Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Friday, 26 November 2021

Too Chicken to Create proper ads

 


Here's the latest waste of money and space from Sainsbury's supermarket and Future Farms.

They've allowed their ad agency or in house team, to create this wasteful piece of advertising for them.

What you see above are the back to back sides of a brochure that's been posted through the letter box a few days ago, promoting and selling Future Farm's range of chicken and meats.

Let's look at the first headline, that's taken up nearly half the selling space with its large sized font - Chicken's Been Upgraded. 
 
Hmmm....

It makes you wonder, the chicken's been upgraded... from what? 

And following on from that, what does that say about Future Farms previous standards and quality of chickens, or for that matter, Sainsbury's current chicken offerings?!   

And then there's an image of the box of chicken, with a 50% off slip at the bottom of the piece.  

And that's it.

That's the advertising offering.

Now can you be any blander? Can you be less creative? Can you be any more wasteful?

How could this be done differently or better?

They could have told a story of how they've come about creating this upgraded chicken. It's a new line so that'd be helpful to know more about it. And if space was an issue, they could have continued the story via sharing a link to a website page.

There's a little Plant Based wording on the box so saying more about that, and who this upgraded chicken would be best suited to, would also zero in on the right potential customer.    

They could show pictures of various meals incorporating the new chicken range. Maybe creating a little series of ads readers can go online to view, demonstrating various life scenarios for differing sets of people and specific recipes could be suited to their lifestyles. 

Maybe also sharing a list of the best wines and desserts that compliment the offering.    

That seems to be a lot more appealing, informative and inviting than the current version. 

Let's look on the flip side of the Brochure.

You get the following headline -- Meat The Range -- with the range of product pictures shown below that.

An obvious, yet lazy effort. 

Why?

Because Tuna isn't meat. Chicken isn't referred to as meat. 

Trying to pack in everything like they've done on one measly brochure, doesn't have someone incentivised to want to try the line out. 

Much better if they made our mouths water with irresistible copy and story about one product line, say for example their sausages, and then saying something like - 

--- if you love these succulent, juicy and flavoursome sausages, you'll possibly crave our delicious line of burgers, mince, meatballs, chicken and tuna --- 

Paper is expensive compared to digital pages, that's why you want your copy, images, and story, to justify their very existence on the page.

What you also don't want to do is waste white space by either leaving too much visible white space, or sloppily patching together words and images in an enlarged way to take up the space because you've no fresh ideas to work from.   

I'd also introduce a continuity/membership type element to the business. 

If I was the Pres or owner of Future Farms and that was the effort I received from the agency, I'd either change agencies, or scrutinise every piece of marketing and advertising promotion to look for the big and little flaws and leaks, or, as do what many, switched on savvy entrepreneurs do heading their own business - write all the copy and advertising myself. 

Why?

Because killer strategy backed up by solid effective copywriting is the highest paying activities there is in a business, or one of them.  

It's the leverage factor, the needle mover, difference maker that makes the big difference in a business when it comes to money, customers, continuity.   

And you don't want to leave that to chance on an outfit who're consistently bankrupt on the creativity front. 
 

http://simple-marketing-solutions.com/mm.pdf

Tuesday, 17 August 2021

Boring quack professionals create boring quack communications

Number one SIN, in marketing, in life in general? 

Being B-O-R-I-N-G.

Nothing makes the mind, body and eyes to want to part company with each other than having a near daily dose of  the mundane, mediocre, non entertaining drivel trying to pass off as 'cool marketing and communications'.

Nothing sends businesses crumbling, than a consistent dose of communication foolishness and quackery.    

Nothing will send your customers scarpering to the hills than the next ho hum boring gargle flooding  their sense doors (aka, deliriously running into the welcoming arms of your competitors)   

And no, you do NOT need an MBA or a string of fancy pants academic qualifications to tell you if something bores the living daylights out of you, or... whether it lights you up and raises your interest, curiosity and lifts you up inside. 

Nothing or no-one can convince us otherwise. We internally know. No advanced science or technology needed. 

And yet...

You don't need to look far to know and notice that we're continually bamboozled with communications and presentations that are stuffed with uninspiring nonsense produced by unthinking minds.  

We're still bored senseless by marketing messaging and sales communications prepared by expensively paid humans who are pretty much following a lazy robotic factory line of un-creativity and un-charming non-entertainment.      

The good news?

I've got 20 ways for you to spark your creativity and writing muscles, into delirious ecstasy. Whether it's your emails, your video posts, facebook messages, blog posts, your articles... it doesn't matter. The creativity and communication techniques and ideas easily transitions across into all media formats.

And that's what you really want; to have your communications spark life and loyalty into those reading your communications and messaging. 

A famous direct marketing copywriter use to say - delay is the death of a sale. I believe that. I also believe boredom is the death of a business and the death of continual stream of happy paying, on-going customers. 

So let me give you one of the 20 ways (number 12 of 20) to spark life and electricity into your communications, right now.

(12.) Give the opposite to what’s considered popular convention and tradition - when most are doing one thing, or believing a popular idea or thought, or are heading in one direction, the best thing you can do is to do the opposite. Head the other way. Think a contrarian, opposite thought. The majority are almost always wrong, about nearly everything. Wedded to tradition. Unshakeable in the dogma and beliefs handed down to them. Putting personality in emails? "Gawd no, that's low and unprofessional. Can't do that. We've a standard and image to uphold…" They're saying that and clinging onto those ideas and beliefs that they’ve no doubt heard somewhere and most probably by someone lauded over in the public eye who has some kind of influence and stature, yet is flat out wrong. Yet, most believe it as the truth whilst at the same time, the mortgage is overdue, the car payment hasn't been made for a few months, debts and bills are mounting...

Now if you like the above, and if you can see a direct correlation and transition into your or your client's marketing and communications by using the above, then you might like the entire 20 creative communication ideas to help fuse and fuel your communications with. 

If you would like that valuable document at zero cost, then send an email to: raja.hireker@gmail.com with "FBM 20" in the email subject line, and I'll send over the pdf to you right away.