Why does it make sense for an advertiser to buy magazine ad space? After all, hasn’t the advent of the internet killed off the magazine industry? Why would an organization look at going in for magazine advertisements for their brands when no one reads anymore as everyone would have us believe?
Well, try and remember the last time you were at the airport or at the railway station or caught a tube. Did you notice what your fellow travellers carried with them during their journey or how they spent their time while waiting? You would have seen some of them fiddling about on their smart-phones or tablets or laptops, some of them staring blankly into space or into the television console with or without a pair of headphones plugged in, while the rest of them READ! Those who were reading either had a newspaper or a book and if you looked closely enough, you would have seen that a vast majority of them held magazines! So now do you believe that the world of magazines is dead?
Unlike newspapers, the editorial content of magazines usually adhere to a specific theme for example, political topics, gardening, motor racing, interior decoration, sports, finance and so on. Readers buy magazines which are in keeping with their areas of interest. From an advertiser’s point of view this is a gift, because an advertiser knows in advance what profile of customers read which magazine, so the time and cost of research is saved. Secondly, it is far easier to track the impact of a magazine advertisement because the buyers of the magazine are known beforehand.
Readers of magazines usually take time to go through the contents closely quite unlike the manner in which they just browse through newspapers or websites. A well-presented advertisement in a magazine does get its fair amount of eye-space and attention and it cannot be muted or flipped over with a remote, thereby making an investment in magazine ad space a prudent decision for an advertiser.
Compared to newspapers and internet content or even TV and radio shows, magazines enjoy a greater shelf-life and are read over by multiple readers thereby ensuring that the magazine advertisement has a multiple reach and hence increasing the probability of a potential buyer actually seeing the advertisement and making a decision to purchase the product being advertised. Advertising in a magazine makes it possible for the advertiser to actually track the impact of every dollar spent in running the ad.
Would you now still believe that to advertise in a magazine or buying magazine ad space is a waste of time, money and effort?
Well, try and remember the last time you were at the airport or at the railway station or caught a tube. Did you notice what your fellow travellers carried with them during their journey or how they spent their time while waiting? You would have seen some of them fiddling about on their smart-phones or tablets or laptops, some of them staring blankly into space or into the television console with or without a pair of headphones plugged in, while the rest of them READ! Those who were reading either had a newspaper or a book and if you looked closely enough, you would have seen that a vast majority of them held magazines! So now do you believe that the world of magazines is dead?
Unlike newspapers, the editorial content of magazines usually adhere to a specific theme for example, political topics, gardening, motor racing, interior decoration, sports, finance and so on. Readers buy magazines which are in keeping with their areas of interest. From an advertiser’s point of view this is a gift, because an advertiser knows in advance what profile of customers read which magazine, so the time and cost of research is saved. Secondly, it is far easier to track the impact of a magazine advertisement because the buyers of the magazine are known beforehand.
Readers of magazines usually take time to go through the contents closely quite unlike the manner in which they just browse through newspapers or websites. A well-presented advertisement in a magazine does get its fair amount of eye-space and attention and it cannot be muted or flipped over with a remote, thereby making an investment in magazine ad space a prudent decision for an advertiser.
Compared to newspapers and internet content or even TV and radio shows, magazines enjoy a greater shelf-life and are read over by multiple readers thereby ensuring that the magazine advertisement has a multiple reach and hence increasing the probability of a potential buyer actually seeing the advertisement and making a decision to purchase the product being advertised. Advertising in a magazine makes it possible for the advertiser to actually track the impact of every dollar spent in running the ad.
Would you now still believe that to advertise in a magazine or buying magazine ad space is a waste of time, money and effort?