Посты с тэгом: creative advertising

Fusion: Linking Your Product to the Message to Create Great Packaging

Published date: July 21, 2014 в 3:00 am

Written by:

Category: Uncategorized

Tags: ,,,,

Creative marketers use a clever little tool called fusion. Fusion links a product to a message in a creative way that communicates the value inherent in the product. Fusion creates a visual connection between the product and a symbol representing the value. When a customer sees that connection, they instantly understand the message and appreciate the value delivered by the product in a more powerful and subtle way.

The packaging of the product is a great, but often overlooked way to do this. Here are examples from a website called Pulpplastic.com. The one above is for a cereal called Beehive Honey Squares. The see through window of the cereal box nicely demonstrates what the product looks like. But the added touch of having the product inside the mouth of a bear is an excellent fusion to the brand message – our cereal has honey so good even bears love it.

Creative-packaging-62 Here’s another great packaging example for NYC Spaghetti. What symbol represents the city better than any? The Empire State Building, of course. By fusing the product to this symbol, the visual connection is complete and clever.

Creative-packaging-4-16-2Packaging isn’t the only way to use fusion. Any element within the retail shopping experience can be candidate for fusion. The trick is to select an element and force it to take on some attributes of the symbol that represents your brand value. Here is an example from a grocery store called City Harvest. They used shopping bags to convey the value of nutritious food they provide by simply cutting out a viewing window in the shape of your stomach. Clear and compelling!

Check out all the examples of fusion and see if you can see the visual link between the product, packaging, or other elements to the brand message.

For an amazing example of fusion to the brand message using just about every element of packaging possible, check out this Coca Cola ad:

To learn more about fusion and other creativity tools used in advertising and marketing, read “Cracking the Ad Code” by Dr. Jacob Goldenberg and his colleagues.

Marketing Innovation: The Activation Tool in Advertising

Published date: December 3, 2012 в 3:00 am

Written by:

Category: Uncategorized

Tags: ,,,

Through a sea of clutter in the world of advertising, how do you get your message across?  One technique is to actively engage the viewer.  The Activation Tool invites the prospect to make an immediate action during the encounter with the ad, either in a physical way or mental way.  It is particularly useful when you want to: 1. make the target audience aware of a problem, or 2. make the target audience aware of the solution.  Consider this print example from the advertising agency Saatchi:


When recipients of this postcard place a hand over the image, their body heat changes the image to reveal a helpless animal covered in oil.

The tool is one of eight patterns embedded in most innovative commercials.  Jacob Goldenberg and his colleagues describe these simple, well-defined design structures in their book, “Cracking the Ad Code,” and provide a step-by-step approach to using them.  The tools are:
1. Unification
2. Activation
3. Metaphor
4. Subtraction
5. Extreme Consequence
6. Absurd Alternative
7. Inversion
8. Extreme Effort

Here is another example of the Activation Tool.  Students in my Innovation Tools course at the University of CIncinnati learn how to use these tools.  Students must develop an advertisement that conveys the value proposition of a product or service. This example conveys new features of a suitcase. Shown here is a mock-up of a print ad created by my students.  It requires the viewer to pull the luggage handle only to reveal the text inside.  Very clever.

Bag1
Bag2
 
 

The Patterns in Super Bowl Commercials

Published date: February 6, 2012 в 3:00 am

Written by:

Category: Uncategorized

Tags: ,,,,

Super Bowl commercials capture our attention because they tend to be highly creative and well-produced.  At $3.5 million dollars for a thirty second spot, Super Bowl advertisers need to create the best, most innovative commercials possible. To do that, they use patterns.  Professor Jacob Goldenberg and his colleagues discovered that 89% of 200 award winning ads fall into a few simple, well-defined design structures.  Their book, “Cracking the Ad Code,” defines eight of these structures and provides a step-by-step approach to use them.

Here are the eight tools:
1. Unification
2. Activation
3. Metaphor
4. Subtraction
5. Extreme Consequence
6. Extreme Effort
7. Absurd Alternative
8. Inversion

Let’s see how yesterday’s 2012 Super Bowl ads fit these patterns.
The Unification Tool uses components of the medium or within the environment of the advertisement to convey the message.  This Bridgestone commercial does a nice job of taking sports objects like balls and pucks and “unifying” them to the theme of rubber tires:

Get our innovation model that has worked for 1000+ companies.

    No thanks, not now.