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Great Print Advertising: Creative Approaches, Strategies, and Tactics

Great Print Advertising: Creative Approaches, Strategies, and Tactics
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Great Print Advertising: Creative Approaches, Strategies, and Tactics

 
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Antin's creative advertising work at Reader's Digest, along with his famous seminars, have earned him a worldwide following. This book is the culmination of his 30 years in the business--ideal for business clients who must know how to critique print ads, as well as for copywriters and art directors who must create them. 75 photos.

 
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Product Details
Author:Anthony Antin
Paperback:247 pages
Publisher:John Wiley & Sons
Publication Date:1993-02
Language:English
ISBN:0471557137
Package Length:10.19 inches
Package Width:7.25 inches
Package Height:0.7 inches
Package Weight:1.5 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 5 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.0
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5Wake up to Antin's ideas  Dec 22, 2009
I've just read the four reviews of Tony Antin's book and I'm shocked at what three of the four reviewers say. The negative reviews come from people who have the idea that advertising is capturing people's attention, without giving much thought to what is the message. That has led to so much crappy, far out advertising today in which you see lots of grungy people and you end up with no idea of what is the product or what it does for you. I have owned the book for several years and have used ideas from it extensively with my clients (I'm a market researcher) because they make sense and they work. And I even have used it in my own company, trying to get subordinates to think about whether they are saying things clearly, both in writing questionnaires and reports of studies.

Wake up someone! I have considered this to be a Bible on good advertising practices for a number of years. This book provides a systematic approach to developing meaningful ads with good messages. In contrast, advertising mostly is just personal opinion with jargon developed over the years to make most purveyors sound brilliant ("reach," "frequency," "hits," etc.)

6 of 7 found the following review helpful:

2He's living in the 1950s  Sep 12, 1999
The ads he advocates (he gives numerous examples in these pages) were bland 25 years ago. TIme has moved on...but Mr. Antin has not. If the idea of advertising is to capture your audience attention, why do what has already been done? What you can see on any UHF station anytime? Mr. Antin apparently doesn't like to be challenged, because there's nothing here a bright twelve year old could not come up with.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

1Sominex by the pages  Oct 02, 1998
Mr. Antin has spouted his views on how advertising should be and at the same time single handedly created copydrones to carry on his boring dictums. Thank God for Luke Sullivan and many other creatives that follow their own drummer and keep this business alive and vibrant. I think this book should have a pillow top cover so when you fall asleep reading it you at least have somewhere to rest your head.

4Customer-centric Advertising Sells  Apr 23, 1998
I read Tony Antin's book. As a print advertising copywriter, I found it very useful because it supports the idea that "customer-centric" advertising is the way to go. Antin doesn't say you can't be creative or memorable. Just the opposite, in fact -- as long as you quickly and clearly communicate the most compelling reasons why the target audience would want your product. I highly recommend the book.

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

2Absolut Waste  Feb 01, 1998
If everyone did what Mr. Antin believes in, advertising would be dull. Duller than it already often is, even. He seems to think that Readers Digest headlines and banal wordplay are the sin qua non of advertising creativity. It's sad that he lectures to members of the business community, and that they apparently take what he says seriously. It explains why so many clients are reactive, imitative, and why their advertising blends together and is quickly forgotton. And why when a company or industry breaks the "rules" they create memorable work (Nike, Got Milk, Porsche, Isuzu). 256 pages of waste.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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