http://tier10lab.com/2012/07/12/creating-automotive-print-ad/ - Tier10Lab strives to be these three things: a thought leader in automotive social media marketing, a clarifier of online/tech news, and an ambassador for automotive-related creative design. Here, Tier10 Marketing designer, Jason Kress, muses on the lifespan of an automotive print ad. [...]
1. The Life of an Automotive Print Ad
http://tier10lab.com/2012/07/12/creating-automotive-print-ad/
July 12, 2012
By Jason Kress
Tier10Lab strives to be these three things: a thought leader in automotive social media marketing, a
clarifier of online/tech news, and an ambassador for automotive-related creative design. Here, Tier10
Marketing designer, Jason Kress, muses on the lifespan of an automotive print ad. His experience in
graphic design spans nearly 15 years. Leave comments/questions for Jason in the comments space
below.
Ok, close your eyes. Try to think of the last automotive print ad you saw...
Kind of stumped, eh? Now, think of the last automotive TV spot you saw. A little easier, right? I mean,
come on, it's a car. How the heck are you supposed to sell a car with a photo when you can spend 30
seconds on TV having some tall, dark and handsome guy beating the living hell out of a 5-series while a
camera swiftly pans around the cabin showing off rare, double-stitched leather seats, then zooms out to
show the car drift an S-turn with ease and finally fades to black and fades that blue and white logo in?
A print ad is tougher. If you're lucky, you have a suitcase of photos that a team of photographers took
either in a studio or possibly on top of a hill with the Pacific Coast Highway in the background right at the
magic hour. Then, those photos went off to someone like me, probably in a dark office, dimly lit by a 27"
color-corrected studio monitor to then spend countless hours retouching those photos so everything is
beyond perfect. So perfect that if given a million dollars, you'd never be able to reproduce a car that
perfect. Reflections are removed and then better ones added back in. Angles are changed so you can
see that perfect combo of the front clip, wheels and vehicle midline. The cabin is darkened as to not
distract from the outer shell. Chrome becomes flawless. Headlight glass becomes transparent.
2. Then you have a choice. Do you show off this vehicle on seamless black or white and have the car speak
for itself or do you take it and put it in front of some obscure Frank Gehry-esque building that accentuates
the vehicle by adding an appealing backdrop right to the point of becoming distracting and then pulling it
back just a touch?
Ok, great, we have a photo to use. Then comes an equally tricky part. Heck, this part is almost—if not
more—important than the photo. Copy. Do you go short and sweet or do you sell the car a little more? Is
this going to be an abstract ad where the Creative Director is going for a Gold Pencil award or is it being
mandated by the OEM to sell sell sell? The former is what fills portfolios, the latter, well, not so much.
I want to touch on the "smart" and creative ad first. These are every designer's dream because there
is usually one line of copy and that copy is simply brilliant. It was penned by a copywriter after two days of
pure suffering. It happened after four whiteboards were filled up and erased. It probably happened in the
shower, but trust me, this is the kind of line that when you see it all come together in print and you read it,
you get goose bumps, look around to show the other designers around you, and say "Damn, that's
GREAT." This is the type of ad that wins awards and the copywriter is the NBA All Star that brings it to the
agency award shelf. The best part is that the ad literally designs itself. Nine-tenths of the page gets the
photo, then you add the perfectly kerned type in just the right position, make sure it's at just the right point
size, and finally slap the OEM
logo and tagline in the top left
or bottom right. Done. Award
city.
Now onto the "selling" ad.
This one's tough. It's just like
the "smart" ad, but instead of a
line of 8pt copy, you have to
somehow fit a photo of a car (or
six, eek!), some sort of
campaign logo that is
announcing to the world that
yes, you too can now buy this
car at no money down, or at
0.9% APR, or there's a holiday
soon so *insert holiday here*
sales event and come on down.
Each car will have to give the
gory details of the sale and how
much you'll pay a month, the
dozen or so niceties the car
has for you built right in and
then that asterisk. Oof. That's
for the two paragraphs of legal
that gets buried down at the
bottom in 4pt at a -45 kern and
4pt leading. You'll never read it
but it's there for that one guy who does and it's needed on every sales ad.
I know I've painted a grim picture of the selling ad so I'll try to stand up for it a bit here.
It gets a bad rap because out of all the sales ads, 99.999% are utter crap. Those are the ones with 119
cars crammed in on a full-page Times ad in black and white literally screaming at you to come in and buy
a car or the world will end (See Fig. 1). They're made by designers who hate their jobs, I imagine,
because when I look at them, I'm glad I don't make those ads. I am proud to say that I am of the .0001%. I
3. am a classically trained artist, as are all of my peers in the room who all take this sort of work very
seriously. At the end of the day it's a car ad sure, but we know what works and we know what doesn't.
There's a lot that goes into a smart "selling" ad. A tight, crisp and ultimately smart event logo. The
vehicles are displayed in a pleasing way, usually stacked with enough breathing room to give them their
own presence on the page. The copy and selling points for each car are presented in a manner that is
exciting. By that, I mean, the main message (total price, APR, per month price, etc) is big and bold but not
overpowering (See Fig. 2).
Lesser copy is smaller and in a thinner font yet
still readable. The kerning is tight as is the
leading so it all becomes a "block" of
information on the page keeping negative
space in check the entire time. Pleasing colors
are used, avoiding reds and yellows because
not only do they not print well, they turn away a
potential sale. Margins are nice and tasty so
nothing is too close to the edge and everything
is spaced out evenly—both mathematically and
visually as well. Logos are small yet still
readable. Social icons and URLS (and even
QR codes) are added where space allows, to
maximize the ad's "salability".
If you can get the buyer to a website while
looking at a print ad, that is all the better
because it gets them to learn more about the
wares you are trying to sell in a limited space.
Now you have them on an entire website to
browse.
It's all in the details and how everything falls
together properly. It's not a glamorous job, but
for a car guy such as myself (and many more
who sit around me), getting to work with photos
of your dream cars every day is a gift. I think
that once a layman can understand what goes into producing these ads, he/she can better appreciate
what, and most importantly how, it's being sold to them.
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