The Next Niche: School
Bus Ads
By Caroline E. Mayer
Washington Post, June
4, 2006
Mass.
Firm's Radio Program
Promises Sales With
Safer Ride
Soon,
schoolchildren may be
singing new lyrics to
the classic “Wheels on
the Bus.”
“The ads on the bus
go on and on, on and
on . . .”
BusRadio, a
start-up company in
Massachusetts, wants
to pipe into school
buses around the
country a private
radio network that
plays music,
public-service
announcements,
contests and, of
course, ads, aimed at
kids as they travel to
and from school.
As BusRadio’s Web
site (http://www.busradio.net/)
explains: “Every
morning and every
afternoon on their way
to and from school,
kids across the
country will be
listening to the
dynamic programming of
BusRadio providing
advertiser’s [sic]
with a unique and
effective way to reach
the highly sought
after teen and tween
market.”
BusRadio, the Web
site adds, “will take
targeted student
marketing to the next
level.” Marketers can
advertise and sponsor
contests or provide a
celebrity deejay
(perhaps to promote
that next CD or
movie). They can also
use BusRadio’s Web
site to conduct
surveys and test
songs, CD covers,
packaging and ads.
According to its
Web site, BusRadio
plans to operate in
Massachusetts this
fall, broadcasting to
more than 102,000
students. By September
2007 it plans to take
its programs national,
reaching a million
students. On the Web
site, BusRadio listed
Hagerstown, Md., as
one of the areas it
plans to serve.
However, Chris Carter,
director of public
school transportation
for Washington County
(which includes
Hagerstown), said he
had never heard of
BusRadio.
The company is the
brainchild of Michael
Yanoff and Steven
Shulman, the same two
executives who created
Cover Concepts, a
company that has
provided schools with
millions of free book
covers—full of bold,
colorful ads for
Kellogg’s, McDonald’s,
Calvin Klein, Nike and
other major national
advertisers. Now owned
by comic-book king
Marvel Enterprises,
Cover Concepts says it
reaches 30 million
school-age children in
43,000 U.S. public
schools, which receive
no funding for
distributing the
products.
Shulman declined to
discuss BusRadio’s
plans, saying in an
e-mail that it is “a
relatively new company
in a start-up mode.”
He said the “planned
launch is in
September, and until
that time we have [a]
policy in place not to
comment on our
business plan.”
According to the
company’s Web site,
school buses will be
equipped—free—with
custom-designed
equipment that will
carry the company’s
proprietary programs.
It is unclear whether
the school systems
will also be paid for
broadcasting BusRadio.
In an hour’s
broadcast, 44 minutes
will be devoted to
music and news, six
minutes to
public-safety
announcements, two to
contests and eight to
advertising. On most
commercial radio
stations, there is
usually 10 to 12
minutes, sometimes
more, of advertising.
BusRadio says pilot
tests have shown that
students behave better
when its programs are
on. Noise is reduced,
and students are more
likely to remain in
their seats and more
willing to follow
school rules,
according to the Web
site. “Drivers used
BusRadio as a
behavioral tool. . . .
If kids misbehaved,
they lost the
privilege of listening
to the show,” the Web
site said.
BusRadio said that
in test runs, its
commercials were
effective in
attracting kids’
attention. The WB
network, for example,
wanted to promote its
television shows to
kids. Print ads could
reach the right
audience but perhaps
not on the day that
the shows were to be
broadcast. Commercial
radio could do that,
but it was considered
inefficient for the
youngest of viewers
because kids “tend to
turn the station when
the ads begin.”
WB tried BusRadio,
running the promotions
on the days the shows
were scheduled to air
and broadcasting more
ads during the
students’ ride home
“so they could
reinforce the message
to watch that night.”
“It’s a pretty
clever concept,”
particularly because
the company is using
the issue of child
safety to promote the
concept, said Paul
Kurnit, head of
KidShop, a New York
marketing firm that
advises food companies
on promoting products
to children.
Kurnit, who learned
of BusRadio just last
week, said, “They are
using traditional
media to reach kids in
an environment that up
to now has been pretty
noncommercial.” And
that, Kurnit said,
could make the concept
controversial,
especially at a time
when a growing number
of health
professionals and
government officials
are calling for
restrictions on
marketing
products—particularly
junk food—to children.
Last month, the
Department of Health
and Human Services and
the Federal Trade
Commission called on
the food industry to
voluntarily set
minimum nutrition
standards for foods
that can be marketed
to children. Last
year, the prestigious
Institute of Medicine,
part of the National
Academies, said
Congress should
mandate changes if
food and beverage
manufacturers fail to
promote healthful
products in the next
two years. In 2004, in
another report, the
Institute of Medicine
said schools should
strive to be “as
advertising-free as
possible.”
That could be
challenging for many
schools, which
increasingly have
relied on corporate
sponsorships and free
products—usually
branded—to ease tight
budgets. At the same
time, marketers have
been courting schools,
eager to distinguish
their products among
the hundreds of others
promoted to kids every
week on TV, radio, the
Internet and anywhere
they congregate. Some
school districts have
accepted ads on the
outside of school
buses, but up to now,
the inside has been
sacrosanct.
That’s why critics
are lining up even
before BusRadio is
officially launched.
“It’s using the
compulsory education
law to compel kids to
listen to ads,” said
Gary Ruskin, executive
director of the public
advocacy group
Commercial Alert. “Its
justification is it
makes kids quiet. So
what? They’d be quiet
if we gave them
cigarettes, but that
doesn’t mean we
should.”
Ruskin said he is
also concerned about
personal data the
company will collect,
particularly as kids
go online to respond
to contests and
promotions. “Who gets
the children’s
personal information?”
he asked.
Daniel Broughton, a
pediatrician at the
Mayo Clinic, said he
was concerned that
advertising “in this
situation takes on the
air of being
official.” That was
one of the concerns
many parents and
advertising critics
had when schools
accepted free
television and
satellite dishes in
exchange for free
programming, including
ads, from Channel One.
There are some
differences from
Channel One, Broughton
noted, because
BusRadio isn’t aired
during school, when it
would divert teacher
time or conflict with
in-class programming.
BusRadio says on
its Web site that its
service is an
improvement over what
students hear if a bus
driver listens to AM
or FM radio. “It is
virtually impossible
to listen to
commercial radio for
30 minutes without
being offended by a
song’s lyrics or DJ’s
talk. . . . BusRadio
entertains the
students while
virtually eliminating
the concerns of
inappropriate music,
DJ talk and
commercials.”
Linda Farbry,
director of
transportation for
Fairfax County public
schools, said its
buses are equipped
with AM/FM radios
precisely for
students. “If they
listen to music, they
are controlled and
quiet. . . . Some of
these trips are long,
and we want kids to do
something other than
pick on other kids.”
The county has 22
stations it considers
acceptable for student
ears, such as soft
rock WASH (97.1 FM)
and country WMZQ (98.7
FM). Would Farbry
consider BusRadio for
her buses, which
transport 110,000
students a day? “It
depends on the cost,”
she said.
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