18 Feb 2008 04:53:04 | Gary Watson
Whether your company is business-to-business or
business-to-consumer, selling almost anything in today’s
economic climate is a challenging task. If your sales effort
feels like you’re pushing boulders up steep hills, it’s time to
take a close look at your media advertising, especially the
advertising you do in newspapers and magazines. The kind called
“print.”
Print advertising, unlike broadcast and the Web, allows you to
target your audience with a fair amount of accuracy. Plus, it
gives you an environment in which you have the room and time to
make your case with a prospect who’s inclined to linger over
words.
If you can capture attention with an intriguing, standout
headline, there’s a good chance your future customer or client
will want to know more about your product or service. At this
critical moment, your prospect should encounter readable,
engaging, highly persuasive copy. And it helps enormously if the
picture that goes with the words is eye-grabbing and relevant to
your message.
Chances are, you’re not going to be taking on this “simple” job
yourself. You may have an ad agency working on your behalf. Or
an in-house marketing communications group. Or maybe even a
freelance copywriter. If money is tight, or you want to be
meaningfully involved in the process, a good freelancer may be
the way to go.
But whether you’re the one who actually creates the ad, or
you’re overseeing someone else’s effort, it’s a critical enough
component of your sales cycle to merit your closest attention.
So here’s a brief list of ten guidelines that will help you
ensure that your print messages work as hard for your company as
you do. Read them, heed them, and keep them in mind as you write
— or review — that all-important ad.
1. Define exactly what you’re selling before you sit down to
create the ad.
2. Know who you’re selling to. Keep that person in mind as you
write your ad.
3. Come up with a clear statement of the benefits of what you’re
selling. Features are important, but it’s the perceived value
that prompts action by the reader.
4. Write as if you’re one-on-one with the reader. Think of ads
that drew you in. They spoke to you. And they assumed you
possessed a certain level of intelligence.
5. Stay away from ego statements unless you’re skilled enough to
be humble or modest or humorous. Smuckers is an odd name for a
line of jams and preserves, but they turned it to their
advantage with the famous line, “With a name like Smuckers, it’s
got to be good.”
6. Make sure there’s a strong connection between your headline
and main visual. You want each to amplify the other in order to
make a dynamic statement of benefit. Fresh donuts need to be
made early in the morning, which is why Dunkin’ Donuts showed a
sleepy guy named Fred crawling out of bed before sunup because
it was “Time to make the donuts.”
7. Choose your ad environment carefully. Your better mousetrap
may not be appreciated in Gourmet magazine.
8. Study competitive ads and make sure that yours is different.
Work hard to make it stand out.
9. Solicit comments. Track results. Change your approach if
there seems to be a problem.
10. Be certain your product or service lives up to any claims.
No matter how brilliantly conceived and executed your ad is,
it’s satisfied customers and clients who create your best
advertising.
About Author :
Gary Watson writes ads that add to the bottom line.