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Magazine Advertising
Many of the same "print" type principles which apply to newspaper advertising
also apply to magazine advertising. The biggest differences are:
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Magazines are usually weekly or monthly publications instead of daily.
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Advertising messages are more image-oriented and less price-oriented.
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The quality of the pictures and paper are superior to newsprint.
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Advertisements involve color more often.
The general rule that you can run the same ad 3-5 times within a campaign
period before its appeal lessens applies to magazine advertising as well, even with a
monthly publication. So it makes sense to spend extra time and money to prepare a
worthwhile ad that can be successfully repeated. Over long terms such as these, however,
be aware that the client (you) often tire of the ad before the audience does.
Because ads in magazines are not immediate, they take more planning. Often,
an ad for a monthly magazine must be prepared at least a month in advance of publication,
so ads detailing prices and items have to be carefully crafted to insure accuracy.
Since the quality of the magazines are superior, the advertising that you
generate must be superior as well. Negatives are usually required instead of prints or
"PMTs" (photo-mechanical transfers). Consider getting assistance from a graphic artist or
an advertising agency.
There are two categories of magazines: trade magazines and consumer
magazines. Trade magazines are publications that go to certain types of businesses,
services and industries. Consumer magazines are generally the kind you find on the
average news stand. Investigate which type would do your business the most good.
An agency can also purchase the magazine space for you, often at no charge,
because the magazine pays the agency a commission directly. If you wish to purchase the
advertising yourself, contact the magazine directly and ask for an "Ad Kit" or "Media
Package." They will send you a folder that includes demographic information, reach
information, a current rate card and a sample of the publication.
Although most magazines are national in nature, many have regional
advertising sections that allow your business to look like it purchased a national ad
when it only went to a certain geographical area. This can be especially useful if your
product or service is regional in nature as well and could not benefit from the
magazine’s complete readership. Each magazine does this differently, so contact the
one(s) you are interested in and ask them about their geographic editions. Some
sophisticated magazines even have demographic editions available, which might also be
advantageous.
This article is used with the permission of YoungEntrepreneur.com.
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