How To Develop Your Unique Selling Proposition Using Timing And Color
How To Develop Your Unique Selling
Proposition Using Timing And Color
Author Name: Steven Boaze
Contact Email Address: owner@copywriteplus.com
Word Count: 658
Format: 60 CPL
Copyright Date: 3-21-05
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How To Develop Your Unique Selling
Proposition Using Timing And Color
By: Steven Boaze
Copyright =A9 1998-2005
Every item you advertise and every word and illustration
you use becomes a part of your company's image. Your
ability to develop a USP (unique selling proposition)
depends on your knowing what you want your image to be and
then doing those things and only those things that
reinforce that image.
A men's clothing store can become the store with fashions
for the man who thinks young. A nursery can create the
image of the home of the talked to plants that will respond
to you. A car dealer can develop a following and a
reputation for his automatic three year trade in plan. Once
you have arrived at a USP that you think will appeal to
your customers, translate the idea into a selling slogan of
three to ten words that can be used as the theme of your
advertising campaign. Use it consistently until your
customers learn to associate your business with the selling
slogan.
If you want to position your business in the marketplace,
select your target market. How old are they? What do they
have in common? What are their goals and ambitions? When
you have learned all you can about them, go back and learn
more! Then start talking to them, and only to them, in your
advertising. Talk to them about themselves and their
desires. Then tell them how the goods or services you sell
are perfectly suited to helping them achieve those desires.
Timing Each Ad for Impact
While your budget will tell you how much you have to spend
each month, you must refine your plan to know how many ads
will run each week and on which days. In planning your ad
insert schedule, be aware that the best results are
obtained by strengthening already strong sales days, not by
trying to make bad days better. If large employers in your
area have paydays on the first and fifteenth of the month,
time your advertising to coincide. If you use more than one
medium, attempt to coordinate your efforts by scheduling a
radio blitz to coincide with a big print campaign or
special store event.
Using Color
Adding color to a black-and-white advertisement not only
increases readership, but can substantially increase the
sales response. Retailers, however, frequently use too much
color in their ads. Remember, color works because of its
contrast with non color areas; use it in one or two strong
clustered areas rather than scattering it throughout your
ad. Keep in mind that colors also communicate
psychologically. Here are a few popular colors and their
common associations.
=A4 Red - Suggests excitement, heat, strength and is a
good color to use in a sale ad.
=A4 Yellow - Conveys brightness, airiness, refreshment.
Warning: yellow gets lost on white paper, so always
surround areas of yellow with a border of black or
another dark tone.
=A4 Blue - As a cold color, can convey formality and
haughtiness in its darker shades and fragility,
daintiness and youthfulness in the lighter tones.
=A4 Orange - A color of warmth, action, power.
=A4 Green - Another cool color, suggests cheapness and
coldness in its darker tones while conveying freshness
and crispness in its lighter shades.
=A4 Purple - A color of royalty and stateliness.
=A4 Maroon - Suggests luxury, solidity, quietness.
=A4 Brown - Implies age, wholesomeness, utility.
=A4 White - Means purity, cleanliness, chastity.
=A4 Black - Conveys mystery, strength, heaviness.
Research on the productivity of color in newspaper
advertising invariably shows increased readership as well
as increased sales from ads that use color. Adding color
raises the cost of the ad, but the increased results are
substantially greater than the increased costs.
About The Author
Steven Boaze, Chairman, is The Owner of Boaze.com
Corporate Web Solutions. Steven is the Author of
two successful Books, thousands of articles featured
in radio, magazines newspapers and trade journals.
Steven has 25 years experience in journalism, copywriting,
certified Web Developer. www.copywriteplus.com
www.boaze.com Copyright =A9 1998-2005 Boaze.com
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