News
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Creative Tips for More Effective & Efficient Campaigns
By Ryan Cote, Director of Marketing, The Ballantine Corporation
1. Customers prefer the look of foil over
paper by 16%. Increase your response rates by using
silver or hologram labels.
2. Choice depresses response. People are
already faced with the choice to respond to a direct
mail piece or not, so to give them a choice of
offer, a choice of premium or any other thing that
makes them stop and think, they are that much more
likely to set the piece aside to deal with it later
and never get back to it. You have 15 seconds as
they are poised with their mail over the trash can
to make an impression, so if they take the time to
actually read your piece, you want them to
immediately say "YES!," not "I wonder which would be
better?" That being said, the one place where choice
does help close a deal is to give the recipient a
choice of how to respond —via mail, phone, online,
or even fax. Make it convenient for them to say YES
and your response rate will improve!
3. Many clients come to us with existing
corporate identity that is limited to one or two
pantone colors contained in their logo. When
designing 4/color work for these clients, it is
helpful to "extend" the palette. Using their
existing chips as the core for the primary palette,
arrange additional chips which extend this primary
palette to 4 - 6 colors. These should match the core
colors in balance and intensity. Lastly, find
swatches that compliment one another and envision
this palette working within your design.
4. Some of the most attractive designs are
built around a great photo or illustration. When
selecting imagery, good designers will always read
the copy. Images should support the copy and
visually communicate the concept. Gratuitous
imagery, while adding visual interest to a design,
will usually “muddy” the communication if not tied
in some way to the copy. The one exception to this
would be the use of backgrounds to add depth and
texture overall. Lastly, try to
find different and interesting ways to crop
photos/illustrations in a layout, i.e. get out of
the "box."
5. White space is your friend! Yes, it's
true... When your audience's attention needs to be
captured within seconds, there's nothing like a
message or image that's crystal clear and easy to
read. Try expanding a piece to multi-page rather
than cramming everything into your design. Less
visual noise = more visual power.
6. Create your own brand guidelines.
Consistency and frequency is key to successful
design and marketing. Start with a general set of
rules that define even just the basics: color
palette; font style; and size and the type of
imagery used. When used consistently over the long
haul it becomes an extremely important and effective
tool.
7. Be inspired. When you see something that
is visually appealing – clip it, bookmark it, file
it, and remember it. Realize what made you stop when
you first saw it...did it make you smile? Did it get
you thinking? Don't be afraid to use your emotions
in your design tactics to create your own inspiring
piece.
---Source: Ballantine Corporation
Direct Marketing Tip Sheet (www.ballantine.com/tip-sheet/ballantine-pdf.pdf).
Ryan Cote is the Director of Marketing for the
Ballantine Corporation. Reach him at ryan@ballantine.com.
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