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Does Your Company Tag Line Pass These Five Crucial Tests?

Article Description:
====================

After looking at the many disastrous slogans that state tourism
boards have happily paid tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars
for, I suggest replacing the "feel-good" test with five much
more grounded criteria. When you're trying to decide on the best
tag line to accompany your organization' s name on the web site,
brochures, business cards, stationery, ads, mugs and mouse pads,
make sure your winner passes these five tests.


Additional Article Information:
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504 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-07-16 11:48:00

Written By:     Marcia Yudkin
Copyright:      2009
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]


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Does Your Company Tag Line Pass These Five Crucial Tests?
Copyright (c) 2009 Marcia Yudkin
Creative Marketing Solutions
http://www.yudkin.com/



Judging from the many disastrous slogans that state tourism
boards have happily paid tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars
for, even marketing professionals often use totally subjective
criteria to select tag lines. Do we like it? Is it catchy and
memorable? Does it make us feel good?

I suggest replacing the "feel-good" test with five much more
grounded criteria. When you're trying to decide on the best tag
line to accompany your organization's name on the web site,
brochures, business cards, stationery, ads, mugs and mouse pads,
make sure your winner passes these five tests.

1. Does it apply to you and not to competitors? Few people would
match "Great Potatoes. Tasty Destinations." to any other state
than Idaho. But there's nothing in "Worth a Visit, Worth a
Lifetime" to indicate Maine any more than Minnesota, Michigan or
Montana. If your tag line does not highlight something
distinctive about your company, it's not making much of a
difference to prospective customers, either.

2. Does it have nothing but positive connotations? I'm baffled
about how "Seize the Day Off" is supposed to reflect well on
Maryland. Are all the jobs in that state so horrible that
everyone there lives for the weekend? Likewise, "Things Look
Different Here" could equally be taken as a bad thing as a good
thing about Oregon, which used that slogan for many years.

3. Does it have emotional oomph? "Greatest Snow on Earth" is
certainly an energetic advertisement for Utah. Similarly,
Kentucky's "Unbridled Spirit," which refers to its
horse-related traditions, has emotional strength. Your tag line
should convey energy rather than being flat and factual.

4. Are the tone and content appropriate for the target market?
The District of Columbia has had "Taxation Without
Representation" on its license plates, which functions well as
an activist slogan for its own residents. But for tourists, that
slogan would come across as bombastic and irrelevant. Always keep
your target market firmly in mind when generating and screening
tag lines. You are not writing it for yourselves but for those
you want to attract.

5. Do you have good reasons for wanting to replace the previous
tag line? Don't toss it in the trash just because you are tired
of it. Remember that because you undoubtedly hear and see your
own tag line much more than your target market does, you may get
tired of it years sooner than they will. It's very rare for a
state to keep a successful slogan alive for more than a decade
because politicians and tourism officials get more and more itchy
to put their mark on their entity's branding. That's a very bad
reason to change. If the audience has stopped responding to it,
or it has begun to be ridiculed - those are good reasons to look
for a new tag line.

When you weigh your favorite tag lines with these five tests, you
reduce the chances of choosing one that exposes your organization
to ridicule. You boost the chances of coming out a winner. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Marcia Yudkin is Head Stork of Named At Last, a company that 
brainstorms creative business names, product names and tag lines 
for clients.  For a systematic process of coming up with an 
appealing and effective name or tag line, download a free copy of
"19 Steps to the Perfect Company Name, Product Name or Tag Line" 
at http://www.namedatlast.com/19steps.htm


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