Great Advantages of Written Ads
All we learn comes through our five senses. Advertisers try to appeal to as many as possible. For example, smell alone can sell fresh baked goods. Taste samples in grocery stores encourage people to buy the full package. Mattresses are not sold for looks but by feeling. People want to lie on them to imagine how comfortable they would be for an extended time.
Of the five senses, sight takes first place as most important. Researches discovered that 80% of what we learn is received through our eyes. Most of the rest comes through our ears. This means that radio ads must get the consumer to recall a vision, smell, feeling, or taste of the product through audio alone.
Advertisers are smart to keep that 80% in mind when planning their ads. If they can include sounds, that’s even better. But printed ads can be read over and over and thus influence more people than sound alone.
Advertisement using the sight will include either words or pictures or both. Words are rather abstract for the letters represent a reality. The word ‘car’ stands for a vehicle of transportation. Words can also represent products. For example, slogans identify products. One of the must successful was, “Where’s the beef?” as part of a Wendy’s ad. This one phrase sold millions of hamburgers and put the company in the limelight.
It is rarely how many words are used but which words that is important in an ad. People are usually too busy to read a long message and it is more expensive anyway. The message must be catchy yet have content. This balance is hard to achieve.
Sometimes the words used or the image portrayed will be humorous. Humor is a leading attention getter for advertisements. Alaska airlines was excellent at portraying extremes in the airline industry, emphasizing their quality through exaggeration of what the competition didn’t have. Their humorous ads must have kept the airline afloat for several years.
Sometimes the ad is so brief that it only reminds consumers of facts they already know. The colors of Pepsi alone will sell the product. A motto or logo or symbol without words will associate their need with the company’s product. In other words, the picture is all the ad needed.
In summary, good ads use visual and audio, use precise words, and may add a touch of humor. This combination will most likely get the attention of the public. It requires creativity but is achievable. Once this is done, then the company must choose where the ad will appear. Some creative people have put their brief message on a banner and paid to have it flown over a large group of people. This is a banner ad. It effectively gets the concise message to many people at minimal cost. With the added audio of the plane’s engine to attract attention, both sight and sound are giving the one-two punch to drive the message home to the consumers.
Once you have followed these principles, it is time to get in touch with an airplane advertising company and get it printed and into the air. It won’t take long before your well planned message will be read by thousands and the result in sales will follow.
Tags: Advertising, advertising appeal, appeal in advertising, eye appeal