Sometimes I like the sentance structur, and other times, capatalizing 3-4 words in a line make them stand out more. All depends on how you're trying to capture your audience.
* Whatever you decide to do, be consistent.
* Make your ads look as professional as possible.
I say this because all a potential customer knows about you is what they see in your ad. If they see a choppy and inconsistent ad, they may assume that you are not particularly professional, and decided not to do business with you.
I recommend you put yourselves in the position of your customer. This means forgetting everything you know about your business.
Now, take a look at your ads. What do they say about your company? Would you do business with the people who wrote the ad - keeping in mind that what you see in the ad is 100% of what you know about that business?
It may be just me, but I'm not likely to do business with a company that can't spell the name of their product, or who has written an ad with capitalization that is all over the map.
Subconsciously, I make the assumption that an unprofessional ad equals an unprofessional company. And I will not be sending my credit card number to an unprofessional company.
AWA
Subconsciously, I make the assumption that an unprofessional ad equals an unprofessional company. And I will not be sending my credit card number to an unprofessional company.
AWA got it spot on.
The whole post just shows why SOME internet only companies run by 1 man bands make fortunes out of paid internet advertising, whilst big corporations get nowhere.
THINK of the user.
Shak