11 law that can improve your results from general-display business-to-business advertisements
Where has the salesmanship gone...?
We've analyzed more than 1,300 business-to-business ads published in trade magazines nearby Australia.
Those ads were compared against 10 tested and commonly suitable advertising principles, plus an extra principle we feel applies to B2B ads.....
The law are explained in this resource, but in brief they are that your ad must -
1. Synchronize reader-gravity with involvement-gravity
2. Have a qualified headline
3. Avoid reducing benefits down to the word 'solution' (our own principle)
4. Employ reader-friendly typographics
5. Get to the point, quickly
6. Deliver sufficient substance to sell
7. Address "you" the reader
8. Translate features into benefits
9. Ensure claims are not vague but specific
10. Tell the reader what to do next
11. Have a unique selling proposition
These law are accumulated from the tests and publications of proven advertising practitioners over the last 60 years.
Billions of dollars have been spent discovering them, testing them and proving them right. The findings from our determination are always staggering...
o Less than 1% one of the ads passed all 11 principles.
o 93% failed more than half the principles.
o Less than 2% adhered to the most principal principle (a good headline).
The most base qoute basal these results is that most businesses are failing to make clear what makes them dissimilar and therefore why a expectation should favor them over the competition.
The examples we present, of what to do and not to do are taken from genuine ads reviewed. But the examples of what not to do are adapted, protecting the company from honestly being recognized.
Either way, no pregnancy or naming occurs. You might identify your own ad, but others are unlikely to.
Ultimately, this reserved supply arms you with principal law for enhancing your advertising.
Principle #1: The ad must synchronize reader-gravity with involvement-gravity
Your reader's eyes naturally try to start at the top-left of your ad and discontinue at the bottom-right. This is the bodily structure of the English language at work. Every book and newspaper description you've ever read has been printed this way.
It is so habitual that it is entirely unconscious. There is a point of advent on the page at the top-left, and a terminal anchor on the bottom-right.
The eye resists anti-gravitational directions of upward or leftward.
Occurring at the same time as this gravity is other one.
Your reader will consequent the more natural 'involvement' gravity of illustration, then headline, then body copy.
This is the process of scanning and discovery at work... Your eyes move from picture to large writing, large writing to small writing.
It follows the best application of Aida... Awareness - Interest - Desire - Action.
First, your reader is aware of your ad and then they come to be interested. Then you arouse in them a desire for your stock or service, and then you incite action.
With these two gravities at work in your ad, the best allinclusive structure to adopt is one that synchronizes them both. And that means, roughly, placing illustrations or pictures toward the top-left, then the headline underneath, then the body copy, then the call to action.
This works within the customer's adored reading construct. It avoids conflicts in the bodily act of reading that cause the message to be disrupted and your reader to give up before taking in your whole message.
But roughly all B2B ads we see are mixing the order of these elements in favor of costly originate agendas.
For instance, an ad that places a headline in the middle of the page, and places pictures and copywriting fragments nearby it, is development it hard for the reader to decree where to start. The first few seconds a reader's eyes come across your company's ad will make or break that ad.
Synchronized reader-gravity and involvement-gravity helps keep them reading your ad longer.
Principle #2: The ad must have a qualified headline
Most B2B ads don't have a allowable headline. A headline serves to make a statement or proposition or examine that incites the reader to enter your ad's body-copy.
Through testing it's commonly established that a headline accounts for up to 80% of the ad's potential for sales-effectiveness.
The four best appeals your headline can capture are: 1. Self interest 2. News value 3. Curiosity 4. Quick and easy benefit
There is no spoton rule about long or short headlines, but the ad fails if it doesn't have a headline that makes readers want to know more.
Because many of the ads we communicate have headlines that are abstract, or just the company name, they will most likely fail to generate the sales they should acquire.
Protecting the companies and brands, since our comprehension is that their products and services are perfectly sound, we recommend these are examples of poor headlines we found in our review...
1. "Small in size but large in technology" 2. "The power to provide" 3. "At last there is a solution"
An ad is a 'sales man in print'. It replicates a salesperson.
A company would not ask one of its sales habitancy to deliver any of those headlines as the occasion to a conversation.
But unwittingly, those ads did just that.
Some of them could duplicate or triple their effectiveness merely with a best headline.
Consider these 3 examples of best B2B ad headlines...
