Why Your Ad Failed
So you spent good money on an ad, put it in a magazine or
newspaper, and waited patiently for phone calls that didn't
materialize. You're upset: you feel that you've wasted money and
time, and now you're convinced that advertising doesn't work.
Advertising does work. Every day. So before you kick away
advertising (or websites, or brochures, or any other marketing
medium), first consider which of these four basic reasons
applies to your effort:
Your ad wasn't created to appeal sympathetically to the
correct customer need.
You can't force a sale, as much as you might want to. Your best,
most reliable, most profitable customers come to your business
because you meet particular needs that your competitors don't.
Simple as that. These needs may be material, psychological or
emotional, but when they present themselves, their owners come
to you.
The goal of advertising is not to pitch a sale, but to establish
name and brand recognition for your company by associating your
name with your ability to meet special customer needs. This
helps promote that "good gut
feeling" that your best customers have about you but can't
really explain.
If your ad isn't built around the right specific customer needs
- not wants, not desires, not self-image, but needs - then it's
almost doomed to fail.
Your ad doesn't establish your own credibility for
meeting customer needs.
Etch this on your forehead: Credibility begins with evidence
of understanding.
It's not enough to hit on the right need. You have to demonstra
te in some way that you truly understand and can meet it.
This step doesn't have to be fancy, and is often very subtle,
sometimes involving no more than certain writing, visual design
or layout decisions.
If your customers need a strong, professional company, your ad
should reflect that. If they need to know that you come highly
recommended, or that you have a certain degree of experience, or
that your services are unique to your area, that should somehow
be a part of your advertising.
Just don't overdo it, turning your ad into a sales pitch.
Provide just enough credibility to satisfy those customers
looking for it. Save the rest for your other marketing efforts.
Your ad wasn't placed in an appropriate medium that
offered regular exposure to the specific customers you serve.
If your business sells luxury cars, the most carefully designed
ad in the world won't accomplish a thing printed in a free
newspaper that specializes in thrift classified ads. That's not
an appropriate medium for your service, and your best customers
aren't looking for you there.
If your ad properly recognized and appreciated your customers'
needs, consider the possibility that the ad appeared where it
wasn't appropriate. Why were your best customers looking for you
there? How does your choice of medium speak to your credibility
for meeting your customers' needs?
Consider time as well as position: a swimwear ad would face an
uphill climb if it ran in a Michigan newspaper in December.
Remember that customer needs often change as the seasons change.
You expected too much from your ad.
If the ad is solid, and the medium is appropriate, then the
problem is you.
Advertising alone doesn't revolutionize profits. Like all
marketing tools, advertising is a precision instrument, an
individual tool designed to perform a specific task. Relying on
only advertising - or only networking, or only cold calling, or
only a website - to promote your business makes as much sense as
an auto mechanic who uses only a hammer to fix your car.
Since human beings are complicated, so are sales problems.
Complicated problems require the skilled collaboration of
multiple tools, of which traditional print advertising is only
one.
The role of advertising in a modern marketing campaign is to
establish name and brand recognition for your company, not to
pitch a sale. The idea is to make sure that your prospect has
already heard of your company - and has a favorable "feel" about
you - by the time customer need presents itself or your
salespeople come calling. Advertising helps pave the road for
your other marketing efforts.
If you expected sales to double last month because you ran an ad
but did little else, you probably expected more than reality
could provide. It's in fact possible that your ad did work, but
that it provided benefits that your business didn't capitalize
on because you expected different results. Next time you run an
ad, do it as part of a coordinated marketing effort that
includes the ability to follow up with the audience that was
exposed to it. Take advantage of the good will that your
advertising helps generate.
If your ad is written to appeal sympathetically to the correct
customer need, establishes your credibility for meeting that
need, and is placed in an appropriate medium that offers regular
exposure to your most likely customers, your ad will do that
job. Every time.