You have to campaign to create and the benefit/message you need to communicate is (fill in the blank). As you stare down at your blank white notepad, your mind just sort of goes blank. It’s like the well’s run dry. I feel your pain. Having spent the better part of my career in ad agencies, I know how difficult it can be to come up with fresh ideas day in and day out. That’s why I’ve learned to rely on certain brainstorming strategies to help kickstart my thinking.
You have to campaign to create and the benefit/message you need to communicate is (fill in the blank). As you stare down at your blank white notepad, your mind just sort of goes blank. It’s like the well’s run dry. I feel your pain. Having spent the better part of my career in ad agencies, I know how difficult it can be to come up with fresh ideas day in and day out. That’s why I’ve learned to rely on certain brainstorming strategies to help kickstart my thinking.
At its most basic, this strategy means communicating your message/benefit by showing the opposite of what people expect which, in theory, creates enough of a visual disconnect that it attracts attention—and getting your audience to stop and look is more than half the battle. Here’s an example.
Nice way to get the benefit across (a stronger, tougher, healthier cat) by showing the opposite of what people expect.
More recently, I came across this uber smart ad campaign—it also employs a kind of “opposite” or reversal move. The campaign’s goal was to introduce an online job market operated by the Brazilian internet service provider UOL.
As you can see, each ad features the visual of a job seeker whose head is highlighted yellow and the very simple but clever line: “There’s a job looking for you.” I love the reversed premise here: that jobs are looking for job seekers.
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