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Headlines and Taglines - Headlines SBM 338 Lanny Wilke
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Why Headlines? Gets attention – the words in the leading position of the ad. Appeals to self-interest – performs the segmentation function. Makes reader want to know more – only 20% of readers go beyond the headline. Completes the creative equation – addresses specific consumer needs
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Types of Headlines Direct Straightforward and informative Specific benefit Making a promise Announcing a reason the reader should be interested. Indirect Often more effective at attracting reader attention & interest. Questions, provocations, how-to statements, challenges
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News Announces or promises new information. “It’s a girl!” Must be believable. Direct benefit Shouldn’t be too cute or clever. Gore-Tex Fabrics keep you warm and dry. Regardless of what falls out of the sky.
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Curiosity/Provocative Provoke the reader’s curiosity. “Betcha can’t eat just one” To learn more, the reader must read the body copy. Danger – the reader won’t read on. Design your visuals to clarify the message or provide some story appeal.
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Emotional You’re selling a feeling, not directly selling the product. Directive/Command Orders the reader to do something. “Obey your thirst.” “Please don’t squeeze the Charmin”
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Hornblowing Impress the reader. Tell them you’re the best. Comparison A way to differentiate your brand from the competition
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Label Might be used for “reminder” ads
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Question Encourages readers to search body for the answer. “What makes our tire customers smarter & richer than others?
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Benefit Headline
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Incorporating Humor
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Writing Effective Headlines The Magic Words AdviceNow AnnouncingReduced At lastThis FreeWanted HowWhich How toWho else NewWhy
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Proven styles Question – reader involvement How-to – again, reader involvement, but make it interesting to the reader. Quote – what others are saying.
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Use the creative tree
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Headlines With Style Be specific Rhyme, rhythm, alliteration Puns and wordplay Parallel construction Twist it Understatement/Overstatement
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Ineffective Headlines Question with no answer Question with yes or no answer Using a headline as a caption Stupid puns Insulting, condescending, patronizing Trying to impress rather than persuade
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Headline Checklist Do you respect it in the morning? Does it work with the visual? Can you do the billboard test? Does it appeal to the reader’s self- interest? Does it pull readers into the body copy?
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Is this the best you can do? Is the headline strong? Are you being punny just to be cute? Can you follow up that headline?
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Subheads Four main purposes: Clarify the headline Reinforce the main idea stated in the headline Break up large copy blocks Lead you into the body copy
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Subhead Traps Using the subhead to explain the headline Using the subhead to introduce a new, separate idea
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Preheads Also called an overline (precedes the headline) Four reasons to use a prehead: Set up the headline Define the audience Identify the advertiser Identify an ad in a series
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