1. "Congratulations! You've saved by buying a non-genuine part... Pity it's cost you the warranty on your ,000 air compressor" 2. "Slash tyre maintenance" 3. "Avoid slip-ups with new Widget Pallet liners"
Principle #3: The ad must avoid reducing benefits down to the word 'solution'
If only we got a dollar every time a company used the word 'solution'...
Some time ago it inferred a kind of holistic, encompassing service. But in the last 10 years it's come to be so over-used that it hides benefits.
Not all the ads that avoid the word 'solution' are best than those that don't... But the word does put a veil over substance.
Expand 'solution' and you get back that qualified substance.
But, as well-meaning ad agencies and managers continue to covenant substance in a search for a short summary, they get 'solution'.
Our guidance is to communicate specifically what your stock or service does and achieves.
If the word 'solution' is already in your slogan or name, develop on it in the headline and educate the readers in the body-copy.
We see great products and services unwittingly sacrifice their advertising effectiveness... 1. "Ultramodern ventilation and fume solutions"
[headline for transported and fixed commercial fans] 2. "Elastic Solutions" [headline for ad selling conveyor belt accessories] 3. "Permanent marking solutions" [headline for laser marking and stamping machines]
These next examples could well have used the word 'solution', too, but they resisted and instead made the endeavor to communicate tangible benefits...
1. "Rapid spill control" 2. "Seven reasons why you should not buy a laser" [headline for laser cutting services; interestingly, the company's slogan is 'cutting edge solutions' and they resisted using this as their headline] 3. "If you need any type of roller for your machine, here's how you can have your qoute solved in one easy call..."
Banish 'solution' from your headlines and only use it in the body-copy of your advertising, after it has been explained in the headline or occasion paragraph.
Principle #4: The ad must Employ reader-friendly typographics
The act of reading is a complex process, and it's principal that your ad aids and doesn't hinder this process.
It might sound like constraining advice, but for a guide look to the editorial of the host magazine. There are reasons why their paragraph structure, line-spacing, font, and font-size are as you see them.
The easiest fonts to read are 'serifed' fonts. The easiest coloring is black writing on a white background.
The easiest paragraph alignment is left-aligned. The easiest size for the ad's body-copy is between 9-point and 13-point.
Vary from these guides as you wish, for selective emphasis.
But understand that your ad is harder to read if too much copy is 'tarted up'.
Two of the biggest issues we saw in our commercial ads communicate were in font and contrast...
Serifed fonts are fonts like Times New Roman that have small curls and ticks on each letter. These help make the shape easier to read. We read words by looking at the allinclusive shape of the word, and the serifs help our eyes to do this.
Sanserif (or 'without serif') looks contemporary but makes quick reading harder.
The disagreement between writing and background was the other mistake we saw often. Look at these examples...
Many of the B2B ads we see have these kinds of distracting elements potential in the 'typographics'... The word-features of the ad.
We don't want to infringe copyrights or communicate names, so we will not reproduce examples to show you.
Instead, we'll ask you a examine that was used as the headline of a landmark publication from Colin Wheildon back in 1984... "Are you communicating or just development pretty shapes?"
Principle #5: The ad must get to the point, quickly
The right prioritising of data in your ad is best points first, least-important last.
Only if the former words were inviting will the following words be read.
So your advertisement must deliver the most qualified selling points, first, in order to continue keeping the reader, to hold them to receive other relevant messages and the call-to-action. The reasoning is simple... Time is costly when a reader is browsing.
Clever copy or affected wordsmithing delay and dilute your sales message.
Yet a lot of B2B ads we see waste the costly first lines of their ad on boastfulness or cleverness before they deliver the solid value that their stock or service no doubt offers... Take these examples, slightly altered...
1. "The road to company maturity is often fraught with delicate moments and hesitation. However, you need not experience such moments in this inviting period. At company we offer a diverse range of products and solutions to ensure your company's growth is as safe as it is quick" [Opening paragraph, selling software] 2. "Once in a while a service comes along that sets new benchmarks in value, function, doing and style. This time it is from Company" 3. "If you refuse to make do with 'close sufficient is good enough', you will learn that only Brand's truly perfect range of widgets covers all aspects of your needs"
But this is an example of getting to the point quickly...
"Now there's no need to weld on allinclusive end-plates to close off larger heavy wall open tube ends. company stock a wide range of caps and inserts to do the job at a fraction of the cost!"
