Kitchen gadgets come in an endless variety. So many of them appear to have a singular purpose.
Empanada maker. Salad spinner. Spiralizer. Avocado slicer. Watermelon slicer. Tomato slicer. Apple corer.
The list goes on and on and on.
Yet when you begin to cook your own food, read recipes or pick up a book about the craft of cooking, there are invariably just two tools you must have (in addition to a stove/oven)—a sharp knife and a sturdy pan.
That's it. Two items can help you prepare the vast majority of food you'll consume.
Your ability to use those items to create something delicious then relies on the ingredients you use, your skill with them which is often based on experience and practice, and your imagination.
You do know you don't have to stick to a recipe word for word, right? Unless you're baking, and that's when the chemistry involved is more precise.
Advertising is the same.
You need art.
You need copy.
You need attention to craft and the ability to generate mountains of ideas.
Banner ads. Billboards. Brochures. Content marketing stories. Long form print. Online video. Radio. Short form print. Social media ads or posts. TV. Websites. White papers.
The specific medium doesn't matter. If you're a copywriter, you can write ads in any format. If you're an art director, you can design in any format.
The fundamentals don't change.
Only the way the "experts" pitch them to clients and make hiring decisions change.
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