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The
Difference Between Creative and Effective
Author: Dale Justice
Which is more valuable, a handful of gold, or a handful of salt?
The gold sparkles with the promise of “the good life” and all it
encompasses. The salt lies in your palm like so much dust.
What’s the difference not readily seen?
Simply stated, the gold is very pretty, but you couldn’t survive
without salt. Gold is very flashy and memorable, but devoid of
life sustaining substance. So ask yourself, is your marketing
communications memorably creative, or substantially effective?
How can you tell the difference?
Not long ago, my spouse told me of a television commercial
featuring several middle aged men obsessing over their hobby,
restoring and racing Big Wheel tricycles. She found the spot
very clever and funny. She admitted she had seen the spot a
dozen or more times and never failed to be entertained. I asked
who the advertiser was and what product they were promoting. She
could not recall, even after a dozen or more exposures and a
favorable impression of the material. Some days later I viewed
the commercial and noted the product advertised was breakfast
meats. |
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I do not understand the connection between sausage and adult
males racing Big Wheel tricycles, nor was any connection
attempted in the advertisement. Although the spot was certainly
memorable for its creativity, the core objective of initiating
change in the consumers buying behavior failed completely.
Consumers were entertained, the marketer wins an award for
creativity and perhaps goes on to direct music videos, and the
advertiser receives no return for their marketing investment.
Effective marketing is both incredibly simple in concept yet
complex in execution. Marketing is designed to initiate change
in consumer behavior and disposition towards a product or
service. This is accomplished by clearly communicating the
benefits of the product with a precise call to action, and
delivering the message to a qualified audience favorably
disposed to purchase that exact product or service. The
difficulty lies in differentiating your message from the
estimated 3000 advertising messages each consumer is exposed to
each day. It is this quest for memorability that mistakenly
lures advertisers and professional marketers away from
disciplined and effective communications, and into the
entertainment business. And, its not just huge national
advertisers succumbing to marketing messages obscured by
disassociated plot lines and images. Local, home-grown companies
are equally guilty.
I’ve observed dancing Santas to sell discount furniture and
hillbillies tossing dynamite into lakes to catch fish used to
sell furnaces. In each instance, the real message conveyed to
consumers is one of desperation, “I’ll say or do anything to get
your attention”. But is the goal of effective marketing
communication to acquire the consumers’ attention to
entertaining displays in print and broadcast, or to acquire
their loyalty to a trusted brand that delivers value to their
lives?
Communicating credibility creatively will not only achieve
memorability, but will begin the branding process. One can be
clever and even entertaining. But one should never lose sight of
the core objective.
About the Author:
Dale Justice is a Partner at Justice & Young, a Cincinnati
public relations and marketing firm.
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