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POSITIONINGCTV: Comedy Television
aka
Comedy Central
1991
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THERE ARE TWO KINDS OF POSITIONING:
DescriptiveandAspirational
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DESCRIPTIVE POSITIONING DEFINES AN EXISTING SITUATION.
Examples:
Avis was #2, and (at least theoretically) already was trying harder before they
came out with that position.
7-up didn't reformulate to become the "Un-cola". The position merely described
what the product already was.
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ASPIRATIONAL POSITIONING DEFINES A GOAL FOR A PRODUCT ORCOMPANY.
Examples:
MTV positioned itself as "MTV vs. normal TV" before the channel even got off the
ground.The positioning served as an aspirational yardstick for everything MTV did, from
advertising and programming to staffing and acceptance of paid advertising.
FOX's position was that it wanted to become the 4th broadcast network. It was a longterm goal that could not be accomplished overnight.
But it provided everyone at the company with a clear sense of purpose.
It gave a certain savvy section of the public someone to root for.And, after careful selection of material and development of new product, it bore fruit.
They never would have made it without the position.
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WHAT TO BE AND WHAT NOT TO BE--THAT IS THE QUESTION.
An aspirational position should answer this question:What can we become that will be successful, generate excitement inside our
company as well as in the world, and be as valid ten years from now as it is today?
Aspirational positioning is especially helpful when the "product" doesn't yet exist, as isthe case with CTV.
It is not intended to determine specific programming questions, like whether to do a
weekend of all stand-up or a Lucy marathon, but it could help point in the right generaldirection.
It does not have to be true now in order to be appropriate, as long as it is something wecould legitimately work toward.
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WHAT CAN CTV: THE COMEDY NETWORK
ASPIRE TO?
Let's pause for a quick look at history...
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THE HISTORY OF TELEVISION IS COMEDY.
From its earliest days as an entertainment medium, TV has been dominated by comedy.While there have been successful dramatic shows, TV's benchmarks are, and will alwaysbe, Milton Berle, Lucy, Sid Caesar, Gleason, Dick Van Dyke, The Smothers Brothers,
Laugh-in, Mary Tyler Moore, M*A*S*H*, All In The Family,
Saturday Night Live, Cheers, Cosby, Rosanne, The Simpsons etc....
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THERE'S COMEDY EVERYWHERE.
Viewers don't need more comedy on TV because they have it.They've always had it.
They always will have it.
All the broadcast channels, and nearly every cable channel programs some comedy everyday.
But so far nobody IS comedy.
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WHAT CAN CTV OFFER VIEWERS THAT THEY CAN'T GET EVERYWHEREELSE?
Comedy round the clock?
Yes, but that's a basically passive claim.
The home for comedy?
Sounds like a retirement community. (Where comedy goes to die.)
The first stop for comedy?
Fine, but why? How do we give CTV the sense of energy that you find with say, MTVor CNN?
Maybe we need to ask a bigger question...
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HOW CAN CTV
EARN A PLACE IN TELEVISION HISTORY?
Let's pause for another look at history...
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THE HOTHOUSE EFFECT
Now and then in the history of show business, time, resources, talent, and visionfortuitously come together to form hothouses of creativity.
MGM studios in the 30s and 40s is one example.
Disney Studios in the 40s and 50s is another.Motown in the 60s and Saturday Night live in the 70s are two more recent "hothouses"
All of these emerged from relatively humble beginning and became creative factories
where exceptional talent could be discovered and thrive.They were places where people who were passionate about movie making, or animation,
or music, or live TV comedy, were eager to come to work often for peanuts --they were
drawn to these places because there was an aura about them of being "the" place wheretheir dreams could come to life.
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WHAT WOULD COMEDY CENTRAL BE?
CTV should see itself as encompassing all of TV comedy's past and future.The place where TV comedy lives, in the form of classic shows, new shows beingcreated, new talents being discovered, and eventually new venues being explored (i.e.
feature films, Broadway shows, who knows?)
Like FOX becoming the 4th network, this will not happen overnight.
Like MGM, Disney, Motown and Saturday Night Live, it will mean slowly building a
consumer following around the talents that CTV has nurtured.
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CTV COULD BECOME
THE TELEVISION COMEDY HOTHOUSE OF THE 90's...
"COMEDY CENTRAL."
Before we laugh that off as being too grandiose, let's look at what we have going for us.
Time: This is a time when cable is ascending and the broadcast networks are on the
wane. (CNN is already assuming a prominent role in TV news.) Soon virtually all
American households will have cable, and the distinction between broadcast and cablewill blur until it disappears completely.
