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Building a Successful Advertising Plan
Before you can advertise effectively, you need to answer these important
questions.
Q: What do you think is a better advertising plan: $2,000 in direct
postcards reaching roughly 3,500 people, or $2,000 in a newspaper ad
reaching 750,000 readers?
A: It depends entirely on what you say in your ad. If your impact quotient
is high enough, your best bet will be the newspaper. If the direct postcards
are delivered precisely to "the perfect target" (which is not
very likely), then the direct-mail route is preferable.
Based on the fact that I don't know the answers to either of these questions,
my guess is that neither the direct postcards nor the newspaper will
work for you. My advice is that you keep your $2,000 in your pocket until
you come up with an actual plan. These are the hard questions you need
to answer:
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1. What do you have to say that matters to your customer? I'm your prospective
customer. I know you want my business, but why should I care? What's
in it for me? Most ads are written under the assumption that the reader,
listener or viewer has a basic level of interest and is paying close
attention to the ad. But customers tend to ignore all ads that do not
speak directly to them. Your first task is not media selection; it's
message selection.
2. Can you say it persuasively? Most ads are ineffective because the
writer was trying to say too much, include too much and be too much.
Fearful of leaving someone out, these writers write vague, all-encompassing
ads that speak specifically to no one. "We Fix Cars" is a terrible
headline for an ad.
3. Are you speaking to a felt need? Let's say the "We Fix Cars" auto
mechanic has a great deal of affection for older BMW 2002s. He knows
that 2002 owners love their cars like few drivers on the road and that
the only weakness of the 2002 is its evil Solex carburetor. Every 2002
owner knows this, too. So he writes the headline, "BMW 2002 Owners:
Aren't You Tired of Fooling With That Solex by Now?" In the body
of the ad, he talks about the fabulous new Weber two-barrel carburetor
now available for BMW 2002s, raves about how it dramatically increases
performance and reliability, explains that he keeps these new Weber carburetors
in stock at his shop, then names the price at which he will install and
adjust that carburetor for you. He closes the ad by saying, "You'll
rocket out of here in a completely different BMW than the one you drove
in." If a list of BMW owners in your area is available for a direct-mail
card (such as the list from the local BMW club), then a direct-mail card
or flier would be the way to go. But if no such list is available, the
newspaper might be a second choice. In either case, you'd want to include
a large picture of a BMW 2002 to serve as a recall cue and help gain
the attention of your target customer.
4. How long is your time horizon? Some ads build traffic, some build
relationships and others build your reputation. If you don't have the
financial resources to launch a true branding campaign focused on building
relationships and reputation among potential customers, you're going
to have to settle for traffic-building ads until you can afford to begin
developing your brand. To what degree do you have financial staying power?
5. What is the urgency of your message? If you need an ad to produce
immediate results, your offer must have a time limit. This technique
will simultaneously work for and against you. On one hand, customers
tend to delay what can be delayed, so limited-time offers generate traffic
more quickly since the threat of "losing the opportunity" is
real. On the other hand, customers have no memory of messages that have
expired; short-term messages are erased from our brains immediately.
Therefore, it's extremely difficult to create long-term awareness with
a series of limited-time-offer, short-term ads.
6. What is the impact quotient of your ad? How good your ad must be depends
on the quality of your competitors' ads. A .22-caliber pistol is a weapon
against an opponent with a peashooter. But aim that pathetic pistol at
an opponent holding a machine gun, and you can kiss your silly butt goodbye.
How powerful is the message of the opposition? If your competitor carries
a machine gun, don't go where he goes. In other words, don't use the
media he uses.
7. How long is the purchase cycle? How long it will take your advertising
to pay off is tied to the purchase cycle of your product. Ads for restaurants
work more quickly than ads for sewing machines, because a larger percentage
of people are looking for a good meal today than are looking for a machine
that will let them make their own clothes. Likewise, an ad for a product
we buy twice per year will produce results faster than an ad for a product
we buy only once a year. Remember, a customer first has to be exposed
to your ad often enough to remember it, then you have to wait for that
customer to need what you sell. How soon will he or she likely need it?
Not hiring a professional ad writer is often far more expensive than
hiring one. If you'd like to read more about this stuff, most libraries
and bookstores are full of books on advertising, including three of my
own.
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