Okay, I'm certainly not in marketing, and I don't presume that I would have had the foresight to suggest all of this at Voom's launch, but now that we're sitting at Voom's bedside, waiting for it to flatline, I have to ask...
Once it was obvious that people weren't signing on in droves, WHY didn't Voom...
The $1 install + $5 lease was a good start, but for all the machinations at the end trying to salvage the company, the marketing arm of Voom's organization sure seemed to take their demise lying down. I mean... infomercials? Come on, now.
Once it was obvious that people weren't signing on in droves, WHY didn't Voom...
- Offer SD-only packages to compete with D* and E*, along with fat discounts for existing D*/E* customers who commit for 6 months; "and when you're ready to upgrade to HD, just give Voom a call & we'll flip the switch"; emphasize that the Voom 21 & all other HD channels are perfectly viewable on SD sets.
- Do whatever it took to ship the HD-DVR; $500 to purchase or $10/mo to lease + $10/mo for the home media network option.
- Create a retail presence at the point-of-sale where people are buying their HD televisions; offer a discount with new tv purchase & a 6-month commitment; this means Best Buy, Circuit City, Fry's, TV Authority, Onecall... not just Sears, Dell, & Crutchfield. Spiff the retailers for every sign-up.
- Provide a self-install option with a $100 programming credit for self-installers.
- Do whatever it took to get every HD network available; INHD1/2, HDNet/HDNet Movies... if it's HD, we've got it, even if it has to be offered a la carte for $$ and even if we had to kiss Mark Cuban's feet & tell him that we enjoyed The Benefactor.
The $1 install + $5 lease was a good start, but for all the machinations at the end trying to salvage the company, the marketing arm of Voom's organization sure seemed to take their demise lying down. I mean... infomercials? Come on, now.