Creating Attention-Getting and Motivating Advertising in the IT Market. Presented by: EDUCAUSE Review and Jack Semler, Readex Research www.readexresearch.com.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Taken from effective-print-ad.seriesId html.
Advertisements

You can’t manage what you can’t measure
Advertising and Public Relations
Conversion Architecture Improve Your Online Performance While Reducing Your Online Spend By Doug Schust.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
The Market Research Process
Print Advertisements Chapter 20.
Forms and Techniques in Advertising Sports and Entertainment Marketing.
The University of Adelaide Poster Power: Meaning and Message Peter Murdoch March 2014 PREPARING GOOD LOOKING DOCUMENTS.
JAZZ COMMUNICATIONS Advertising in brief. BEFORE YOU WATCH: 1 Discuss your answers to the following questions: 1.Describe the kind of people that you.
Communicative Writing Week 9 MMC120 Instructed by Hillarie Zimmermann MMC120 Instructed by Hillarie Zimmermann.
Section 28.2 Types, Trends, and Limitations of Marketing Research
Business Memo purpose of writer needs of reader Memos solve problems
LECTURE-22 Advertising.
Objective Summary.
 Print is very effective in conveying information and facts, and less effective in generating strong emotional responses.  Use words to describe the.
B2B Advertising. Why Advertise? I know half my advertising works; I just don’t know which half. -- John Wannamaker The moral being, we can’t always see.
Forms and Techniques in Advertising Sports and Entertainment Marketing.
Preparing Print Advertising Commtech– Mr Raposo/Mr Quadrini.
The California Writing Exam Grades 4 and 7
5.00 UNDERSTAND PROMOTION 5.01 Understand the use of an advertisement’s components to communicate with targeted audiences.  
Paid communication Sponsor is identified Advertisers control where the message is seen and heard and how often repeated Average person exposed to over.
Microsoft ® Office Access ™ 2007 Training Choose between Access and Excel ICT Staff Development presents:
Essential Elements of Advertising
Chapter 20 Print Advertisements
Marketing Essentials Essential Elements of Advertising
Visual information accompanying a related article.
Maximise your online performance “Using your website to convert more students”
Running Records SUE pALMER 2010
New Leader 101 Lesson 4 What to Do Your First Day on the Job as New Leader.
Copyright © 2006 Thomson Business and Economics. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Copywriting.
10/10/2015 IENG 471 Facilities Planning 1 IENG Lecture END Project Report Requirements & Project Presentation Information.
Section 20.1 Essential Elements of Advertising Section 20.2 Advertising Layout Section 20.1 Essential Elements of Advertising Section 20.2 Advertising.
+ Developing Print Advertisements Introduction to Business & Marketing.
Chapter 1 Before You Begin to Design…. Objectives (1 of 2) Learn how to define your design project. Consider the importance of identifying your audience.
The Value of Print. Media formats fall into clear tiers Podcasts RSS feeds Online blogs and newsgroups Wikis Web.
The Marketing Research Project. Purposes of the Project 1.Give you practical experience at conducting a marketing research project. 2.Examine some factors.
PREPARING PRINT ADVERTISEMENTS. The Advertising Agency Advertising Campaign The creation and coordination of a series of advertisements around a particular.
How do new products come to market???. For the teacher This lesson plan is designed to help high school students learn about how ideas become products.
Evaluating Creatives *  Concept Testing: Assessment of potential creatives  Communication Research: A Look at the Advertising Creative  Copy Testing:
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. COMMUNICATION AND DISSEMINATION, PART 2 DEVELOPING DISSEMINATION PRODUCTS 1.
CREATIVE BRIEF. Creative Brief A document required in preparing for advertising, public relations, promotions, direct marketing, design and digital mediums.
O NLINE C LIENT R ELATIONSHIP M ANAGEMENT Evi Christiaens, Céline Lytens, Claudia Parms & Dorien Tettelin.
Today I am Identifying media measurement techniques Learning promotional budgeting methods So I can Make correct media buying decisions I will know I’m.
ADVERTISING.
CHAPTER 24 Advertising Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS Section 24.1.
Article. Elements of a Good Answer To write a good article, you will need more than one idea or reason. Make sure you have enough to say before you start.
Click to add Text 1 Components of a Business Plan.
Duncan Jordan CAM Examiner Assignment brief December 2013 / March 2014 Marketing and Consumer Behaviour.
January 13, The following are the four fundamental elements of print media (may also apply to other media) 1.Headline 2.Copy 3.Illustrations 4.Signature.
The Promotion Strategy 1 Explain the role of the promotion strategy. Explain how to formulate promotion plans. Describe considerations for putting together.
May 9th, 2015 Market Research Describe the purpose of marketing research.
Advertising & Promotion Ag Business Spencer Agricultural Education 2012.
“NOTECARDS” Information for Research Project. Purpose of notecards: ■Overall: Gather information that will support your claim about WHY THAT ARTIST IS.
CREATIVE AND STRATEGIC PLANNING. “COPY PLATFORM” Plan or checklist that is useful in guiding the development of an advertising message or campaign 1.
Advertising and Sales Promotion ©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 10.
ADVERTISING.
Advertising and Public Relations
Chapter 20 Print Advertisements
Business planning Super-project.eu.
Preparing Print Advertisements
For enhanced knowledge (a.k.a. “excellence”) reference pages
Research Presentation
Cornell Notes.
Foundational Marketing: Building Your Marketing Plan
APPROPRIATE POINT OF CARE DIAGNOSTICS
Week Three Review.
ADVERTISING.
Objective Summary.
Research Presentation
Presentation transcript:

