The Politics of a Great Headline

By: Colleen Davis
Submitted: 2008-05-19 15:02:08
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher | Social Bookmarking
Rating:
 

Election time is just around the corner and candidate’s are out in full force pushing their campaigns with posters and signs on every other corner. Add this to the regular influx of ads hitting the streets every week and you’ll realize how, now more than ever, your headline makes or breaks your ad. Whether your doing poster printing or putting together a new flyer campaign, your headline is the crux of your advertisement. It will either compel your reader to continue reading, or turn them away before they've seen your product or offer. What makes an effective headline, though?

First of all, your headline should speak to the reader's emotions rather than their logic or intellect. For one, you simply don’t have the space in a headline to expound on all of the rational reasons for someone to buy the product you’re selling. Emotional responses, however, can be created with nothing more than short phrases or even single words. Additionally, strong emotions motivate people to take action. The more powerful the emotion, the faster the resulting action will be. Those political campaign posters I mentioned are excellent examples of this. Single words, like hope, change and security have driven countless political careers and they can be just as effective for your business. When writing your headlines think about words and phrases that inspire wonder, excitement, curiosity or even fear, and you are certain to grab the reader's attention.

One of the keys to effective headline writing is to communicate potential benefits to the reader. This has an added benefit of setting up an expectation of what will follow in the ad itself. When you get down to it, the customer is going to be looking at your add and asking themselves, “What am I getting out of this? How does this help me?” You need to make sure you that you have something real to offer and that it is clear to the reader. Those political ads miss the mark here, in most cases. Take a look at one and you’ll notice that the candidate’s name is more prominent than their headline and there is typically little substance in the ad. Instead make your headline the prominent feature of your ad and make an offer you can follow up on, be it a new product or a reduced price.

Above all, though, keep your goal in mind when writing your headline. That is, to make a sale. This is what your reader is expecting when they read your ad. They know you have something to sell, so don’t play coy. Use direct, imperative language in your headline. Strong verbs and direct phrases like “What you need!” or “Don’t miss out!” can create a sense of desire or urgency in your potential customer that will get them to act on your ad. Again, look at what they political ads are asking. In short, “Vote for me and I’ll give you change, or hope, or protection, or whatever.” Make sure your headline is just as clear and concise.

Your Headline is going to be the first thing your potential customer sees when they glance at your ad. If it loses their attention, you’ve lost a potential sale. Put at least as much thought and care into creating your marketing headlines as the current crop of presidential hopefuls and have your customers clamoring for four more years.

For more information, you can visit this page on poster printing

Article source: Expert Articles

Most Recent Articles in Politics category

  • Do Sanctions on Iran Work? - By: Gabriel Sawma
    Three weeks ago, Iran revealed that it had a uranium-enrichment facility near the holy city of Qum. The U.S. began working with its allies, mainly France and Great Britain for a fresh round of sanctions against Tehran. This article addresses the effect of sanctions on Iran
  • Every Individual is Part of the Whole - By: Andy Carloff
    As much as you are an individual, you will be effected by the organization of society. You can be an individualist, but you will be rocked and effected by the actions of the collective. "As a Socialist, many will argue how I can be an Individualist. If I believe in making things more public and more common, how can I also be a defender and believer of the individual?"
  • What Is Your Relationship With Work? - By: Andy Carloff
    Examining what it means to be employed, and what it means to be unemployed; what it means to be your own master, and what it means to be subjugated. "It is the same as all past revolutions. Collective action to create individual liberty!"
  • Where Does Society's Wealth Come From? - By: Andy Carloff
    Investigating where wealth and luxury come from; and then analyzing the idea of rights and justice in terms of property. "...we are living on a planet where the few, idle Capitalists own the majority of wealth."
  • A Race Hanging By a Thread - By: Bobby Miller s
    I have never spoken a kind word about the Israelis in my life, but it's simply impossible to deal with these hate-consumed Arabs.
  • The Politics of a Great Headline - By: Colleen Davis
    Election time is just around the corner and candidate's are out in full force pushing their campaigns with posters and signs on every other corner. Add this to the regular influx of ads hitting the streets every week
  • President Searching With a Fine Tooth Comb - By: Ajeet Khurana
    The US Presidential elections are due in 2008. Intelligent voters always weigh their options before choosing someone as President.
  • The Insurgency in Southern Thailand - By: Matt Crook
    Thai premier Surayud Chulanont has reacted to escalating violence in Thailand’s southernmost regions by traveling to the area and making his latest move towards ending decades of violence.The insurgency in southern Thailand has received major media attention in the wake of a series of violent incidents centered in the three southern provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat.The history of this separatist movement can be traced back to the early twentieth century when in 1902 Patani was annexed by Thailand (then known as Siam).
  • John Kerry, Republicans, & Our Military: So Irate Together - By: Stephen Oakes
    What do John Kerry, Republicans, and now the U.S. military have in common?
  • Fighting Dem's, Hiding Dem's, and All Things in Between - By: Greg Reeson
    The latest television campaign ad in the Virginia Senate race features two of the primary election approaches engineered by Democratic strategists for this November's mid-term contest: attacking the President's judgment and competence and appealing to the patriotism and dedication to service of current and former military members. These two campaign tactics, along with a third, newer strategy that just emerged in recent weeks, form the core of Howard Dean's plan for winning back the House and Senate after twelve years of Republican control.The first part of the campaign strategy centers on attacking the Republican candidate, Senator George Allen, by framing him as "guilty through association" for his support of the President and his policies.