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Friday, November 22, 2013

OH, HOW TIMES CHANGE - MAGAZINE ADS 40 YEARS AGO

On Saturday, November 16th, I celebrated my 40th birthday with a party complete with birthday cake, singing, and presents. I ended up with ten bottles of wine, gift cards, a handful of gag gifts, and a little book from my aunt about life in 1973. As I read the book, what struck me the most was the changes in the magazine print ads.

So I decided to do a comparison: a magazine ad from 1973 for Maybelline Powder-Twist Eye shadow and a 2013 ad for Maybelline Falsies® Big Eyes® Mascara.

The first thing that stuck out when I read the 1973 nostalgia book was the numerous words in the ad, the copy. Other than the product name and tag lines, the 1973 ad contained approximately ninety-nine words; the 2013 ad, just a third of that. This reflects what many people have said about today: people want bullet-point, quick, easy, text-message sized copy. The chances of anyone seeing this ad today and reading even all of the thirty-five words on the 2013 version is slim. The chance of reading the ninety-nine words on the 1973 ad? Probably almost zero.

The content of the copy also serves as evidence of another trend in marketing: focusing on benefits. Other than listing the so-1970s colors in which the Powder-Twist is available, the copy focuses on how to use the product. I suppose since this was a new invention, they wanted to focus on how easy it was to use the new method. Today, we'd focus on the time-saving and let the package directions teach the consumer how to use it. Today's ad, as you might expect, focuses on benefits: corner to corner volumization and edge to edge bottom lash magnification.

The differences don't end at the written copy. The entire graphics of the 1973 ad consists of photos of the six eye shadow shades and a lady applying it that takes up about 1/4 of the page. The lady on the 2013 ad takes up about half the page with photos of the wand showing the difference between the upper and lower applicators (and presumably how they help the eyelashes), a photo of the product open and closed, a clip art graphic of eyelashes, and the skyline of New York City in the background. All the 1973 ad has for its background is a homely pink to purplish gradient. The 1973 ad uses what appears to be five different fonts while the 2013 uses somewhere around nine.

Seeing these two ads side-by-side is a real "eye-opening" experience and provides a good lesson on how what worked 40 years ago would not work today.

Here's to 40 more years!
-The Wordsy Woman

Sources:

2013, December 13. Maybelline New York full page advertisement. All You. p. 39.

Worthington, Art (Ed.). 2010. The Year was 1973. Chatsworth, CA: Flickback Media Inc.

Friday, November 8, 2013

HEADING TOWARD THE HEART OF DARKNESS

Winter is coming. Daylight saving time has just ended and my extra hour burned from both ends. The sky is dark by just after 5:00 p.m. and getting darker earlier every day.

In some ways, I'm glad. Instead of feeling guilty for not getting out and enjoying nice weather on Sunday afternoons, I can curl under a blanket and read a book or watch a movie. And casserole and soup season is in full swing.

But I find it extremely difficult to stay focused and motivated this time of year. As the weather gets colder and the dark hours longer, I find myself fighting hibernation. It's a cruel trick to have to step out of a warm bed into a cold, dark room and then blind myself with the flip of the light switch. And as the sun starts to set shortly before five, so do I. In the Midwest, it seems that mid-fall and winter are synonymous with cloudy, dreary skies and my throw blanket, couch, and sleep beckon.

But I have words to write, words to read, and words to study. Things that need said. So I fight. Hard. Concentrate on celebrating ticking off the check boxes on my to do list. And there's a lot of tea and coffee involved.

Do you have any tips to help me stay focused and energized during these long, cold, dark days? If so, please, PLEASE, share them in the comments section.

Thanks!
-The Wordsy Woman