Creating Attention-Getting and Motivating Advertising in the IT Market. Presented by: EDUCAUSE Review and Jack Semler, Readex Research

Session Goal: Gain ideas and insights into characteristics of high-performing print ads Our agenda will provide a:  Brief overview of the research that we have done for EDUCAUSE Review  what is measured in this research  how to interpret the numbers from actual ads in actual studies.  Review of the methodology  List of key characteristics in good advertising  Memos  Ad contrasts and “Which Ad Scored Best”

Definition of Terms As we look at our series of ads, you will see references to ad scores, actual scores from actual studies: RS =Recall Seeing RR =Recall Reading The average score for one page, four-color ads over the two studies from which examples will be used is RS 65% and RR 24%.

Methodology

Executive Summary: 9 key elements to powerful print advertising 1. Present one central selling proposition. Avoid clutter and extraneous ideas. 2. Support the basic proposition with all elements of the creative. The headline, illustration and text should work together. 3. Appeal to the reader’s needs and self-interests. “What’s in it for me?” 4. Show the product in use. Help the reader imagine using the product or service. 5. Design the ad for easy reading. Don’t make it a chore to get through your ad.

6. Sell the merits of the product or service. Why should the reader buy? 7. Emphasize benefits, not facts. Facts are what the product/service is....benefits describe what the product/service does. 8. Use humor carefully. What you think is funny may not be to others. 9. Finally, don’t be shy about frequently repeating a successful ad. Executive Summary: 9 key elements to powerful print advertising

RS 64% RR 31% 1. Present one central selling proposition. Avoid clutter and extraneous ideas.

2. Support your basic proposition with all elements of the creative. The headline, illustration and text should work together. RS 81% RR 34%

Idea: Avoid asking a question in your headline that can be answered with a “No.”

Poll In your next fiscal/budget year, how do you expect your overall marketing budget to change compared to your current year?  Significant reduction  Modest reduction  Stay the same  Modest increase  Significant increase

3. Appeal to the reader’s needs and self-interests. Answer the question: “What’s in it for me?” RS 66% RR 30%

4. Illustrate the product in use. Help the reader imagine using the product or service. RS 61% RR 24 %

Idea: You have an average of four seconds to connect with readers. Make sure you do this as quickly and clearly as possible.

5. Design the ad for easy reading. Avoid reverse and creative tactics that are fun and playful but make it hard to read what the copy says. RS 67% RR 21 %

6. Sell the merits of your product or service. Why should readers consider buying the product or service? RS 61% RR 15%

Idea: Pretend the headline for your ad is the first thing your sales representative would say on a call.

Poll What percentage of your current marketing budget is dedicated to digital channels AND online advertising?  Less than 10%  10%-19%  20%-34%  35%-50%  51% or greater

7. Emphasize benefits, not facts Facts are static points about what the product/service is. Benefits describe what the product/service does for the reader. RS 58% RR 16%

8. Use Humor Carefully While this ad is not, in my opinion, designed to be humorous, there is a playful element which can go one way or the other. RS 62% RR 20%

8. Use Humor Carefully

Idea: Testimonials.

Final Idea: Keep the copy flowing outwards: You versus We

Final Idea: Keep the copy flowing outwards: You versus We. 11 You-0 We

Executive Summary: 9 key elements to powerful print advertising 1. Present one central selling proposition. Avoid clutter and extraneous ideas. 2. Support the basic proposition with all elements of the creative. The headline, illustration and text should work together. 3. Appeal to the reader’s needs and self-interests. “What’s in it for me?” 4. Show the product in use. Help the reader imagine using the product or service. 5. Design the ad for easy reading. Don’t make it a chore to get through your ad.

6. Sell the merits of the product or service. Why should the reader buy? 7. Emphasize benefits, not facts. Facts are what the product/service is....benefits describe what the product/service does. 8. Use humor carefully. What you think is funny may not be to others. 9. Finally, don’t be shy about frequently repeating a successful ad. Executive Summary: 9 key elements to powerful print advertising

9. Repeat a successful ad Following are two charts which track the same ad over eight different exposures:

Location Percentages calculated based on data from over 22,000 ads measured in Red Sticker recall studies from

Size

From a March 2013 Study of B2B Media Users, Conducted for American Business Media-Regular Usage of Media Channels base: all 6,682 respondents (multiple answers) Nearly two in three are using mobile-optimized websites and/or apps

Now for the fun! In the next three slides are ads from EDUCAUSE that were run by the same advertiser two different creative approaches.... different results The final three slides will present – “Which Ad Scored Best?” Your task is to guess which ad scored highest, the right or left?

Ad contrast RS 56 RR 20%RS 68% RR 16%

RS 69% RR 15%RS 74% RR 37% Ad contrast

RS 75% RR 26%RS 64% RR 16% Ad contrast

Which Ad Scored Best????

Which ad scored best? RS 59% RR 20%RS 70% RR 21%

Which ad scored best? RS 72% RR 23%RS 59% RR 12%

Which ad scored best? RS 75% RR 32%RS 69% RR 45%

We hope you have found our presentation, “Creating Attention-Getting and Motivating Advertising in the IT Market”, informative and useful. Thank you for attending.