write a short note on making of an advertisement?

advertisement is a  powerful medium  . when a  producer has produce a particular things he  want to  sell it  to  maximum number of  people.this  can  do as  advertisement.it can  make  mass selling  possible .advertisement is  apowerful  median to sell products to  the  constumer .advertisement play an  important   role in  day to day life  contumer   became   aware from   advertisement

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advertisement is a powerful medium . when a producer has produce a particular things he want to sell it to maximum number of people.this can do as advertisement.it can make mass selling possible .advertisement is apowerful median to sell products to the constumer .advertisement play an important role in day to day life contumer became aware from advertisement

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Advertisements are made after a lot of research as their main aim is to get

people to buy a product.Steps in the making of an advertisement include identifying the profile of thetargeted consumer by market surveys and emphasizing unique qualities andemotions that would appeal to the target group.These messages are then communicated through the final visual of theadvertisement.
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advertisement is the short presentation that attract the people towards to the product to by the by their qualities and use to prove to the people that their product is the best.their are 2 effects of advertisements positive and nagative effect.

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Advertisement is a powerful medium . Advertising or advertizing is a form of marketing communication used to persuade an audience to take or continue some action usually with respect to a commercial offering or political ideological support . In latin word adverts means to turn forward
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first we have to write details for example about the thing on name place that accept all the important details and then we should have to make a picture and then last mobile number address or etc others
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method 1 
Decide where to publish the ad. Will your advertisement be printed in the newspaper, a magazine, your website, or Facebook? Knowing where you plan to publish the ad will influence the way you write your copy. Find out the perimeters of your advertising space, including how many words you're allotted, how large the font size will be, and whether you can incorporate graphics or video. Ultimately, the traditional classifieds-style ad will fly in almost any medium, but you might need to make small tweaks to tailor it to the space in which you're advertising.[1]
  • If you're taking out a quarter to full-page advertisement in your local newspaper, you're going to have some room to play around with a paragraph or so of copy.
  • However, for a Facebook or other online ad, your copy will be limited to a sentence or so.
  • Either way, when you're writing an ad, every word counts. Being too vague or wordy will cause people to skim your advertisement instead of pausing to read it,so the same writing tenets apply no matter what type of ad you're writing.
method 2
Tailor it to your audience. Which consumers are you targeting? Ideally, everyone who reads your ad will want to buy your product, but in reality you'll have better results if you tailor your ad to a specific audience that is likely to be more interested than the rest of the world. Use language and references that appeal to the demographic to which your product appeals. It might be a turnoff for other groups of people, but it's important to speak to the hearts of the people who have the potential to become loyal customers.[2]
  • For example, if you're selling a service that allows people to self publish their books, you'll want to use language that sounds writerly and elegant. That way your target audience - people who have written books they want to publish - will know they would be in good hands with your company.
  • If you're selling a product that appeals to a younger crowd, like a new type of candy that makes your mouth turn rainbow colors, lose the formality and use language that's familiar to your target audience - kids who want to spend their allowance on candy, or who could influence their parents to buy the candy for them.
method 3
  1. Write an attention-grabbing headline. This is the most important part of your advertisement, because it's your one shot at getting consumers to actually read your ad. If your headline is vague, difficult to understand or in any way uninteresting, you can't expect people to take the time to read the rest of your carefully-written ad. You're immediately telling them that your company isn't innovative enough to come up with a compelling ad - which will reflect poorly on your product as well, even if it's excellent.[3]
    • People riding the subway, scrolling through Facebook or flipping through a magazine have hundreds of little pulls on their attention. How can you cut through all the noise and make them focus on your product? Think of a headline so compelling that it essentially forces the person reading it to pay attention.
    • Your headline could be something shocking, strange, emotionally compelling, or exciting - it doesn't matter, as long as it grabs the reader. For example,
      • Write something mysterious: Don't be happy, be terrified.
      • Write something people can't pass up: Get 75% off a ticket to Paris.
      • Write something emotional: She has 2 weeks to live
    • method 4
    • Don't start with a question. You might be able to get away with a highly creative and compelling rhetorical question, but stay away from your standard "Do you need a new car?" type of opener. Consumers have already read thousands of similar questions, and they're tired of being asked. You'll have to dig a little deeper to capture their attention. Find a creative way to tell people that you have what they need without asking an obvious question.
    • method 5 
    • Write a bridge to keep them reading. The next line after your headline is your short, sweet chance to create a solid impression of your company in the minds of your audience. After your mysterious/shocking/emotional headline, you need to follow up with something substantive - otherwise, your headline will be perceived as mere hype.[4] Use the bridge to tell the consumer what need your product can fill.
    • Touch on the major benefits your product will bring the consumer.[5] Your bridge should contain your strongest selling points.
    • Tip: Remember that every word counts. Your bridge language needs to be just as compelling as your headline, because there's still a good chance you could lose people before they get to the end of your ad.



