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Why Creating Taglines Drives You CrazyHere's a challenge. First there's confusion.
And frankly, no one should.
The tagline is supposed to draw in the customer. And get them to ask the question: 'How do you do that?' Or 'What do you mean by that?'. And having tickled the customer's curiosity, the tagline should step back and let the rest of the marketing material do the talking.
E.g.: Removing the roadblocks to high-end sales and creating loyal customers. See that? Two thoughts there. 'Removing roadblocks' as well as 'creating loyal customers.' So choose one already. Because as you choose one, the clarity comes through. If you drop one of the two thoughts, you get a thought that's crystal clear. You get: Removing the Roadblocks to High-End Sales.
Let's analyse the previous tagline. And just for the heck of it, let's remove one of the elements, one by one and see if it has the same impact. When we remove the specific target audience, we get: Removing the roadblocks to sales. When we remove the problems, we get: Helping you close high-end sales. When we remove the solution, we get: (Nope, you can't remove the solution without completely reducing the effectiveness). The tagline, as you can see for yourself, is most effective when it has the combination of all three. Yes it can run without the specificity of a target audience. And yes, we can drop 'the problem' like a hot potato. You can chop and change all you like, but if it's extreme curiosity you want, keeping the trio of problem + solution + target makes mucho sense. But there's still one mucho confusing factor.
But even a great line like that wouldn't do squat if you were selling a slightly different product/service. For example, if you offered a service that showed how to 'make effective presentations to increase sales-conversions', then your tagline has to reflect that specific audience: Those interested in presentations. And it must address the problem involved in making presentations: This problem could be 'fear.' When we add up the problem + solution + target together and put in the dollop of the 'individual product/service', we'd get something that looks like this: Taking the fear out of sales-presentations.
Do you now see why each product; each service needs to have a tagline that's related to that product/service alone? Why? I already told you why.
It's just a way to get momentum. Just the way to get the customer moving down to the main message. So if your main message is detailing what your company excels at, then put the company tagline. If you've got a product/service that even slightly deviates from the company message--as it will--then make the tagline specific to that product or service, and don't just slap on your company tagline everywhere. So if you're making a presentation a specific topic tagline is a great way to keep your audience pre-warmed. If your tagline is on your web page, the tagline is just a pre-cursor of the product/service that is to follow. If you're about to make that elevator speech, your tagline gets the customer interested in a specific product/service before the elevator goes 'ding.' Curiosity. |
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