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Almathera Ten Pack 3: CDPD 3
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Almathera Ten on Ten - Disc 3: CDPD3.iso
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151-175
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scopedisk151
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pladcalc
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pladcalc.doc
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1995-03-19
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7KB
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155 lines
PladCalc
========
The Political Ad Calculator
This simple Amigabasic program has saved me many hours of drudgery,
and hopefully someone out there will find it equally helpful. It is
obviously a very task-specific program, designed to calculate a radio
advertising campaign. It was designed for political ads, but could
easily be used to plan any radio campaign. Even if you aren't in the
position to need or use this program for its intended purpose, you may
find it interesting to experiment with as a learning experience, to
explore the world of radio advertising.
What Does it Do?
PladCalc inputs the all the data necessary to compute a complete radio
campaign for one radio station, and prints out an order in finished
form, ready to be submitted to the radio station, including a breakdown
of how many of each kind of ad. There are provisions for:15 second,
:30 second, and :60 second ads, and rates for News, Drivetime/Specifictime,
and ROS (Run On Schedule) commercials. The schedule can last a few days,
a week, or as long as you want.
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<INCLUDED FILES>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
This program is freeware, and may be duplicated and distributed to anyone
or any bulletin board or computer service which doesn't have the ordacity
to claim copyright to everything it gets!! The following files must all
be included...
PladCalc
PladCalc.info
PladCalc.doc
Pladcalc.doc.info
Plad_ME_First.doc
Plad_ME-First.doc info
There are no warranties, either expressed or implied. The author accepts
no responsibility for its use or misuse, and offers it only as a tool for
the convenience of the general public.
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
INSTRUCTIONS:
This program needs AMIGABASIC to run. Make sure you have AMIGABASIC on
the same disk with this program and all will be well. Start the program
by clicking on the PladCalc icon, or by typing "AMIGABASIC PladCalc" from
the CLI.
This program inputs information and processes orders for one radio station
at a time. If your campaign will run on more than one station, simply
rerun the program for each additional station. Originally I had the
program set up to input all the data for every station and process the
whole thing at once, but I found there were too many opportunities to goof
and enter wrong data while entering so many facts and figures, and it
worked out better to just do one station at a time.
This program works by taking your total advertising budget, and using
percentages you input, distributes those dollars among various options
such as commercial length, time of day, and the radio station's advertising
rates. Once you've given the computer what it wants, it spits out a
nice, neat order. Part of that order, the "Dispersement Chart", will
look something like this...
Johnson for Senate
Radio station order for WXXX
WEEK 1 4/3-4/9 DRIVETIME NEWS ROS
no. :15's 6 7 19
no. :30's 6 5 25
no. :60's 7 0 0
As you can see, even a single week of commercials on a single radio
station can involve a lot of variables. There might be three different
commercial lengths, and three different options for each length! In
planning the schedule, thought must be given as to whether your client
will best be served by advertising evenly throughout the day (ROS
scheduling), sponsoring newscasts, "dayparting" (narrowing the
schedule down to just the prime morning and/or afternoon drivetimes,
when listeners are getting ready for work or commuting to/from work),
or doing a little of each. In most cases, I reccomend to my clients
that they mix it up a little, because there are listeners who will be
missed if they "narrowcast" too much.
The "Nitty Gritty"
The most important thing to remember when you run this program is that
WHEN IT ASKS FOR PERCENTAGES, IT WANTS PERCENTAGES!!! Be sure to enter
your answer as a decimal. If you want, for example, 23 percent of your
total budget allocated to radio station WXXX, express it as .23 and
press RETURN.
When you run the program, it will first ask you for your total budget
for the entire campaign, then the percentage you want dedicated to the
station in question. It will then go on to quiz you on other pertinent
information related to the radio station's advertising rates (enter the
per ad rate like this: 14.75 (no dollar sign), how many weeks in the
campaign, and what percentage of the ads should be ROS, News, and
Drivetime.
Once you get things set up, the program will grind through the schedule
week by week, asking you the dates that week, what percentage of the
station's budget you want allocated to that week, and the percentage
of :15's, :30's, and :60's you would like for that week. Remember
to always express your percentages as decimals. The only exception would
be if you wanted all the ads that week to be, say, :30's. Then you
would simply enter a "1", representing 100 percent. Obviously, if
you allocate percentages for :15's, :30's, and :60's, the percentages
should add up to 100 percent, or your final product won't "add up"!!!
As soon as you finish up the last week of data input for your campaign,
PladCalc will automatically begin printing your order. When it reaches
the midway point, it will stop and let you look over the dispursement
chart. Make changes if you'd like, right on the paper, and then enter
the totals for all weeks into the computer as prompted. When it asks
for "Drivetime :15's", it wants the total for ALL weeks, etc. When
the totals are all entered, it will continue its printing process,
pumping out an itemized list of all ads by rate, with subtotals and
grand total clearly spelled out. This printout can now be turned in
directly to the sales staff at a radio station, along with your client's
commercial tape.
If the data is entered accurately, it should give you a reliable,
complete final product.
IN CONCLUSION!
When computed by hand, with pencil and calculator, I've found myself
staring at the wall in exasperation because of all the variables involved.
This program, while simple, has made life easier for me. And after all,
isn't that what computers are for?
Feel free to fiddle and adapt this to your own needs, but if you then
distribute your own version, please use a different name and include some
sort of credit in your doc files.
If you would like to ask questions, have comments, or would like to
hire me to help you with YOUR political campaign, feel free to write!
I also do professional commercial production and narration work, and offer
film and slide transfers to video tape.
Dane Scott
Dane Scott Productions
Box 222
Oconto, WI 54153