Resources: CTV is beginning life with a fair amount of publicity, thanks to the warbetween HA! and the Comedy Channel. It is the offspring of the most credible, successful
parents in the basic (MTVN) and pay (HBO) cable businesses. It has the combined
financial and subscriber bases of the two, plus an impressive programming roster tochoose from.
Talent: The hottest new talents would spark to this positioning if it were properly
expressed to them. More established talents would be intrigued and would gravitate to usas time goes by.
Vision: The sky's the limit.
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TWO ROLE MODELS: COMPARE AND CONTRAST
ESPN is a cable channel with no vision and very little energy.All they do is put sports on TV. Not the top sporting events (they can't get them) or themost complete, incisive coverage of sports--just sports.
If they started the ESPN play-by-play Institute to teach sport casters how to do better
commentary, people would laugh. ESPN is unlikely to ever become "the world's placefor sports."
CNN, on the other hand, positioned itself as the world's place for news. They opened
bureaus and placed equipment in tiny burgs around the world. At first, people wereskeptical of CNN's vision. But now we're all watching live CNN feeds from Baghdad, the
Secretary of Defense cites CNN as giving the best coverage of the Persian Gulf war, and
the broadcast networks are interviewing CNN reporters on their air. CNN has, in fact,become the world's place for news.
CTV has a little-known studio which can literally be the "hothouse" where talent andmaterial can be nurtured. Comedy fans (read: everybody) will be rooting for a channel
that not only gives them great comedy round the clock, but also is growing it from within.
It is the only channel that actually could become the "mythic visionary" of TV comedy.
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SUMMARY
CTV is in a unique position to become the MGM Studios of television comedy. It canprovide and develop every type of comedy for every taste. It can build and nurture freshnew material and talents. It can be Comedy Central, a home for everything from the solo
stand-up to the next Ghostbusters.
What would Comedy Central mean?
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WHAT COMEDY CENTRAL WOULD MEAN TO CONSUMERS.
Comedy Central would win support and patience from the public.
It would place CTV in the role of pioneer, instead of just being one more cable channelvying for attention.
It would make CTV a channel to watch, regardless of what you might see any specific
time you tune in.
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WHAT COMEDY CENTRAL WOULD MEAN TO THE CABLE TRADE.
Comedy Central means that CTV would be a focused channel with vision.
A focused channel with vision translates into an exciting place on the dial--and therefore
an additional lure for new subscribers.
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WHAT COMEDY CENTRAL WOULD MEAN TO THE
PRODUCTION/CREATIVE COMMUNITY.
Comedy Central would attract adventurous young talent.
It would represent a chance for freedom and experimentation for more established talent.
With careful development of material, it would eventually become the place to be for
anyone working in comedy.
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WHAT COMEDY CENTRAL WOULD MEAN TO CTV.
Comedy Central would build pride and energy within the company.
It would give ad sales, marketing, on-air promotions, and programming a horn to blow
and a target to aim for.
And--if the history of television tells us anything--with luck, vision and hard work,
Comedy Central would succeed.
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Assignment: POSITIONING MTV: MUSIC TELEVISIONAgency: Fred/Alan Inc.Year: 1987Positioning document written by Alan Goodman
MTV: Music Television was my first employer in television and a great exampleof positioning by intuition. With good and focused leadership from Bob Pittman,those of us on staff all knew what we were and what we were doing.
Years after the 1981 launch, with long-form successes like "Remote Control"there was a move afoot to mess it up by claiming that the audience was "bored"with music videos, repositioning MTV away from music and more as a lifestyleservice. Additionally, a shift to a second generation of management had takenthe initial gut instincts that built the joint and hardened them into inappropriate
"rules" that were brandished like capricious swords at new employees' heads.
So, the challenge was to create a position that:
1> formalized the intuition that let some people claim thatthey "got MTV" to support whatever personal opinion they had at themoment.
2> would take into account the evolution of the network into longer formprogramming.
3> gave guidance to creative decisions, business decisions so they would
be consistent with, and build further, the networks brand character.
I think youll find, with some exceptions, the document holds up pretty well, andthat MTV pretty much follows it to this day.
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POSITIONING MTV
July 17, 1987
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POSITIONING MTV
Introduction
To recap something we all learned long ago: "positioning" a product means
finding a place for it -- a hole -- in a prospect's mind. A place we can claim
that competitors cannot.
There are many reasons why we may want to be "the entertainment source for
young America." Or "a non-stop party." Or a million other things.
But these aspirations are ours, not our consumers. We must remember to look
inside the consumer's head.
And to successfully position a product for minds everyone else wants to occupy
in the age of overcommunication, it must be a simple message.
