Pay For
Your TV As You Go
For small business & professional TV advertisers, it's
the way to go!
Why apply for
credit? There are only
two reasons that I know of why you, the TV advertiser,
would want to apply for credit with a television station
and pay on billing, rather than just pay up front, a few
weeks at a time. One reason is good, the other bad.
1. Good Reason to Use
Credit: You are a very
big company that makes all payments to vendors through an
Accounts Payable Department. We really don't expect Ford or
IBM to pay for their television advertising any differently
than they pay for anything else -- through their corporate
system, on billing.
2. Bad Reason to Use
Credit: You intend to
pay for your advertising with the money you make from the
advertising. This reason is bad because you never know, in
advance, how well your advertising will work. The
advertising may be wildly successful but you still don't
know how long it will take new customers to pay you. And
you never know what unexpected budget demands will arise
for you at the same time your TV bill is due.
There are several good
reasons to pay as you go:
1. TV stations will
sometimes run spots you didn't order. I have had stations run twice as many
spots as I actually ordered for one of my clients -- and
then bill for them! But my client got all those extra spots
for free, without argument, because we pay as we go.
If I point out to a station that they have gotten an order
wrong, I can say, "When I paid for the order, if the amount
I paid didn't match what you booked then you had an
opportunity to clear up the problem at that time."
Here's what can happen: The station bills you for more
spots than you ordered. But the salesman, covering his
you-know-what, swears up and down that you did order all
those spots. The station takes you to small claims court
and gets a judgment against you. I have seen it happen.
But if you had paid cash-in-advance, it could not have
happened because you would not have had a credit
application on file and without a credit application, the
station has no weapon to use against you. So by paying cash
in advance you protect yourself against this problem.
2. Paying up-front puts
you in a position of strength with salespeople.
Most TV salespeople are paid
on the basis of orders, rather than collections. So some of
them will use every trick in the book to try to get you to
order as much airtime as possible, long before you even
know what works and what doesn't. When you are planning to
pay for your advertising way out in the distant future you
are much more vulnerable to sales pitches than you are when
you are paying as you go.
3. You take no chances
on ruining your credit. TV station credit managers get together
with each other and trade information. If something happens
and you get behind with one station, that station will tell
everyone who will listen.
4. Most TV credit
applications make you personally responsible.
If something terrible goes
wrong with your business before you pay them, they will go
after you personally for the money.
5. Your ad agency -- if
you use one -- is not a bank. An ad agent who files a credit
application with a TV station, then puts his client on the
air and bills the client is, in effect, loaning the client
money, like a bank. If, for any reason, the client can't
pay, the station sues the agency and the agency can be
quickly driven into bankruptcy. Then the TV station goes
after the client personally for the money.
Huge agencies with huge clients can take those risks. In my
opinion, small agencies that "loan" money to their clients
only do so because they they are afraid to ask for money up
front. That's just foolish. Look for an agent with more
courage.
Although it's rare, yes, there are occasions when an ad
agency will take a client's money and then not pay the TV
stations. If you are suspicious for any reason, you can
make sure that your ad agency is passing along your money
by simply calling up the TV stations around the time your
schedule starts running and making sure they've been paid.
You could even ask them to inform you any time your money
doesn't get passed along in a timely manner.
So -- pay on billing or
pay as you go? Really,
what's the downside to paying up front? When you pay on
30-day billing, after a month or so you are paying every
month -- the same as when you pay as you go. It just starts
a month later. (That is, assuming you are planning on
paying the bill!)