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Marketing Lowdown: Is Your Marketing Filled With Clutter?
September 05, 2008
Guess how many ads you are exposed to in a typical day. Fifty? A hundred? More?
By Robert Grede

The average consumer is exposed to over 1,500 advertising messages every day. From billboards to bumper stickers to logos on caps and T-shirts. There are advertisements in public restrooms and on the grocery store floor. They even sell space on the inside of the cup at the golf course. Sink your putt. Retrieve your ball. Drink Pepsi.

Advertising is everywhere. We may be most conscious of advertising when we watch television, but advertising in its many forms, nevertheless, pervades our society, invades our households and persuades our minds nearly every waking moment.

And it's not likely to abate any time soon. If anything, advertising is becoming more ubiquitous.

Most newspapers are about 60% advertising; trade journals often contain even more. Company newsletters now frequently carry advertisements. Your utility bills arrive with multiple ads enclosed. But nowhere is the increase in exposure more apparent than on your television screen. New research released by an advertising industry trade group says the number of television commercials, public service announcements, and station promotions reached an all-time high last year.

And it's not because the networks think you need more time to fix a snack or go to the bathroom. "Costs are going up," says a CBS executive. "And advertising is what covers those costs."

Clearing Up Clutter

In the average hour, only about 39 minutes is devoted to programming. The balance is called "clutter." Clutter worries the advertising industry. They figure the more commercials stuffed into an hour, the less likely you are to remember their clients' ads.

Clutter, whether on television or in any medium, also makes marketers’ jobs harder. It's up to the advertising agency to create commercials for their clients that stand out from the rest of the commercials you see. Their ads must communicate their client's message more clearly and be better remembered more so than the muddle of mediocrity that exists among most advertisements. The ads must have punch, make the reader stop from turning the page or the viewer stop from changing the channel. They must break the "boredom barrier."

In short, good advertising must have IMPACT. It's a fundamental precept of all advertising. No matter how persuasive your copy, no matter how strong your offer, if your customers don't read your ad or see your TV spot, you've wasted a lot of money.

Rising Above the Crowd

So how do you create ads with impact?

In print, start with a good headline. Five times as many people read a headline as read the body copy. A good headline is therefore worth 80 cents of your advertising dollar. For your 80 cents, pack in your brand name, its product benefit and, if you can, a catchy appeal to your target audience. Don't be afraid of a long headline. Research has shown that headlines of 10 words or longer, containing news and information, consistently outperform shorter ones.

Famous ad man David Ogilvy's best headline was "At Sixty Miles Per Hour the Loudest Noise in the New Rolls-Royce Comes from the Electric Clock," (which prompted the chief engineer at Rolls-Royce to comment, "It is time we did something about that damned clock.")

Certain words or phrases work wonders in a headline: “how to,” “suddenly,” “announcing miracle” and so forth. They may seem like clichés, but they work.

In broadcast, the same principle holds. The "headline" of your TV or radio spot is often the opening line, a catch phrase, or words superimposed on the screen. The most important factor in creating impact is to make it easy for your customers to recognize your product at a glance.

At Leo Burnett Advertising Agency, we called it "The Big Idea." It was a theme, or a catch phrase or sometimes even a "critter" who embodied the brand and what it stood for: United has the friendly skies; McDonald's has the golden arches; and Keebler has elves. Each identifies the product or service quickly and efficiently. Each jars the memory and alerts a potential customer to the product being advertised.

Even if a potential customer skims over your magazine or newspaper ad without reading it carefully, the tag line or corporate symbol may register.

Just one more way to break through the clutter, and register with your customers.


S&MM online columnist Robert Grede is a teacher, consultant and best-selling author. He speaks on marketing and strategic planning. Contact him at www.TheGredeCompany.com.


Sales & Marketing Management Magazine
This article is brought to you by Sales & Marketing Management, the leading authority for executives in the sales and marketing field.

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