ForTheArborist
Addicted to ArboristSite
Advertising use to be simple. It used to apply right to the genuine senses of awe. A finely crafted sign or ornamental structure said so much to the human appreciation senses that the phoneys are only trying to say today. And that worked for hundreds of years. It's no different now.
Advertising now seems so much like a kids game of colorful, fruity, one liners based in deception not genuine commitment to integrity and service. On top of that, there is so much of it that it's a pain to look through it all to find what you want and is safe to do business with. That would be a fine service with a fine experience included.
My honest opinion about this whole market is like it's one big tree with each of its leaves being an advertisement. The problem is the leaves are piled up so high around the tree that the tree is completely blocked by the leaves.
People are offering services missing the point that service is a service not a gangster hit on the community for all the dough. People that have the money for services are kind of being marginalized with the idea that a service is based in part to the human sense of willfully contributing to people's well being, and so customers are being forced to be skeptics about all services' intentions. That's because nobody wants to be de-pantsed by some "sociopathic outsider" with a license to stiff people out of their money while calling it all "a business." Business is something between human beings not sociopaths degenerates and human beings.
So anyway, I'm one to think that I should take out all of the high techy looks of the ads, and take things back a notch to the way advertising was done before this world wide panoramic collage of advertising was started. I'm going to do a little research in the area of how a person's presence to the community was made known for the past hundreds of years, and mix it in with what is going on in our times now. It's kind of like "organic advertising" as opposed to "fast food advertising."
I'm thinking a website should look simple, like the commonly known book's pages. Anybody able to make money can grasp that. I'm sticking with the basic but classical colors like leather, wood, gold, silver, and bronze in the trims. Artistic creation not photographs or computer generated imagery, and I mean art that make any mind have to wonder how was somebody able to craft something so well finished. They'll intuitively know it was something done by an absolutely patient and masterful hand. "Like gold coins on the pages, and no need for more than that."
And that would be that. Let the rest happen on its own. People will naturally go for what is being offered in the most respectful and dignified way unlike the what the colorful advertising zoo of forceful ads does to everybody. And ya, that's just it. It needs to do for someone not to someone or at someone. It might take a trick or two to pull that one off.
Advertising now seems so much like a kids game of colorful, fruity, one liners based in deception not genuine commitment to integrity and service. On top of that, there is so much of it that it's a pain to look through it all to find what you want and is safe to do business with. That would be a fine service with a fine experience included.
My honest opinion about this whole market is like it's one big tree with each of its leaves being an advertisement. The problem is the leaves are piled up so high around the tree that the tree is completely blocked by the leaves.
People are offering services missing the point that service is a service not a gangster hit on the community for all the dough. People that have the money for services are kind of being marginalized with the idea that a service is based in part to the human sense of willfully contributing to people's well being, and so customers are being forced to be skeptics about all services' intentions. That's because nobody wants to be de-pantsed by some "sociopathic outsider" with a license to stiff people out of their money while calling it all "a business." Business is something between human beings not sociopaths degenerates and human beings.
So anyway, I'm one to think that I should take out all of the high techy looks of the ads, and take things back a notch to the way advertising was done before this world wide panoramic collage of advertising was started. I'm going to do a little research in the area of how a person's presence to the community was made known for the past hundreds of years, and mix it in with what is going on in our times now. It's kind of like "organic advertising" as opposed to "fast food advertising."
I'm thinking a website should look simple, like the commonly known book's pages. Anybody able to make money can grasp that. I'm sticking with the basic but classical colors like leather, wood, gold, silver, and bronze in the trims. Artistic creation not photographs or computer generated imagery, and I mean art that make any mind have to wonder how was somebody able to craft something so well finished. They'll intuitively know it was something done by an absolutely patient and masterful hand. "Like gold coins on the pages, and no need for more than that."
And that would be that. Let the rest happen on its own. People will naturally go for what is being offered in the most respectful and dignified way unlike the what the colorful advertising zoo of forceful ads does to everybody. And ya, that's just it. It needs to do for someone not to someone or at someone. It might take a trick or two to pull that one off.