Johnson Box

A Johnson Box is a box commonly found at the top of direct mail letters, containing the key message of the letter. The purpose of it is to draw the reader's attention to this key message first, and hopefully grab their attention, enticing them to read the rest of the letter.[1]

A Johnson Box is very effective, but it lends a "salesy" air to a letter, and so is considered inappropriate for letters that are intended to be formal or personal.[2]

It has also been adapted to the email format, having the additional benefit of allowing the most important message in the email to be visible in the preview pane of an email reader.[3]

The Johnson Box is named after direct marketer Frank Johnson, who is credited with using the Johnson Box to improve response to his offers for American Heritage magazine. He does not claim credit for creating the device, claiming to have only popularized it.[4]

The Johnson Box has since "evolved" by use. It is often used at the middle of the page, particularly to highlight a testimony or an important sentence from the writing. It is now even used to surround an order form at the bottom right of the page which re-iterates the benefit and offer.

References

  1. Bruce Mayhew Consulting Communication Training
  2. The Product Marketing Handbook For Software
  3. ClickZ Network
  4. Melissa Data

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 23, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.