Avoid these 11 mistakes and improve the
    effectiveness of your advertising overnight
         Every day in every newspaper I see many examples of why most ads don’t
    work in the sense of getting customers to come in or call.  Far too many ads fail
    because they had no chance to begin with.  

    Avoid these 11 mistakes and improve your ads immediately:

    1.  Using the name of your company as the headline of your ad. The name of your
    company is about as exciting as watching paint dry.  You have less than 3 seconds
    to engage the reader.  No engagement, no chance.

    2.  Running only a percentage off as your headline.  When is the last time you
    deposited a percentage in your bank account?  25% off of what?   Fine to show a
    percentage savings, but only if you show comparative pricing along with it:  
    Regular $8-$200, SAVE 25%, Sale $6 - $150.

    3.   Reversing out small type in a color or black background.  Anyone who does
    this simply does not understand that newsprint (the paper used to print
    newspapers) is porous and when the ink is transferred to the paper it
    automatically “explodes.”   Far too often advertisements that looked like absolute
    winners on the print proof produced on an ink-jet or laser printer turn out to be
    “unreadable” on a newspaper page.  

    Newspapers may claim the poor reproduction is from the early part of the print
    run and that the register “improved” later in the printing process.   Bunk!  
    Someone should have raised a “red flag” from the beginning that running skinny
    and/or tiny type in reverse rarely reproduces well on newsprint.  

    Ad agencies that produce these ads should know better.  Sometimes they do,
    sometimes they don’t.  In all cases, the newspaper will be blamed for “murdering”
    our “perfectly good art.”  Without exception, the crime is always committed at the
    original production level.

    4.  Using photos (color or black and white) as a “background” over which you
    print your advertising message.  Doing this is “dicey” at best.  Some newspaper
    presses can pull it off; most cannot.  If the publication is being printed on a web
    press employing heat to set the ink, the chances of satisfactory reproduction
    improve.   Note:  heat set is used mostly on special upgraded newsprint not on
    regular run of press newspapers.

    5.   Failing to take ownership of your own advertising specifications.  Translation:  
    you allow each publication do its own thing with your ad.  Ad “A” does not look
    like ad “B.”  Small businesses should specify border, type style, illustration style,
    logo, etc. then insist that every publication follow YOUR specs.  More brand for
    your buck.

    6.   “Lazy” copy!  “Call for details.”  “Stop in for more information.”  Get real!  When is
    the last time YOU responded to this kind of hazy offer?  State “details” in plain
    coffee-shop English.  Not doing so amounts to lazy copy . . . relegating your offer
    to the trash heap of ineffective ads.

    7.   5 pounds of widgets in a 1-pound sack.  If your budget allows only a certain
    size space, use that space to make an impression.  Jamming what should be a
    quarter page ad into an eighth page space NEVER works.  Most people don’t read
    publications with a magnifying glass in one hand.

    8.   Ridiculous come-ons: “priced under cost”.  If a widget costs $25 and you sell it for
    $19, say WHY.  No one is dumb enough to believe that anyone does business
    below their real costs!  

    9.   Wrong kind of photos.  Print publications have different standards for photos
    - measured in “dots per inch” (DPI).  Web site photos require the least dots per inch;
    high gloss publications the most.  Newspapers usually require 150 to 300 DPI.  
    Running a 1200 DPI or an 80 DPI photo in a newspaper is shooting craps with the
    reproduction of your photo.

    Avoid cutting photos out of brochures or catalogs and expecting the newspaper to
    reproduce them dot for dot.  It will not and cannot happen.  

    10.  NO copy . . . prices only.  Even high fashion merchandise –clothing or
    vehicles – needs copy to support the price.  You might expect that everyone knows
    why a Gucci handbag is $250.  They don’t.  You need to tell them – in terms of
    what is in it for them to carry a Gucci bag.

    11.  Not building ad to correct mechanical sizes.  Anyone who does business with
    more than one newspaper already knows that each publication may require a
    different mechanical size for a given advertisement.  A two column wide ad will
    vary in width depending on the newspaper’s column sizes.  Build your ad to the
    proper size.  Don’t allow your ad to be shrunk or expanded.  

        Cut this column out and use it.  The effectiveness of your ads will improve.  As
    the man from Men’s Wearhouse exclaims, “I guarantee it!”



             







             Marketing Emporium                                                  
    636 Horizon Drive, Unit 604                                       
    Grand Junction, Co  81506
    Direct telephone: 970-210-8648

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