 
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1. Choose an advertise you want to launched
2. Determine the class of people who would like to buy that product
3 . design an add campaign with target goal in mind
4. Come up with the strategy to counter the competition
5. Go door to door to advertise the product and produce free samples of the product if can.
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method 1 
Decide where to publish the ad. Will your advertisement be printed in the newspaper, a magazine, your website, or Facebook? Knowing where you plan to publish the ad will influence the way you write your copy. Find out the perimeters of your advertising space, including how many words you're allotted, how large the font size will be, and whether you can incorporate graphics or video. Ultimately, the traditional classifieds-style ad will fly in almost any medium, but you might need to make small tweaks to tailor it to the space in which you're advertising.[1]
  • If you're taking out a quarter to full-page advertisement in your local newspaper, you're going to have some room to play around with a paragraph or so of copy.
  • However, for a Facebook or other online ad, your copy will be limited to a sentence or so.
  • Either way, when you're writing an ad, every word counts. Being too vague or wordy will cause people to skim your advertisement instead of pausing to read it,so the same writing tenets apply no matter what type of ad you're writing.
method 2
Tailor it to your audience. Which consumers are you targeting? Ideally, everyone who reads your ad will want to buy your product, but in reality you'll have better results if you tailor your ad to a specific audience that is likely to be more interested than the rest of the world. Use language and references that appeal to the demographic to which your product appeals. It might be a turnoff for other groups of people, but it's important to speak to the hearts of the people who have the potential to become loyal customers.[2]
  • For example, if you're selling a service that allows people to self publish their books, you'll want to use language that sounds writerly and elegant. That way your target audience - people who have written books they want to publish - will know they would be in good hands with your company.
  • If you're selling a product that appeals to a younger crowd, like a new type of candy that makes your mouth turn rainbow colors, lose the formality and use language that's familiar to your target audience - kids who want to spend their allowance on candy, or who could influence their parents to buy the candy for them.
method 3
  1. Write an attention-grabbing headline. This is the most important part of your advertisement, because it's your one shot at getting consumers to actually read your ad. If your headline is vague, difficult to understand or in any way uninteresting, you can't expect people to take the time to read the rest of your carefully-written ad. You're immediately telling them that your company isn't innovative enough to come up with a compelling ad - which will reflect poorly on your product as well, even if it's excellent.[3]
    • People riding the subway, scrolling through Facebook or flipping through a magazine have hundreds of little pulls on their attention. How can you cut through all the noise and make them focus on your product? Think of a headline so compelling that it essentially forces the person reading it to pay attention.
    • Your headline could be something shocking, strange, emotionally compelling, or exciting - it doesn't matter, as long as it grabs the reader. For example,
      • Write something mysterious: Don't be happy, be terrified.
      • Write something people can't pass up: Get 75% off a ticket to Paris.
      • Write something emotional: She has 2 weeks to live
    • method 4
    • Don't start with a question. You might be able to get away with a highly creative and compelling rhetorical question, but stay away from your standard "Do you need a new car?" type of opener. Consumers have already read thousands of similar questions, and they're tired of being asked. You'll have to dig a little deeper to capture their attention. Find a creative way to tell people that you have what they need without asking an obvious question.
    • method 5 
    • Write a bridge to keep them reading. The next line after your headline is your short, sweet chance to create a solid impression of your company in the minds of your audience. After your mysterious/shocking/emotional headline, you need to follow up with something substantive - otherwise, your headline will be perceived as mere hype.[4] Use the bridge to tell the consumer what need your product can fill.
    • Touch on the major benefits your product will bring the consumer.[5] Your bridge should contain your strongest selling points.
    • Tip: Remember that every word counts. Your bridge language needs to be just as compelling as your headline, because there's still a good chance you could lose people before they get to the end of your ad

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