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> Get Articles > Advertising > How to Know When You've Done a Good Ad

How to Know When You've Done a Good Ad


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Walter Burek
walterwalterburek.com

Advertising fro walterburek
http://www.walterburek.com


A good ad is a marvelous, magical thing. An

object of emotion as well as intellect. A work

of art.



Once you've done one, you know what a good ad

can do. Turn nerves taut. Make fellows mellow.

Raise eyebrows or raise hopes. Inspire or

intimidate or influence. Impart information that

motivates action.



A great copywriter once wrote, "A good ad is

like a good sermon: It not only comforts the

afflicted, it also inflicts the comfortable."



But the question of the moment is this: How do

you know -- before a single living colleague,

client or consumer has laid eyes on it -- that

you've done a good ad? That it's the right time

to stop all the thinking, talking, writing,

doodling and designing. The right time to click

on "save" and call a meeting?



It ain't easy, knowing that moment. Because a

good ad isn't like the 99-yard run kickoff

return that everybody in the stadium can follow

as it turns into a touchdown. Or the 4th of July

fireworks display that gets everyone oohing and

aahing in unison.



A good ad is hard to recognize. Often because

it's hiding in blah advertising meetings and

windy memos. Lost in dim product descriptions

and lengthy creative briefs. Or even gone

missing inside another ad.



A good ad is difficult to get your hands on.

Like a glob of mercury on a glass tabletop.

Slippery and elusive. (On the other hand, Leo

Burnett said, "I have learned that any fool can

write a bad ad, but it takes a real genius to

keep his hands off a good one.")



A good ad will sometimes show itself when you

least expect it. While you're in the shower, at

a movie, listening to the latest from Eminem, or

having a couple of quiet beers. Sometimes, even

when you're working on something else.



Every now and then, a good ad will sneak up on

you from out of the blue. Or from within

yourself. A dream, a hunch, a personal

experience. David Ogilvy, in The Art of Writing

Advertising, wrote: "Some of the good (ads) I

have done have really come out of the real

experience of my life, and somehow this has come

over as true and valid and persuasive."



A good ad is a subject about which you'll hear a

lot of views. A lot of people will tell you an

ad is good if it wins awards. Some will say a

good ad is one that "sells product." Others will

say an ad is good only if it "tests well." And

more cynical others will say a good ad is "any

ad the client buys."



John Caples, who created enough good ads in his

career to get him into the Copywriters' Hall of

Fame and the Advertising Hall of Fame, opined

that "... you're almost sure to have a good ad,

if you come up with a good headline." And Bill

Bernbach of Volkswagen "Lemon" fame believed

that good ads are often the ones that "take

chances."



Still, while all the preceding identifiers may

be interesting, they are all descriptors after

the fact. None of them tells you how to know, at

the moment you've done it, that you have done a

good ad. How do you decide when to take this

beast you've created and lock it up in a cage

for all the rest of the world to see?



Two little words: Your gut.



Intangible, unsupportable, unprovable. But

unbeatable.



You may be suspicious of it, but you know it's

never failed you. You can't evaluate it easily

or readily define it but, deep down, you know

you can't ignore it.



You know a good ad when you know it in your gut.

And that's an easy thing to know.



Walter is a professional advertising copywriter

who writes, edits and publishes "Words @ Work",

a FREE bimonthly newsletter of advice and

information about writing that works. To view

his award-winning portfolio and to subscribe

visit <a href="http://www.walterburek.com">http://www.walterburek.com.</a> You may also

subscribe by mail to: WordsAtWorkcomcast.net



(c)Burek Group 2002



THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST IN THIS ARTICLE. YOU

MAY FREELY PUBLISH IT ON THE WEB OR IN PRINT, AS

LONG AS YOU INCLUDE THE CREDIT PARAGRAPH AT THE

END. ALSO, PLEASE ADVISE ME OF PUBLICATION VIA

MAIL TO: walterwalterburek.com






















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