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18 Feb 2008 04:33:57 | Harry Hoover
Three seconds. That’s what you have to convey your message.
Creativity is the strategic weapon that allows us to capture
those few precious moments of attention from busy consumers in
our increasingly competitive, time-crunched environment. Let’s
examine our audience for a moment. Who are today’s consumers?
What are they thinking? What matters to them today, or tomorrow?
What will motivate them? Compel them? Focus groups tell us that
time is a precious, yet dwindling resource. Attention spans seem
to be dwindling, as well. Consider: the average TV spot in the
past 30 years has fallen from 60 seconds to 30 seconds. Today we
produce 15 and 10-second spots. Five-second and three-second
spots are now being considered. And not just for economic
reasons. Many forces condition people. They are surrounded by
competing messages, special effects, quick cuts, pop-up videos.
This environment requires extra effort on our part to get people
to read beyond a headline. In writing and designing an outdoor
billboard we have to communicate clearly and creatively in three
seconds. Anything more and you lose their attention. The same
now is true of print ads. In this neon, strobe-laced, fast-cut,
quick-dissolve, sound-bite world, we bore easily. We should not
totally surrender to these trends but instead look at the
yearnings they reveal: a desire for simplicity, efficiency,
truth, quality of presentation. Everyday in our business we deal
with commodity products. Me too versus the very few unique. And
the unique products in the consumer’s mind are few and far
between. More products than ever are becoming commodities. So,
when we design and write marketing communication material we
must recognize a very fundamental fact: we are interrupting
someone’s day. The fact that they chose to read, hear or view
our message places a great responsibility on us to present this
work as best we can. All the elements must contribute to a
single point. A single reason for being there. Add something and
it is excess baggage. Take something away and it’s thin soup.
The balance is critical. Competition for that shorter attention
span is increasing, too. Today, advertisers are competing for
the consumer’s time with an increasing number of non-media
related activities. Segmentation to special interests is
exploding. Not because suddenly people have lots of free time to
pursue other interests. It’s because the tools and delivery
systems exist to create and produce publications – online and
offline – faster than ever. There are magazines and websites on
every conceivable subject and more coming. Digital TV
advancements provide six-channels-to-one over current systems.
Competition for your customer is increasing. The choices will
continue to expand. And people will increasingly filter out that
which doesn’t meet their needs. It’s not just about meeting
these challenges. It’s about anticipating them, too. As you
institute changes that help you remain competitive today ask:
where will the consumers be one year from now, three years from
now. Anticipate the market on the best model you can find then
add your imagination, excitement and personality. And, we can’t
underestimate today’s consumers and readers. They are smart and
you must not fall prey to communicating to the lowest common
denominator. Our consumers demand creativity, and ultimately
they are who we work for.
Creative Potential Realized Everyone has the potential to be
creative. Creativity isn’t just a flash of lightning. It is a
deliberate, disciplined process. Let’s take a look at the
questions we ask ourselves in order to free our creativity: 1.
Why are we communicating? 2. Who are we talking to? 3. What
would we like them to think? 4. What is the single most
persuasive idea we can convey? 5. Are there creative guidelines?
(e.g. budget, logos/colors, illustrations)
Let me explain briefly what these questions are really getting
at. The first question is “what has led to the need for this
communication?” It can include any number of things like: Are
there misconceptions about us? Do we have a new product/service?
Are we reinforcing the brand? Is this for awareness, or do we
have a more retail message? "Who are we talking to" helps us
define our audience beyond the too-broad “all carbon-based life
forms.” Even if it is a broad-based audience, we should try to
give it some focus, e.g. adults, 25 - 49, high school educated.
"What would we like them to think" addresses tone and manner or
underlying brand-specific attributes we want to leave our
audience with. "What is the single most important thought we can
convey" speaks to our core message and product/service benefit.
This always should be from the consumer perspective. What does
the consumer REALLY get out of this? Now that we’ve done the
research and asked all the questions, it’s time to let ideas
flow on concepts, content, medium, style. Remember, creativity
takes time. Being more creative is not just as a gift. It is an
ongoing commitment and practice. And requires exercise. Now, go
be creative.
About Author :
Harry Hoover is managing principal of Hoover ink PR,
www.hoover-ink.com. He has 25 years of experience in crafting
and delivering bottom line messages that ensure success for
serious businesses like Duke Energy, InterCerve, Levolor, North
Carolina Tourism, VELUX and Verbatim.
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