here's to a good fit.

On to the business at hand ...

NASCAR ...

Traveling with NASCAR (and IndyCar and ALMS and NHRA) for umpteen years ....

Aside from all the excitement and the superstars, it all boiled down to simple marketing:  NASCAR, or any form of racing is just sponsorship marketing.  Sponsors who succeed use the sponsorship as an investment.  Its no different than the bank sponsoring a local sports team ... for everyone to really succeed in the end the sponsorship must be the centerpiece of a well leveraged marketing campaign.  When that happens, everyone wins.  Everyone!

WhereGreggEats.com ...

Remember, life is short ... you only get to eat any meal once ... don't waste a meal on drab, formula, average, food.

I'm a food snob.  Not in a fu-fu sort of a way.  I usually (almost always) avoid chains, in favor of harder to find, sometimes out of the way places in wherever I happen to be.

It is worth the trouble. 

WhereGreggEats.com

 ... all content and design created by Gregg

  Quick Rules:

 1.  If you don't know for sure, sit at the bar and order the soup.  Homemade bodes well.

 2.  Use Yelp, Google Places and ROADFOOD.COM for hints.  In other words do your homework, but if you find yourself in the hinterlands with your iPhone, you have no excuse for going to Denny's.

 3.  The cars in the parking lot theory only works if there are an assortment of cars, trucks, beaters, new, etc.  The system does not work if there are a lot of older retiree cars, minivans, and so on.

Music, Music, Music ...

The Society for the Preservation of The Great American Songbook

I'm spearheading the development of the site, and collateral efforts to save the music.

SPGAS PROJECT MARKETING SUMMARY

TRADESHOW

BROCHURE  (PDF)

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY  (WEB)

SIMPLE SUMMARY  (WEB)

 

"SPEC" WEB PLAYER MOCK-UP  (WEB)

 

"A table for one, and the dog of course" ...

If I were thinking ahead, I might have gotten involved in this group, just so I'd eventually be able to put picture of puppies on my resume.

It does go a little deeper than that.  CCI is a great organization ... one of the few I've affiliated with where everyone wins!

  Observations:

 1.  The sign shouldn't say "No Pets, Except for Guide Dogs" ... Guide dogs are not pets, the sign should say "We Welcome Service Animals" ... that was kind of a pet peeve of mine from days on the road with Abigail, Roma and Vanessa and it is the basis of many misconceptions across the board.

 2.  Yes.  It is hard to give them up after you've raised them -- heck after you've spent 24/7 with them for almost a year and a half.

 3.  We have to remember "SHE'S NOT MY DOG" ... especially at turn-in time.

Gregg, Executive Producer ...

An outgrowth of the NASCAR radio promotions we were doing was a nationally syndicated radio program.

At a high point, the show was on about 70 stations thanks to an affiliation with Westwood One.

We sure knew how to make a radio remote look like a big deal.

  Takeaways:

 1.  Be suspicious of anything quantitative given to you by a radio network ... no matter how big time the company.

 2.  Always "Show-Biz-It-Up" when you go live.

LIVE IN ORLANDO  (PDF)

Those Oldies But Goodies ...

I've been on a kick lately and have been dubbing down old cassette tapes that I never listened to and turning them into MP3 files that I'll never listen to.

I've done quite a bit of converting and the result chronicles the old days when I couldn't seem to stay away from an open microphone.

There were the days on the air in Hartford, Connecticut and in Northampton, Massachusetts.

HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT:  WRCQ AIRCHECKS ON MEMORIES PAGE  (WEB)

NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS:  JIMMY FUND RADIOTHON ON MEMORIES PAGE  (WEB)

   

Portfolio ...

Here's an assortment of sales-orient materials and private, client-only, web pages.  These are archives, so some links within the pages may be outdated.  The idea is to give you an idea about how I comport myself for clients.

I love what local media can do for advertisers.  Feel free to plagiarize anything for your own client presentations.  Please, just let me know and if you post anything on the web, add an attribution.

 

 

 

 

HANDOUT  (PDF)

WEB INTRO

HANDOUT  (PDF)

WEB INTRO

Sometimes it seems like every phone call, every personal contact — everything — turns into an essay question. 

Most of time I write the essay before I make the call.

This is a compendium of just a few missives I've created in my days.

MyTV NE Special Edition ...

for The Pioneer Valley of Massachusetts

TV Program Proposal

 

 

 

 

CONCEPTUAL OUTLINE HANDOUT

ONLINE CONCEPTUAL OUTLINE

CONSUMER WEB PAGE MOCK-UP

CLICK HERE  (USE

VIDEO CODE # 03)

Racing for a Cause ...

Station marketing, community service, event related conceptual outline.

Prospecting ... reaching out to companies in Healthcare ...

"If your doors are open, you're in business."

 

 

 

 

 

CONSUMER WEB PAGE

(PENDING)

CLIENT WEB PAGE

POST CAMPAIGN DECK  (PDF)

 

Mobil 1 RACEPASS ...

This was a pretty big project.  Here's a small sample of the client-only, private site that documented the campaign and gave their sales people the resources to make presentations about it.

Retail Race Promotion for Mobil 1 ...

in Sebring, Florida

 

    

 

 

 

HANDOUT  (PDF)

WEB EXTENSION

MAIN WEB INTRO

COLLATERAL HANDOUT

printed at 11 x 11 so it's less likely to get lost on buyer's desk

Going Green ...

"A New Era of Energy" TV show proposal.

Price Chopper Markets ...

for the TV station ... The big idea was to create a fully interactive Media Kit online.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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