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Basics of Promotion Advertising |
Promotion advertising differs
significantly from consumer franchise-building advertising. The latter is
long-term in nature and aimed at giving customers reasons to buy. Promotion
advertising is short-term. It pushes for the order by providing incentives,
coupons, rebates, premiums and contents.
The usual medium for promotion advertising is print. Some big-budget advertisers
use broadcast (radio and television) to get consumers to look for their
promotion advertising in their local newspapers.
As a rule, promotion advertising should be specific and should call only for
consumer to perform a desired action. Resist including extraneous points in the
promotional ad. Focus on a simple call to action.
For example: Your ad copy may ask the readers to (1) Redeem this coupon and save
$2, or (2) Buy two packs and get the third one free, or (3) Fill out coupon and
enter sweepstakes to win $100,000, or (4) Buy two of the products and receive a
free gift worth $10. Most promotion events are price or added-value oriented
campaigns. As such, it is imperative that when writing copy, the ad should
appeal more to the wallet than the emotion.
Final point: Do not make your redemption procedure complicated and confusing.
Avoid having to make them decide. That's too much work for them.