Posts Tagged ‘creativity in advertising’

Are Your Briefs Filled With Crap? Here’s how to clean them up.

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Few things in advertising are as certain as this: You give a writer and an art director a pile of poop and you’ll get one back. With a logo and some supers on it.

From conference rooms to cubicles to corner offices throughout advertising land, well-meaning agency teams are short-sheeting their clients with short-sighted input documents. Needless to say the result is a tragic waste of money and talent.

As a writer-for-hire, I get handed a lot of sow’s ears with the expectation for silk stockings in return. There are myriad reasons why stinky briefs are the norm. Mostly these have to do with the current state of the workforce: lack of mentoring, poor staffing, shrinking budgets and whiplash turnaround times. But those are topics for another day.

The purpose of this crafty blog is to help inspire more powerful messaging and imagery– with a few insights from a writer who has lots of mileage on her keyboard and loads of experience receiving, and occasionally giving back, yes that’s right – crap. If you are an agency creative, please forward this to your favorite offender. If you are a newbie account type, take notes.

So, here we go: A very brief look at how to avoid writing a sucky brief. Part One.

Tell me the assignment
For the love of Leo, give your creative team a deliverable. Give the art director something better to do with her time than scouring BlueFly for new Dior shades. Create a campaign. Write a brochure. Design a website. These are assignments. If you have absolutely no idea what media to ask for, you’re not ready to start creative execution.

Get busy with the objective (aka the desired outcome)
Your objective should state an action, preferably the one that you want your customer to take. Buy two rolls. Log on for reservations. Feel smart and sexy.

Please don’t tell me our objective is to Create a communications vehicle that increases sales. This is the grand canyon of goals. Send me in there and I’ll wander aimlessly in the wilderness for eons.

Increased sales is a marketing objective. Stating this as the purpose of an ad won’t get you any closer to breakthrough creativity than a pep talk from the folks in accounting. Zzzzzz. This doesn’t mean that selling isn’t important. Hell that’s the whole reason we’re in business. But if you want your brief to inspire effective communications, you have to get out of your head and into someone else’s. Hence, my next point–

Climb inside your customer’s head
Who is the target audience? Seems like a no-brainer, right? But what can you tell me about their physical or emotional state? Effective creative comes from an understanding of the customer’s attitudes, perceptions and past behavior, not from their marital status, age and income. Duh, we all know this. So why do we continually cheat ourselves out of a chance to be really relevant by avoiding the topic? Creative folks have to work mighty hard to hit a customer’s sweet spot if all they know is she’s a married women over 40.

Then there’s the matter of the Consumer Insight. This is where we drill down into Maslow territory and explore what your audience needs. Whiter whites. Faster fillups. A family night out for under 25 bucks. That’s what they’re thinking about so that’s what you should be talking about.

Trust me, if your brief reveals the right buttons to push, you’re going to make a sale — hopefully to the client and most certainly to the customer. What’s more, when your start-up document focuses on the audience and its relationship to your product, the creative team has fewer excuses for coming back to you with crap mounted on quarter-inch foam core.

Okay, so enough blathering for today. Next time, we’re going to tackle the dreaded Key Message and Support.

Till then, happy creating.


Let’s say TTYL to the fine art of crafting ads

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Okay, so I admit I haven’t completely immersed myself in the world of marketing 2.0. It’s not that I’m a total technophobe. It’s just I’m struggling with the apparent reality that anyone can do my job, and the job of my pals in the art department.

Blog pages, Youtube posts, twitter profiles — social media has put communication arts in the hands of the people – people who didn’t study Burnett, Bernbach or Ogilvy. Grade schoolers, college kids, entrepreneurs and budget-freaked brand managers, these are the new stars of advertising and to them there’s nothing sacred about headlines, fade ins or fonts. These folks have never obsessed over the size of a logo or squinted at a screen till 3 am while perfecting an ad. They are marketing civilians who wouldn’t know a jump cut or ho-hum headline if it bit ‘em in the booty text. Nowadays, a clean layout smacks of corporate sanitization. And when it comes to commercials, who needs a meticulously edited music track when you can have a million hits on a homemade video featuring some pimply kid bastardizing your brand alongside his Casio keyboard?

Kerning? F o r g e d d u h b o u t i t! Syntax? Of this they have not understanding.

I recently asked a relatively young video editor to add a few frames to the tails of a scene. I thought it would make a smoother cut. I think he was more concerned it would cut into his lunch. I got a virtual eye roll and an email pushback in the form of, “If that’s what you really want.” In his defense, who wants to work on old-fashioned paid media when you could be posting your band’s latest gig on Facebook? And potentially reaching a highly receptive audience for practically zero dollars.

The fact that copywriting (the discipline which took me, oh let’s see, about a couple of decades to master) is now in the hands of the masses is not so painful for me as the reality that consumers don’t seem to give a Twitter (or is it Tweet?) about clunky type or heavy-handed copy. Today, it’s the lack of production quality that gets noticed. Amateur gets the Gold Pencil in the new world.

Whether this nascent era of raw and unrefined is really moving product off the shelves or making phones ring remains to be seen. But as long as ad dollars run short and consumer attention spans run even shorter, it’s certainly here to stay. As for me, this self-proclaimed copy perfectionist is trying her hand at a few reckless rants on a cookie-cutter blog site.

So far, I rather like it. TTYL.
Martha
adlibmktg.com
mypersonabooks.com