Pack a Punch
Serving up "bursts" of copy with your ads can attract impatient, time-starved readers.
Why do relatively few people actually read an ad all the way
through? Because beyond the headline, the rest of the sales message
is usually locked in a boring block of paragraphs below it. Unless
their interest in the product or service is keen from the outset,
readers aren't easily lured into the homework assignment that a
copy block can look like. Indeed, the sales points embedded there
may be superbly crafted and hugely persuasive, yet may never get
read because the text looks like labor to get through.
That's why it's refreshing to see an ad like the one
shown here from Graco, a well-known maker of baby gear. The company
compartmentalized its key sales points about its car seat in
eye-popping yellow bursts that float like clouds around the ad. In
fact, the headline itself hovers in a little cartoon cloud. So a
new mom who's flipping though a parenting magazine with little
Kevin or Kaitlin napping or yapping on her shoulder can quickly get
the key points.
Obviously, such a whimsical graphic treatment is not appropriate
for all products or services. But that doesn't mean you have to
stick with formal copy-block ad formats. There are
attention-grabbing cousins of the burst approach, including
captions and call outs, that attract attention just as well. Use
such blurbs to surround a central visual and point to different
features, or simply to make your best sales points. House them in
colored shapes, à la Graco. Put them inside
"balloons." Have them flash on in sequence in your HTML
e-mail. There can be a dozen of them without the ad looking
daunting. The key is to keep them in easily digestible nibbles that
look simple to read. And why not consider this same format to show
off your powerful testimonials and endorsements? It almost assures
they'll get read.
Content Continues Below
Mind
you, my love for snack-size copy bits flying around an ad
doesn't mean that paragraph copy is ready for the dustbin of
advertising history. Many ads with potent headlines and dense copy
blocks below can still get credit cards flying. Just don't
underestimate the effect of advertising fatigue on your prospects.
They are barraged every day with hundreds—even
thousands—of advertising messages, each trying to distract
them from more important matters. By the end of the day, their
interest level in clearances, fall sales, closeouts, blowouts,
manager's specials, zero-percent financing, mark-downs and
"a free turkey with every order over $20" has pretty much
flat-lined.
Always look for ways to relieve a sales pitch with graphics. And
consider how approachable—or formidable—your piece of
advertising may look to the typically indifferent, desensitized
passerby.
Jerry
Fisher is a freelance advertising copywriter and author of
Creating Successful Small Business Advertising.