What retailers need to know now, that is relevant to agriculture later
There are an abundance of ...
The headline must work harder than ever to get customers to notice, read, engage with or act on your brand’s message. It may be your only chance to be heard and considered.
This is true whether you’re creating advertising, writing and pitching news stories, sending emails or developing website content.
This was true decades ago when David Ogilvy said, “five times as many people read the headlines as read the body copy of our advertisement,” meaning five out of six people only read headlines.
The stats don’t get any better as we fast-forward to today’s marketing landscape, where there is even more clutter and chaos that must be penetrated to reach the time-starved, over-stimulated, omni-channel, hyper-scrolling consumer. Consider these stats:
All of these truths mean your headline has more jobs to fulfill than grabbing attention of the reader and touting the unique selling proposition of the brand. It may seem like an impossible task for a line that may be as few as seven words, but today the headline has five tasks to complete for your brand.
Content marketing can engage your audience. See how.
If the goal is for your brand’s message to break through the ever-increasing chaos and clutter, to capture and hold the attention of the consumer, then craft and hone the headline, to ensure it accomplishes all five of its jobs. Because at least 60% of the time, it’s the only thing your customer reads.
A coy, clever or obtuse headline often excites and amuses those of us writing it. In reality, it annoys and repels today’s consumer. Clear and compelling make for a better, harder working headline.
There are an abundance of ...
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