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Your Online Guide » Advertising & Marketing » How to Make a Brochure

What Do Brochures Need To Do?
by Lynne Saarte, Lyn
Unlike most other forms of marketing a brochure cannot be ready in the span of a few seconds. This is a rather large difference between brochures and most advertisements. If you think about most of the advertising you typically see they are almost always very short and to the point. All you need to do is glance at them in order to understand exactly what they have to say.

But brochure printing came about for a reason, because not all marketing messages are going to be that short. The truth is that people are willing to read more and offer your advertising a lot more of their attention than you might expect, but you have to give them something that is worth giving that much attention to.

The first thing to look at with brochure printing is how fast a person can understand the base information from your brochure. What I mean here is that when a person glances through your brochure, they will not come away with everything it says, but can they understand the basic points being made?

To accomplish this you need to have strong headlines that define what the section is going to be about. You need a overall title on the front of your full color brochure that both grabs their attention and lets them know what they're going to find inside. You are telling them ahead of time what they are in for, which will encourage them to devote some time to read more.

As I hinted at with the last point, images are just as important to brochure printing as they are to any other form of advertising. Most brochures are not going to be completely centered around images, but that does not mean you should not use them to entice a person. People are visual when it comes to understanding information, and the more visual an advertisement is the better they will be able to get into it.

Remember also that because brochures are so text heavy you have to pay careful attention to how effective your writing is. This is about conveying a larger chunk of information in a very efficient manner. Too often the writing in brochures becomes very long-winded because someone was stretching a short message out over a longer brochure.

On the reverse, do not cram so much information into your brochure that people are sifting through too much text and too many different points. Try to have a single theme to focus on and three or four main points. Do not go too far over that or else you will find your brochures become a little too packed in.

If you are not sure when you need to use brochures, just outline your message and see how long it is. If it looks like you would need two or three pages of text to talk about all of your points, you should start looking into brochure printing for your marketing.
Lynne Saarte has sinced written about articles on various topics from Site Promotion, Business Cards and Ezines And Newsletters. For comments and inquiries about the article visit: . Lynne Saarte's top article generates over 14800 views. to your Favourites.
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