Art In Advertising
Pictures in advertising are very expensive. Not in cost of good art
work alone, but in the cost of space. From one-third to one-half of
an advertising campaign is often staked on the power of the pictures.
Anything expensive must be effective, else it involves much waste.
So art in advertising is a study of paramount importance.
Pictures should not be used merely because they are interesting.
Or to attract attention. Or to decorate an ad. We have covered these
points elsewhere. Ads are not written to interest, please or amuse.
You are not writing to please the hoi-polloi. You are writing on a
serious subject - the subject of money spending. And you address a
restricted minority.
Use pictures only to attract those who may profit you. Use them only
when they form a better selling argument than the same amount of space
set in type.
Mail order advertisers, as we have said, have pictures down to a
science. Some use large pictures, some small, some omit pictures entirely.
A noticeable fact is that none of them uses expensive art work. Be
sure that all these things are done for reasons made apparent by results.
Any other advertiser should apply the same principles. Or, if none
exist to apply to his line, he should work out his own by tests. It
is certainly unwise to spend large sums on a dubious adventure.
Pictures in many lines form a major factor. Omitting the lines where
the article itself should be pictured. In some lines, like Arrow Collars
and most in clothing advertising, pictures have proved most convincing.
Not only in picturing the collar or the clothes, but in picturing
men whom others envy, in surroundings which others covet. The pictures
subtly suggest that these articles of apparel will aid men to those
desired positions.
So with correspondence schools. Theirs is traced advertising. Picturing
men in high positions of taking upward steps forms a very convincing
argument.
So with beauty articles. Picturing beautiful women, admired and attractive,
is a supreme inducement. But there is a great advantage in including
a fascinated man. Women desire beauty largely because of men. Then
show them using their beauty, as women do use it, to gain maximum
effect.
Advertising pictures should not be eccentric. Don't treat your subject
lightly. Don't lessen respect for your self or your article by any
attempt at frivolity. People do not patronize a clown. There are two
things about which men should not joke. One is business, one is home.
An eccentric picture may do you serious damage. One may gain attention
by wearing a fools cap. But he would ruin his selling prospects.
Then a picture which is eccentric or unique takes attention from
your subject. You cannot afford to do that. Your main appeal lies
in headline. Over-shadow that and you kill it. Don't, to gain general
and useless attention, sacrifice the attention that you want.
Don't be like a salesman who wears conspicuous clothes. The small
percentage he appeals to are not usually good buyers. The great majority
of the sane and thrifty heartily despise him. Be normal in everything
you do when you are seeking confidence and conviction.
Generalities cannot be applied to art. There are seeming exceptions
to most statements. Each line must be studied by itself.
But the picture must help sell the goods. It should help more than
anything else could do in like space, else use that something else.
Many pictures tell a story better than type can do. In advertising
of Puffed Grains the picture of the grains were found to be most effective.
They awake curiosity. No figure drawing in that case compare in results
with these grains.
Other pictures form a total loss. We have cited cases of that kind.
The only way to know, as is with most other questions, is by compared
results.
There are disputed questions in art work which we will cite without
expressing opinions. They seem to be answered both ways, according
to the line which is advertised.
Does it pay better to use fine art work or ordinary? Some advertisers
pay up to $2,000 per drawing. They figure that the space is expensive.
The art cost is small in comparison. So they consider the best worth
its cost.
Others argue that few people have art education. They bring out their
ideas, and bring them out well, at a fraction of the cost. Mail order
advertisers are generally in this class.
The question is one of small moment. Certainly good art pays as well
as mediocre. And the cost of preparing ads is very small compared
with the cost of insertion.
Should every ad have a new picture? Or may a picture be repeated?
Both viewpoints have many supporters. The probability is that repetition
is an economy. We are after new customers always. It is not probably
that they remember a picture we have used before. If they do, repetition
does not detract.
Do color pictures pay better than black and white? Not generally,
according to the evidence we have gathered to date. Yet there are
exceptions. Certain food dishes look far better in colors. Tests on
lines like oranges, desserts, etc. show that color pays. Color comes
close to placing the products in actual exhibition.
But color used to amuse or to gain attention is like anything else
that we use for that purpose. It may attract many times as many people,
yet not secure a hearing from as many whom we want. The general rule
applies. Do nothing to merely interest, amuse, or attract. That is
not your province. Do only that which wins the people you are after
in the cheapest possible way.
But these are minor questions. They are mere economies, not largely
affecting the results of a campaign.
Some things you do may cut all your results in two. Other things
can be done which multiply those results. Minor costs are insignificant
when compared with basic principles. One man may do business in a
shed, another in a palace. That is immaterial. The great question
is, ones power to get the maximum results.
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