Entrepreneur’s Choices in Advertising Define First Impressions
Desktop publishing has made it easy for entrepreneurs to sit down at the keyboard and make “almost” professional looking flyers; but professionals call them flyers because “they fly in and fly out.” And in many cases, this is a good thing because those hastily composed flyers frequently do more damage than good. Let’s examine a few details of advertising pieces and why your choices are more important than you may realize. Every time you create a beacon for your business (any advertising in any media), you form an impression. The easiest way to create a consistent impression is to use a well designed logo. Professionally designed logos are an investment that develop equity just like a piece of real estate, growing in value as they bring recognition to your product or service. Here are three requirements for a working logo. It should:
1. Serve your purposes for ten years without appearing dated.
2. Convey your industry or service at a glance.
3. Employ classic fonts (fad fonts are tomorrow’s platform shoes).
How important is your company identity? Like every well-worn clichÃ?©, an identity performs the same base function of quick recognition. With an austerity of words, visual identities quickly associate and touch deep emotional centers. Instinctual reactions are not easily undone in the viewing public. Why is a picture worth a thousand words? Because pictures are received by the right side of the brain, your emotional center. While words must be translated through the logic center of your brain, pictures go right to the heart of the matter, so to speak. That means logos that are graphic rather than verbiage based will impress quickly. They will translate to your targets’ emotional center with more impact and that makes accuracy in visuals highly important. Since it gets there quicker, it had better be right. Amateurs may stumble here if they accidentally cross social taboos or invoke subliminal prejudices. If you push the wrong button, your audience may unintentionally transfer their subliminal feelings of angst to your company without realizing it. Use a professional designer if at all possible even if cash flow isn’t optimal; barter is always an option.
Here’s a story to illustrate my point: A hundred year old funeral parlor installed new signage; the owner wanted something bold and black. After about a year of steady business decline, a survey was taken among families who had been customers for generations but suddenly took their business elsewhere. The participants responded they had a queasy feeling about the place; couldn’t put their finger on it; they thought about dead children whenever they saw that new sign. The sign company followed the owners request and used a big, bold typeface named Cooper Black, the same font traditionally used on children’s alphabet blocks. How confident are you about the advertising choices you make for your business?
Find a qualified designer through your local art director’s club or through referrals from other businesses who have used their services. Always ask to see a portfolio–that’s a designer’s true resume. Remember, you get what you pay for.