Brian R
Member
What do you think?
Both cards look nice , we have a car dealership that advertises like that on their billboards. Depending what area of town you are in will depend on who you see on that bill boardBrian Robison said:This ones for the Ghetto
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Is that wrong??
rhino1 said:looks really nice, just a thought:
cleaner: how or why would you get carpets cleaner? How about something like Our expert stain removal ensures you get the best cleaning possible.....
better: how are you better?
healthier: again, same question, and why should the prospect care?
Just making claims to be better than somebody else without backing them up or adding details that show some benefit to the prospect is seems like an empty promise.
Steven Hoodlebrink said:Keep it.
The top states who you are, next I see you message of what you provide. Then you ask a question that will psychologically make them think of their kids and entice them to call you so they can have a cleaner home.(the picture helps this) And lastly you're showing them how to contact you.
Looks good Brian, and good move reversing the picture a much smoother transition indeed.
Ron K said:Brian looks good. It's a nice clean easy read, I wouldn't put "Call for Appointment" on an angle. "giant health filter" ? maybe giant air cleaner....air filter....air purifier ?
Also is there space to mail these and put a stamp. Just a thought. They do look really nice I would use a heavy weight paper stock. Some cards look good but feel cheap because the paper is thin.
The simple solution to that is to put the phone number on BOTH sides of the postcard.Dave Yoakum said:If you are going to mail the card make sure that the post office doesn't cover up your phone number with their bar code. The best copy on a card is worthless if the phone number is obliterated by the post office.
Dave