Kim T. Gordon: Marketing
Get a Hue!
Clueless about colors for your fall marketing campaign? Shades affect sales more than you think.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2002/september/54524.html
It's time to kick off fall marketing programs, which means
you're wrestling with design decisions. But are you considering
which colors your marketing tools will wear this season? Selecting
the best shades isn't as simple as black and white. But making
the right color choices can have a strong impact on sales.
Say It With Color
Color has a subtle, yet immediate and powerful, effect. Each
time customers ares exposed to your marketing materials--anything
from business cards to direct-mail campaigns--they tend to make
instantaneous decisions about your company and the products or
services it offers, often based largely on their emotional
reactions to colors.
Basic colors have universal meaning in our culture. We all know
red is the color of passion and love. Blue, cited by most Americans
as their favorite color, connotes respectability and tranquility.
Both men and women like purple, an androgynous color most often
associated with royalty. Green, the color of money, also represents
nature and the environment. Yellow is linked to feelings of
happiness, while orange, a hot color, conveys energy and emotional
stimulation.
But basic color is just the beginning of the story. What's
most critical when it comes to selecting the right look for your
marketing materials is shade, the value of the color range.
Take green, for instance. Chartreuse conveys a trendy image. Choose
apple green, and you make a modern, artistic statement, while the
deeper shade of hunter green appeals to a more conservative
audience. Each color value sends a slightly different message.
Often, the first materials your customers see are your
stationery, business cards and company brochure. "Many
companies use color as a way of identifying themselves," says
Jay de Sibour, president of the Color Marketing Group, an
association of independent professionals. De Sibour suggests
selecting and sticking with a color for your company identity that
represents the nature of your business. Eventually, it will become
associated with you--much as "IBM blue" and "UPS
brown" are immediately recognized today.
What's Hot for Fall
While your company color symbolizes what you're all about,
the colors for your point-of-sale, direct mail, presentations and
other marketing tools must be selected based on an understanding of
your target audience and what will appeal to them. "If
you're targeting the Latin market, for example," says de
Sibour, "you can use brighter shades of red, yellow and
orange."
You should also choose shades of color that reflect what you are
marketing. For example, a caterer who wants to prepare a
direct-mail campaign would use richer, more saturated shades to
market anniversary parties and weddings, and switch to brighter
hues for packages featuring children's birthday parties.
Every season, some colors drop out of favor and new ones replace
them. This fall, Americans' desire for tradition, family,
nostalgia and spiritualism will spur a move toward colors we feel
safe with, says de Sibour.
The most popular colors with women this fall will be turquoise
and a teal called "mallard." Younger men will prefer
"madder red," a deep orange-red, and older men will find
a combination of deep navy and indigo most appealing, according to
Margaret Walch, director of the Color Association of the United
States, which standardizes and forecasts color trends.
There's a wide range of tastes even within a targeted
market, and Walch says geography also plays a key role. Once
you've selected the colors for your marketing materials, she
suggests trying them out on five members of the target group to see
how they react. That should be enough feedback to let you know if
you're on the right track.
To learn more about choosing colors, visit www.colorassociation.com and www.colormarketing.org.
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Contact marketing expert Kim T. Gordon, author of
Bringing Home the Business, at www.smallbusinessnow.com.
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