Chantix
Tactics For Slogans To Quit Smoking
Sometimes if you believe in a cause, you do your best to popularize it, and such is the case with people devoted to lessening tobacco use worldwide, encouraging people to stop smoking with slogans, commercials, educational programs, and so on to try to hold back people from lighting up. Finding a way to get people to stop lighting up can be a trial, requiring inventiveness in your campaign. Some campaigns aimed at getting people to stop smoking use slogans in order to give a sort of tag line that directs the spotlight of the campaign.
A campaign to stimulate others to stop smoking uses slogans because they're short, memorable, and easily remembered. But if you're having problems coming up with a slogan, then it might be easier to determine what angle you want to take for your campaign. There are three fields that are good to direct your attentions to: the health profits of quitting for the smoker, the health benefits of quitting for those around the smoker, and the cost benefits of quitting smoking. If you choose to aim your campaign as one of these areas, it'll be a lot easier to focus your brainstorming for a slogan.
The Smoker's Health
If you want to get people to stop smoking with slogans, generally it helps to address to the smoker himself. You can easily use slogans like "Cancer cures smoking" to show in a snappy, memorable message just what will happen to smokers if they go on in their habit. Alternately, you could focus on the benefits of quitting, which include higher quality sense of smell and taste, better working lungs, and a statistical extension in life span. Whether you choose to show the consequences of smoking or the benefits of quitting, appealing to the smoker in your campaign is a good idea.
The Health Of Others
Sometimes, you can not only persuade people to stop smoking with slogans, but you can convince non-smokers to help extent the word of your campaign. Slogans that focus on removing secondhand smoke from the air for the health of others not only pressure smokers to quit, but instructs non-smokers on possible health risks from living with smokers. This can encourage some to make a bid for their smoking friends and family to kick the habit, essentially recruiting people to spread the word of your campaign.
Saving cash
Sometimes an appeal about the health benefits of quitting just doesn't work, and so there you can appeal to a smoker's wallet alternatively, convincing them to stop smoking with slogans that talk about the price of cigarettes. While not usually as hard-hitting as health-related slogans, a campaign focused on the cost can indeed lower cigarette usage, just as laws increasing prices on cigarettes, such as the ones in New York City increasing the tax on cigarettes, help to curb smoking. By starting with this or the other two angles listed, you can direct your artistic energies to finding a way to get a snappy slogan to persuade people to stop smoking.