Your advertising works best if it gets to the point.
Principle #6: The ad must deliver sufficient substance to sell
Your ad is like a salesperson, so it must deliver as many relevant messages as possible, provided they do not cloud each other.
A short ad that says minute of substance may save in ad space but probably at the price of a qualified selling message.
A longer ad that conveys the right messages can out-perform the shorter ad that says little. A lot of B2B companies seem afraid of 'long copy', or long wordy ads. But so long as those words are delivering value, free of any fat, they'll be read by the right people. Who cares about boring the wrong people? They weren't going to buy from you anyway.
Want proof long copy is safe? You're still reading this marketing reserved supply after six pages, and don't for a minute think we're not selling something to you.
We often see good products and services under-sold by copy that is composed of just a handful of words...
1. "Widget temperature exchangers. Bindless gasket technology" 2. "Great quality. Buyer Service. Side channel widgets. Call us for a brochure." 3. "Superior Quality! Exceptional Value! The smart widget from down under"
Examples of sufficient detail include... 1. "You can buy small quantities, because our facility is set up to do any size job, or... You can buy in bulk and receive beneficial discounts... Either way you win" [Two of a dozen detach points the ad makes in a strip ad of about 250 words] 2. "Why is the Brand dissimilar to other Vsd compressors in the market? It does not need to unload and will give you air from the moment it starts to the moment it stops." [This ad put some endeavor into face good points]
Principle #7: The ad must address "you" the reader
Ads that speak in 'you' language are more readable, deliver benefits better, and transport the sales message personally.
Ads that don't will seem self-serving, not speaking with the reader's interest in mind.
Most ads we see speak about 'us' the company or 'it' the product. They fail to address 'you' the reader.
We all know this, yet our ads fail to apply it... Our reader cares about what we can do for them. 'You' has been proven to be the most commonly used word in the most flourishing headlines. The next 4 were 'your', 'how', 'new', and 'who'.
These are slightly altered examples of good products whose advertising fails to address the reader... 1. "Company leads the globe in protecting hands, with an innovative array of products and solutions for all types of commercial needs..." [The word 'you' is not used until the fourth paragraph] 2. "The company Brand is constructed to be more productive than any multistage centrifugal widget ever made. Through decades, we have lifted the doing of the Brand widgets in order to meet the needs of contemporary industry. We improved it for 30 years..." [This ad has not one instance of 'you' in its material]
These examples account for how B2B advertising can, in fact, address the reader... 1. "If you handle granules then you need Company, the pail elevator specialists" 2. "You can use our service anywhere you are located... We'll originate freight anywhere." [This ad had 21 uses of 'you' or 'your', and out of 13 paragraphs only one didn't have one of these words in it]
It's difficult to have too many 'you' words in your ad.
Principle #8: The ad must translate features into benefits
Features are static properties and they have no intrinsic value. For instance, "The door is blue". A advantage is a gain to someone. For instance, "It complements the carpet".
Benefits are the language of customers, even when they come with complex specifications and seem to be feature-literate.
But as an advertiser you cannot rely on your reader to make the reasoning rehearsal in translating features into benefits. It's the job of your ad to do that.
Sales training insists sales habitancy use joining phrases like "so that you can" in their dialogue with prospects.
"Our glove has duplicate the thickness of suitable linings so that you can protect your hands from the heat".
Your ad must do the same. It doesn't have to use cumbersome translators, but the translation must still occur.
Most ads we see fail to translate features into benefits and fail to tell the reader what they'll gain. These ads undersell their stock or service.
For example, read these extracts of feature-only B2B advertising of what are probably great products with great benefits...
1. "Self adjusting. Sealed widgets. Single, duplicate working piston design. Purchasable as a thoroughly enclosed or open unit" 2. "Widget offers maximum adaptability from -50o C to +105o C" 3. "Run excellent control and signal processing"
Compare them with these extracts that do a great job of translating features into benefits... 1. "Excellent adhesion: will not run or drip" 2. "By loading and unloading your containers, you accomplish a much faster "turn-around" time of the delivery truck/trailer" 3. "The equivalent of 5 steel drums, yet only the area of 4, reducing freight and warehouse costs"
We argue that 'brand awareness' is not sufficient for your ad to achieve.
