Document 1
Document 1
Document 1
1. Introduction
2. Movie Advertising
3. Techniques
4. Strategies
5. Merits of Cinema Media Advertising
6. Demerits of Cinema Media Advertising
7. Final Thoughts
8. References
Introduction:
Film promotion is the practice of promotion specifically in the film industry, and
usually occurs in coordination with the process of film distribution. Sometimes
called the press junket or film junket, film promotion generally includes press
releases, advertising campaigns, merchandising, franchising, media and interviews
with the key people involved with the making of the film, like actors and directors.
As with all business, it is an important part of any release because of the inherent
high financial risk; film studios will invest in expensive marketing campaigns to
maximize revenue early in the release cycle. Marketing budgets tend to equal about
half the production budget. Publicity is generally handled by the distributor and
exhibitors.
Movie Advertising:
In theaters:
Trailers are a mainstay of film promotion, because they are delivered directly to
movie-goers. They screen in theatres before movie showings. Generally they tell
the story of the movie in a highly condensed fashion compressing maximum
appeal into two and half minutes.
Film posters
Slideshows - stills, trivia, and trivia games from the film, shown between
movie showtimes.
Standees (freestanding paperboard life-size images of figures from the film)
Cardboard 3D displays, sometimes producing sound
Product placement: paid active or passive insertion (as on-set posters, and
action figures) of film brand in drama or sitcom shows, or as passing
mentions in dialogue. For example, 20th Century Fox commissioned an I,
Robot-themed motorcycle, featured on two episodes (2:17, 2:18) of
American Chopper. The film Memoirs of a Geisha was placed throughout an
episode of the TV show Medium.
Extended placement: full episodes of television talkshows (Oprah),
entertainment news programs (ET), or network news programs (20/20),
devoted to compensated exposure of the film, stars, clips, director, etc.
In addition, interviews with actors and directors which are filmed en masse
at a hotel with local and national entertainment reporters which are featured
on local news shows, programs on cable networks, and series such as Byron
Allen's series of entertainment series like Entertainment Studios.
Internet:
Online digital film screeners: These digital film screeners have the benefit of
letting you send individual copies of your film or a promo to the press, sales
agents, distributors etc. Using them its simple to send individually controlled
copies of your film to various recipients with different expiry dates. Along
with the security of individual expiry dates, you can see reports of who
viewed your film and track their viewing of the film.
Print:
Merchandising:
Film actors, directors, and producers appear for television, cable, radio,
print, and online media interviews, which can be conducted in person or
remotely. During film production, these can take place on set.
After the film's premiere, key personnel make appearances in major market
cities or participate remotely via satellite videoconference or telephone.
Audience research:
Positioning studies versus other films that will premiere at the same time.
Test screenings of finished or nearly finished films; this is the most well
known.
Exit surveys questioning film goers about their demographic makeup and
effectiveness of marketing.
Strategies:
Over the past few weeks I’ve had a number of conversations with people
involved in film & TV marketing about how best to use social media to
virally promote movies and TV series online.
Unfortunately, movie marketing is not a science, but there are a lot of lessons
we can learn from those who have successfully (or unsuccessfully) marketed
films & shows before us.
Below are 17 strategies, tactics, case studies & ideas for creating an
exceptional online marketing campaign for your next movie or TV show.
1. Deep impact: Screen advertising has a deep impact on the viewers because of
large screen size and the fine picture presented to the viewers combined with
sound, colour motion and vision.
2. It is selective and flexible: The cinema audience consists of all segments of the
society differing in living standards, educational level, etc. But, all are interested in
the advertisement message as there is something for everyone.
3. Mass publicity: A cinema hall offers this unique specialty. Today, a capacity of
a theater ranges between 1000 and 3000 persons per show. Neither radio nor
television can match on this aspect.
4. Versatility: Film advertising cuts across the barrier of literacy and language and
reaches the audience and make them spell-bound.
Further, the advertisement films which are shot are based on urban life style,
whereas cinema is very popular in rural areas, especially at present.
Final Thoughts:
Marketing films and TV shows is not an easy task. If you want to stand out from the
crowd, do something remarkable, be ambitious with your marketing goals, work
with experts, and don’t believe the myth that you need a large budget to achieve
great results. Money helps, but creativity is the real currency in marketing.
References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_promotion
https://www.wowso.me/blog/movie-marketing
https://www.ventureharbour.com/ultimate-guide-marketing-films-tv-shows-
online/
https://www.hdkdigital.com/movie-promotion/