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Make your banner look like text on a page.
This is what I call a "non-banner" (close to "no-brainer").
If your banner looks like a banner, it gets ignored. Conventional banner ads
only pull less than three percent on average.
Why is that? It's because we have learned to ignore advertising. Every day
we are bombarded with sales pitches in newspapers, on the radio, on television,
on highway billboards, and so on. It becomes background noise that we learn
to tune out.
Something that doesn't appear to be a sales pitch will receive more attention.
Intelligent surfers are looking for information. They want to find out about
something and be told how their problem can be solved. Do that properly and
you will get their click. If you try to entertain them, impress them with graphics
or bore them with your company's features, you won't get noticed.
Your banner is pretty much a classified ad. And classified ads work when the
rules of marketing are followed. Make your banner an attractive text ad and
it will pull like crazy. Make it look like any other flashy, hyped up banner
and it just becomes more of the clutter on a site.
If your banner will be staying at a permanent home, design it so it looks like
it is part of the site. Match the background color, fonts and layout as much
as you can. If your banner is going through a banner exchange, use white as
a default color. At the very least your text will be highlighted if it lands
on a dark background.
Put useful information on your banner. Highlight key words and phrases. Use
a power headline consisting of your best benefit right up front. Appeal to their
"click impulse". Make them an offer they can't refuse. Create a sense
of urgency.
Put the words "Click Here" at the end of the text message, underlined
and in standard blue. This visual is the most underused and yet the most effective
way of getting a surfer to click. Who cares about having fancy buttons, use
what works!
Don't use animated banners. Animated banners do pull better than static banners
but they still look like banners. Most people smile and say "That's cute!"
before clicking away somewhere else. Normal text doesn't flash or move, so neither
should your non-banner.
By following these and other simple rules for banner design you could very
well, through testing, end up with a non-banner that generates a much higher
click-thru rate than a conventional banner.
Currently many website owners are only too happy to host your banner and collect
your money for doing so since the banner is only pulling a little of his traffic
and is harmless to him. However, he might become concerned after your new non-banner
starts to pull a bigger chunk of his traffic away from his site! Of course,
you won't care because you'll be on your way to the bank...
About the Author:
Ernie has put the rest of the design ideas and a sample "non-banner"
on his site at http://go.to/erniewest.com |