Your store must instead be aware of your key selling message, and the benefits of buying your stock or service.
Principle #9: The ad must ensure claims are not vague but specific
Vague claims are base in the ads we see. But vague claims make minute sales impact. They imply looseness of fact, or at worst mild deceit. Being specific implies the facts are true, the claims are real, the outcomes measurable.
If your stock achieves 23% more reduction in downtime, your ad should be specific in its claim.
If no specifics are known off-hand, you or your agency should encourage tests to observe specifics, or seek case studies and examples from customers.
Heinz is well known in marketing circles as having had over 60 products when it claimed "57 varieties" in its advertising. But such was Heinz' comprehension of the power of specifics that they under-represented the truth in favor of a lesser but specific number.
A point to note is that the best specifics communicate to benefits. Specifics that communicate to features of your stock or service, like measurements, are not necessarily powerful.
We see examples of poor specificity in B2B advertising all the time... They undersell good products... 1. "The new motor solution from Company, the Brand is very cost effective, compressed and the quietest motor in its class" 2. "New array of measuring products. Small size - big performance" 3. "Less energy, more profit"
Compare against these claims which are specific... 1. "92.86% experienced a reduction in the cost of recruitment..." 2. "The amazing Brand mixes 18-360 times faster than other drill driven mixers" 3. "...turn liquid waste into a solid cake, reducing volumes by up to 90%"
Which are you inclined to believe more?
Principle #10: The ad must tell the reader what to do next
The in-person sales process requires a 'closing pitch' when the needs of your buyer have been understood, confirmed and addressed.
Your advertising requires the same explicit hand-holding to guide your reader to the activity you need from them.
A long ad probably gives you space to communicate in detail what the next steps are, why, and what the reader can expect. But even a short ad can provide a clear palpate detail and ask the reader explicitly to use it.
An ad that asks for the sale is a sales person. An ad that doesn't may be wasted.
Most B2B ads we see fail to explicitly tell the reader what to do in order to buy what could well be a great stock or service...
For instance... 1. "Call toll free 1800 zzz zzz" [Obscured below the logo at lowest of page] 2. "Company http://www.company.com.au 9999 9999" [Listing in block format at lowest of page] 3. "Company email@company.com.au tel 9999 9999" [Placed along the lowest of a graphic, in 6-point size]
But these examples show how to ask for the sale... 1. "Phone now on 9999 9999 for a condensed account of the full range of company materials handling equipment." 2. "Registration on the database is free. Register your details now at http://www.company.com.au" 3. "To regain your complimentary copy or to make an appointment for company to gift the findings of the paper to you, call 9999 9999 or email@company.com.au"
After your company's ad has educated your reader it should tell them what to do next.
Your readers are silently begging to be led. Your ad must lead them.
Principle #11: The ad must have a unique selling proposition (Usp)
A good ad makes a clear proposition. A good proposition is aimed at selling. And the best such selling proposition is unique.
A Usp is best used in place of a conventional slogan, or as your headline, or both.
It's a qualified and under-utilized conception in and out of fashion since it was first identified by Rosser Reeves, an advertising menagerial from the 1960s.
Three illustrious examples...
Domino's Pizza - Fast-Food Delivery
"Delivered hot to you in 30 minutes or it's free" M&Ms - Confectionery
"Melts in your mouth and not in your hands" Fedex - Logistics
"When it honestly honestly has to be
there overnight"
These are more qualified than slogans. They promise something tangible.
A Usp is virtually unseen in the world of B2B ads despite the strength having one brings to a marketing strategy and the advertising that expresses it.
Many B2B advertisers are large corporates, in the middle of a marketing strategy or controlled from overseas.
Going Through the process of deriving a Usp may seem difficult for them.
But it is well worth doing. Even if it's just to position a singular stock better. Ask us how it's done.
These examples show good products and services undersold by modest slogans... 1. "Constantly on the move" 2. "Inventiveness in interface" 3. "Creating occasion for business"
Here is a rare treat... Just one example of a potential Usp, incommunicable in a visible in its ad... 1. "Service to service without downtime" [for compressed air and cooling solutions, but the advertiser didn't feature this in place of its slogan... In our view, that would have been a winning move]
"Now YOU Can Create Professional 3D Animations, Games And Graphic Models Like Pixar and Dreamworks In 2 Hours or Less..."
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