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Advertising 101 - How to Create Better Ads
INTRODUCTION
"Advertising is a science, not an art"
Definition: The word advertising is
from the root Latin advert: ad (to) vertere (turn), which means to
call attention to. To advertise means: “to describe or praise
publicly, usually to promote for sale.”
Advertising is a special form of
communication intended to persuade consumers to respond in a
positive way toward a product, service or idea. In Washington, DC,
the home of many non-profit advocacy organizations it means to
persuade or to change minds.
In other words the goal of advertising is to
influence people:
-to buy something,
-to think well of something,
-to ask they take a particular action.
Contrary to popular opinion, advertising is
a testable, provable, science, not an art. Effective advertising
relies on a few simple strategic formulas. Done well however
advertising can be done artfully. And should be.
It pays to advertise.
The basic purpose of advertising is to
inform. Often, simply giving basic information about a product or
service is sufficient. i.e., classified ads are simple information
ads.
“Top of Mind awareness.”
Memory is the cornerstone of creative
strategies in advertising. The basic assumption of this strategy is
that the media environment is cluttered and memory is limited. Since
memory is limited, it is important that our advertising give
customers something worth remembering, otherwise they will simply
forget you.
Frequency and repetition is crucial.
Frequency and repetition is crucial. How many times do you have to
tell a dog to sit in order for her to learn how?
Advertising exists along a continuum.
Short-term traffic builders vs. long-term awareness builders.
1. Pricepoint ads are only sale advertising:
Jerks.
2. Awareness and Image: Pulls.
How does Advertising really work? It
creates:
1. AWARENESS, which creates:
2. INTEREST, which creates:
3. MOTIVATION, which creates:
4. DEMAND, which creates:
5. ACTION!
THE IMPORTANCE OF STRATEGY
I. Advertising is part of a larger plan
The most successful companies have an
advertising or marketing plan as part of their larger business plan.
Advertising is only one method of communication in this plan. It
must be linked to other communication strategies to be truly
effective
II. Starting to advertise
A. Position your product. This means to
understand how your product looks and feels compared to other
similar products in the marketplace. Jeep is positioned as an
upscale outdoorsy anyplace-anytime vehicle, compared to Volvo, which
is positioned as a sensible, safe, financially secure “investment in
security”. Position means to be placed in a certain way in the
consumers mind. Having a unique sales position means you can create
a unique sales message:
1. Against other similar products (market
segment)
2. In new areas (market penetration)
B. Create a strategy
1. Marketing Strategy is the master plan
a. in which you determine actual product,
price,†distribution, promotional effort
b. From Marketing Strategy grows creative
strategy
2. Creative Strategy is what you say and how
you say it. You can't have a good ad without the following:
Major Checkpoints of Creative Strategy
1. Objective: What the advertising should do
2. Research: Is there any and what does it
tell us about perceptions, both positive and negative.
Qualitative vs. Quantitative.
3. Target Audience: Who is your consumer
exactly. It's ok to have more than one target.
4. Key Consumer Benefit: Why should they buy
your product?
5. Support/lnformation: A reason to believe
that benefit
6. Tone and Manner: A statement of the
product "personality" or the personality of the "statement"
III. What works best
A. The three parts of any Ad
1. Benefit Statement: Headline
a. Get your basic message here and see it
from the consumers side
b. Keep it simple
c. Inject news
d. Don't be afraid of Long Headlines
(Research shows more sales)
2. Illustrations vs photos
a. Photos generally better
b. Inject story appeal
c. Keep it simple
3. Information/support
a. Support claim or promise
b. Don't be afraid of long copy. Resistance
does not increase after 100 words.
c. Testimonials help, although cliched
4. Call to action--What do you want the
consumer to do?
a. Coupons
b. Telephone
c. Visit
5. Forget everything but Rule 1. Benefit,
benefit, benefit
IV. Media Strategy --Winning a place in the
consumers mind
A. Campaigns--A series of ads with a single
goal similar in style and execution, slightly different in message.
B. The importance of frequency
1. Awareness building
2. Opportunity improvement capture
C. Placement
1. Research Media Kits (refer to marketing
plan)
2. Flight strategies save money
V. Media
Television
Advantages: Excellent medium for emotional
impact and singular message. Fantastic reach.
Disadvantages: If bought with enough Total Rating Point's, it is far
too costly. It is hard to target and there would be lots of waste
over the entire SMSA. Production costs to do quality advertising are
expensive
Cable television
Advantages: Can select geographic areas
specifically, television allows for high emotional impact. Cable is
affordable.
Disadvantages: Networks skew too heavily toward particular targets
Radio
Advantages: Can be fairly targeted, allows
for impact and emotional appeal through broadcast, cost effective.
Disadvantage: Fair percentage of wasted geographical listenership
over SMSA.
Magazines
Advantages: Prestigious environments, color,
room for more detailed information, can target psychographically.
Disadvantages: Very few magazines isolate specific areas, so there's
plenty of wasted circulation. Lack of reach with specialty
publications. Require many different placements.
Newspaper.
Advantages: Can target specific areas with
regional placements, large space units are emotionally impressive,
newspaper has an urgent, timely feel, and there's room for longer
copy or more photography.
Disadvantages: Normally a retail medium, not usually good for impact
or awareness. Limited reach. Poor reproduction
Direct mail
Advantages: Highly targeted, good for long,
informative messages.
Disadvantages: Not a prestigious or "important" medium, relatively
expensive to produce in 4-color, big impact or large numbers. This
medium works best when linked to response offers. It is private and
quiet in nature.
Outdoor and transit advertising
Advantages: Easy to target, great for short
"reminder" messages.
Disadvantages: Public transportation users become primary target,
uses up too much budget if done right, can't stand alone as primary
medium, "good" locations are very limited.
Tim Kenney: Creative Director and CEO of Tim
Kenney Marketing Partners, has 33 years of experience in the design
industry. Tim’s work has been published in two volumes of American
Corporate Identity, Logo 2000 and Logo 2001 and, under his
direction, his agency has garnered 100 prestigious design awards…
and still counting.
© Copyright 2007. Tim Kenney Marketing,
http://www.tkm2.com
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