Friday, October 5, 2012

Simple and Unexpected

In our reading for this week, Heath and Heath discussed the principles of simplicity and unexpectedness. I want to draw attention to this anti-smoking ad that I think uses those principles well.


Everyone knows that smoking is bad for you, even people who smoke. It's common sense at this point because people have heard the phrase over and over again. But as Heath and Heath discuss, common sense isn't memorable. We already know it, so having it repeated to us over and over again, just makes our eyes gloss over and our ears turn off. "We know it already. You don't need to tell us again!"

So instead of trying to reinforce the idea that smoking is bad, this ad used surprise to convince adults to quit smoking. Children walked up to the smoking adults and asked if they could have a light (a surprising situation in and of itself). The adults immediately started telling the kids why they shouldn't smoke, and the kids handed the adults a slip of paper.

"You worry about me, but what about yourself?"

This, I think holds both surprise and simplicity. The surprise comes in when the adults have their own logic turned upon themselves. They hadn't expected it. And simplicity is in the message "care about yourself." All of the adults kept their papers. Most threw away their cigarette, and the hotline saw a 40% increase in calls to quit smoking.

The message stuck because of the simple message and the use of surprise.

No comments:

Post a Comment