Often, positioning a product is easier when that product has competitors -- Avis
"tries harder," Lite Beer is "everything you want, and less," 7-Up is the "uncola,"
etc.
But MTV is "Music Television," and nothing else is. So MTV has no competitors.Right? Wrong!
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The Environment Defines the Competition
MTV exists in an environment where there is more choice available than everbefore. Cable television.
Often, cable programmers try to draw a distinction between cable andbroadcast. Cable means choice and modernity, broadcast means less
choice and tradition.
But these programmers identify the environment in their terms, notconsumers' terms. More and more, the difference between broadcast and
cable will blur in consumers' minds, and for our children, who will never see
a TV dial and won't know the limitations of the VHF 2-13 band, thedistinction may not exist at all.
WTBS is shows, just like Channel 2. So is USA Network and Lifetime. Andwhen the Pay services show movies you don't want, they may as well not be
there at all.
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For real consumers, television is television. And there are certain things abouttelevision that MTV isn't.
WATCHING TELEVISION IS:
Making a commitment (a half-hour -- or hour -- commitment).
Putting up with the shows they feed you. Watching things that aren't for you (they are mass audience).
Not listening to music.
Predictable.
WATCHING MTV IS:
A small, or short, commitment. No shows. Or, a new show every three minutes.
Watching something that's for you.
Music. Reliable, not predictable.
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Simplifying the Message
We have to put all of these differentiating characteristics into a simple message.Because we can't list them all for consumers whenever we want to talk to them.
And because they aren't all that meaningful to consumers, who never think
about things like "commitments" when they hit the remote button.
We need one word that instantly identifies us and our competition to our
audience.
We know what we are: MTV. So what is the competition, all those other TV
channels out there?
There is only one word to describe them: Normal.
When programmers talk of "Miami Vice" as having MTV attitude, they mean "notlike normal cop shows."
When commercials are said to have and MTV look, it means disjointed,
disconnected, musically-rhythmic but not linear or logical -- in other words,"not like normal commercials."
It's
Normal TV vs. MTV
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Normal TV and MTV
Normal TV is boring.
It let's you down.
It makes you wait for what you want.
It's never surprising. It all looks the same.
It's for old people or my little brother.
It's phony and hype-y.
It's dumb and old-fashioned. It's not mine.
MTV is alive and looks interesting.
It's always there when I want it.
Sometimes, it can really surprise you. They really do some different-looking things in the videos.
It's for people like me.
I can believe what they say.
It's very up-to-date and state-of-the-art. It's my MTV.
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Normal TV vs. MTV
MTV is relief from Normal TV.
It's a quick break from Normal TV.
It's mine, and Normal TV belongs to everybody.
It's more stuff I like, and Normal TV is more stuff I hate.
It's music, and Normal TV isn't.
It's for people like me and my friends, and Normal TV isn't.
It's cool, and Normal TV is dumb.
It has "it," and Normal TV doesn't.
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Normal TV or MTV.
This simple statement provides MTV with a benchmarkagainst which everything about and for the network canbe judged;
Programs
Specials
Promotions
Contests
Advertising
Staffing
And it has value beyond promotion and advertising;
It supports and encourages MTV's fundamentalstrength as a risk-taker.
It guarantees that MTV will never evolve into"normal TV."
It is used as a common vision throughoutthe company to ensure that MTV will always deliver on
this promise.
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Advertising
1988 Campaign
Objectives
Increase network cume
Build trademark value
Strategies
Use TV as the primary medium to generate
awareness.
-- point-of-purchase
-- delivers message with sight and sound
Use TV Guide for show-specific tune-in advertising.
Tactics
Create advertising that asks the question -- "TV or
MTV?" -- and answers with the line that is stillvalid -- "I want my MTV" -- within this re-defined
context.
Results
"We've had the best ratings year we've ever had, and in
terms of the value of our trademark -- we've now beenable to develop ancillary businesses."
Bob Friedman
Senior Vice PresidentMTV Marketing
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1989 Campaign
Objectives
Increase network cume.
Build trademark value.
Strategies
Use a combination of TV -- to generate awarenessplus Radio and Print -- for show-specific tune-in
messages
-- saturate the markets
-- test media performance
Tactics
Create TV advertising that does a straightcomparison of MTV vs. Normal TV.
Create Radio and Print advertising thatdemonstrates the essence of MTV -- not-normal
entertainment -- with show-specific end-tags.
Results
"Unconventional approaches in unconventional times allowyou to have low budget levels and yet break through
with messages that people remember. Even when you are
up against people spending considerably more dollars."
Tom Freston
Chairman
MTV Networks
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