Monday, April 7, 2008

When less is definitely more

How many ads have you seen and heard where the advertiser tries to do too many things at once? Unfortunately, I've seen way too many over the last weeks. My focus on rural and small business has exposed me to print and audio/visual advertising that is over-designed, over-produced and completely unfocused.

If you want to make the most of your advertising, there is a very key thing to remember. Be focused, focused, focused.

Keep your message short and sweet. People today have very short attention spans, especially for advertising. You'll never successfully be all things to all people, so don't even try. Know your audience thoroughly and design your messages to speak clearly to them.

Don't mix your messages. Pick a topic and stay on it. The 30-second radio spot is great for this because you can only do a little bit in 30 seconds. But print ads and flyers can get away from you pretty quickly.

Make sure your designer understands the concept of minimalism. There's often no need for tons of illustrations, graphic effects, and there's definitely no need for a kazillion type styles and sizes. Trained designers know this. I realize that not everyone is working with a trained designer, and those companies can be spotted instantly through the over-design and clutter in their advertising.

Remember too that white space is easy on the eye. If your customers have to struggle to read your message, they'll just turn away. Be careful when using reversed-out type (white type on dark surface). Many type styles can't hold up under this treatment. Most especially script fonts.

Test all your print and audio/visual advertising with someone who doesn't know the message. If they don't get it quickly, then you need to modify.

No comments: