addadude:"Besides, an ad is 80% visual, 20% copy"
I believe a slight misunderstanding may have taken place, I think when the other guys are saying it's 80% visual, and 20% copy, are basically meaning...eye contact before anything else, it maybe pictures or text, it is still eye contact, one needs to attract.
My other point would be, that professionalism and expertise can be very difficult to measure, if one doesn't know, the occupation, and everyone see themselves as the expert.
Like art in general, the painter paints for himself, and the consumers like it or not, their are literally millions of artists out there, and only a handful, are able to have influence to earn a living, locally, for the advertiser, he needs to be looking from the consumers perspective, of emotional, humoristic, educational, secure, needs and wants, wavelength! I think maybe the maslow pyramid also applies in the concept of design.
My point is, that even a great piece of advertising maybe subject to zero votes, by many consumers, because they don't get the message, although the main point of the exercise is to target a group to sell products...for most clients, it's a shot in the dark, and trust in a advertisers abilities, become the main area of discussion.
By having a little knowledge and interest background, in consumerism and psychology, it does help to identify a person selling his abilities, I play around quite a lot with my own skills of art & design, and quite often ask friends, in the business, to see, what they think..guaranteed it will always be, changed, and they will say, well what do you think of that, and on many occasions, it's been an improvement.
Although i am never 100% happy with my finished designs, I ask myself if it will do the job it's supposed to do....what I dislike, in advertising, is the trend setters, that are stealing the concepts of others, without any real creative skills used. The yard stick of advertising soon becomes a mile long, with so many punters, to choose from, so applying my own thoughts, helps me, to be satisfied, with the requirements in an advertisement, where many corporate marketing professionals, may not even have the ability to apply their theory, of advertising, and must rely on trust.
My serious question to any professional would be, "How do you know, you have the right advertiser for the job"?
My instinct tells, me the word passion, along with the ability to express in colours and out of the box, idea's is a good starter, my attention needs to be attracted to listening, to the sales pitch, I can then know, at least we are on the same wavelength, with all the relevant points, turning up, in a conversation.
But like I say, I am no professional in advertising, so it would be very rewarding to get an opinion of, how does a professional advertiser, choose another advertiser, from his own perspective, and his he critical of the finished product.
Dumbing down is also needed for mass market attention, it's the difference between the layman knowledge and professional subject area.
My wife who is a skilled academic, doesn't have a clue, when it comes to creativity, because her skills have never been developed, and that, sadly to say, is quite often, in the case of Chinese, due to the cultural demands of a child parents to concentrate on subjects, that are more likely to support the family, although this is changing, especially so here in Singapore, where creative expression is now well in development, although still a minority of parents adopt, creative arts, for their children.