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As I was riding
down the road last week, I noticed a billboard. As I sat waiting
on a stoplight I kept staring at it. I couldn’t help wondering
what those people were thinking when they created that thing. It
made no sense to me whatsoever. The focus was completely off. They
were spending all that money on a billboard that was practically
useless.
That happens
quite a bit with all types of advertising. Well-meaning people design
and/or write ads that just don’t make good sense. For all
their time and all their money they will likely get nothing in return.
So, what did they do that was all wrong?
This particular
billboard was for a realtor. Half of it was taken up with his photo.
I understand photos… they help to create relationships and
give people a face to put with an otherwise arbitrary name. But
half the billboard? The photo should have definitely been much smaller.
The next biggest
thing on the billboard was the realtor’s tag line. To be honest,
I don’t remember what the tag line was… something pretty
generic like “Serving your real estate needs for 15 years.”
Nothing worth taking up all that space for.
Next…
in about the same size font (type) as the tag line were the name
of the real estate company and the realtor’s name.
Last - and in
the smallest type - was the contact phone number. Hmmm… does
something seem wrong to you?
Now let’s
think about this. What is the purpose of putting up a billboard
- or any other piece of advertising? To get people to respond. And
how do people respond? In this case by contacting you. If I had
a shot at redesigning this billboard, I would do a lot of things
differently.
The biggest
two things on the billboard would be the realtor’s name and
his contact phone number. If a person driving by only got two pieces
of information from this ad, I’d want it to be the name of
who to contact and how.
Next, I’d
want to see a tell-all tag line (USP – unique selling position).
Something that sets this realtor apart from others. Something that
tells me - as a prospect - that I need *this* guy to sell my house…
not any of the other 6,000 realtors in my area.
Lastly, I’d
work in the smaller photo, and the name of the realty company. Both
are needed, but they don’t need to be as large as they were.
When you create
any piece of advertising, you have to keep the end results in mind.
What do you want to happen once a prospect sees your ad? In this
case, the realtor wanted people to call him. Therefore, the contact
information simply has to be prominent.
People driving
past a billboard *may* have a total of 3 seconds of viewing time.
Since this billboard was near a stoplight (great choice of location
by the way), those who were stopped had a few more seconds, maybe
even a minute, of viewing time, IF they noticed the billboard. (They
may have been looking in the rearview mirror and yelling at their
kids!) That means the focus has to be crystal clear.
When you create
advertising pieces, be sure to keep your focus in mind. What do
you want to accomplish with this ad? If every aspect does not lend
itself in some way to getting the prospects to respond the way you
need them to, consider reworking your ad.
Whether it’s
billboards, postcards, Web sites, newspapers, magazines, or brochures
— keep your focus in check. Making it easy for the customer
to buy will bring you maximum results.
Most buying
decisions are emotional. Your ad copy should be, too! Karon is President
& CEO of Marketing Words, Inc. who offers targeted copywriting,
search engine copywriting, and ezine article writing. Subscribe
to Karon's free ezine at http://www.marketingwords.com/ezine.html
or visit her site at http://www.marketingwords.com. You can also
learn to write you own powerful copy at http://www.copywritingcourse.com.
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