Advertising doesn’t sell a bean
I have read a bold claim.
An agency claimed that a piece of creative they were responsible for had led to an increase in sales.
It might be true.
But the claim came on the back of the information that sales rose after the ad was aired.
So was it the creative?
Or was it just the media buy?
How do we know where responsibility lies?
The problem with making a claim is that once made, it is open to question. A designer who claims their logo concept boosts sales has to do so with confidence that the rest of the activity isn’t also having an affect.
Regardless of this, however, is a deeper question: what does advertising do?
My feeling is that advertising doesn’t sell…
It creates the urge to buy.
There’s a big difference. I’ve had arguments as to the effectiveness of advertising. Friends not wrapped up in the world of advertising claim that an advert has no effect on them; that it doesn’t influence them. The fact that companies are spending billions each year to reach people like them has no effect on the argument. They just insist they aren’t influenced and that’s that. Then they go and buy a BMW.
Whilst there is little doubt that many companies waste huge amounts of money on ineffectual advertising, it’s certainly not true to say adverts have no effect. Even as a barrage of messages upon our collective consciousness they have a cumulative effect.
What matters to me is whether that effectiveness is selling or creating the urge to buy.
The difference may seem pedantic but it governs the way we approach the creation of advertising.
