Squash This Ad
Marketing News, Small Business, Print Advertising, Advertising, Sports Marketing May 8th, 2007While researching various channels and verticals for our sandboxsports.com theme, we’ve come across a number of creative adverts that are…. well let’s just say puzzling. It’s not too difficult to discover ads where there is an obvious disconnect between the creative imagery, cheeky copy and what it is that most advertisers’ hope to achieve with their marketing budget.
This is fine for the ad agencies and creative professionals who get paid to “create” but not so good for the paying customer who receives a disappointing consumer response in exchange for their valuable - and limited - advertising dollars. It’s also fine for Coke, Nike, Budweiser and so on because the big dollar outlay on repetitive advertising is almost exclusively geared to brand promotion and almost never an immediate call to action.
For small business it’s a mistake to follow this type of strategy. Some marketing experts suggest that as consumers, we are presented with over three thousand advertising messages in a typical day. Billboards, T.V. commercials, radio commercials, email marketing, banner ads, pop-ups, pop-unders, direct response mail at home and at work (aka junk mail), telemarketing, fax broadcasts - you get the idea. To break through and capture the attention of your target audience, your advertising message needs to interrupt and then it must engage the attention of your qualified prospects so that they’ll continue to search for more information.
No doubt you’re probably familiar with the adage that sex sells - right? It’s not true. Sex interrupts. If a sexy image captures your attention in an advertisement, then it has interrupted you, but it has not necessarily engaged you - encouraging you to learn more - leading you to a purchasing decision or some other immediate action such as opting in to a promotion with their name and email address.
This print ad for a sporting event is a pretty good example of a misguided advert. The image of the sexy female squash player does a decent enough job of interrupting. But then it fails to push the hot buttons of almost any potential spectator with the exception of the demographic that is male, twenty something, hormonally motivated and probably indifferent to the game of squash.
Think about it, if you are a heterosexual female, a homosexual male, a family, a legitimate squash fan, an elderly person, just about anyone else - are you really interested in going to a sporting event that is going to be packed with obnoxious, Neanderthal, male patrons? This advert would work better if it were promoting a brand of beer.
If female squash players are really that hot, how about an action shot that captures the essence of the game and presents an image of athleticism, skill, competitiveness and drama. If the athlete happens to be a babe (think Anna Kournikova, Chris Evert) and if she were attired in revealing athletic sportswear (think Anna Kournikova, Chris Evert), then the ad would still work for the Neanderthal but it would also appeal to a much broader market demographic. A whole market segment that just might be engaged enough to want to learn more - maybe even buy a ticket.



