Everyone's heard the saying, "A picture is worth a thousand words," but is it even close to true? And should you be striving harder to include good photographs in your planned giving marketing materials and on your Web site? Well, let's start by listening to one of the world's experts on the impact of visual imagery:
"The printed word is very convenient, and it's worked very well for us for 5,000 years; but it's an invention of human beings," says Marcel Just, the director of the Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, in an interview with Harvard University's Nieman Foundation. "By contrast, Mother Nature has built into our brain our ability to see the visual world and interpret it. In many cases a picture is worth a thousand words. I think it's inevitable that visual media are going to become more important in conveying ideas."
But not just any photograph will do
Many studies have shown that photographs and graphics enhance the readership of articles across all media. But you do have to select your pictures with care. Russell James, planned giving researcher from Texas Tech University, found that photographs of donors are effective when the donor appears to be close in age to those viewing the photograph—but can actually have a negative impact when the donor appears to be from a different generation than the viewer.
However, using photographs depicting younger members of a generation can be especially effective: other research has found that Baby Boomers—currently ages 52-70 and soon to be the largest group of planned givers—perceive themselves as 10-15 years younger than they actually are. So they are likely to respond better to photographs of youthful-looking Boomers who might be in their early 50s.
Key characteristics of a good photograph
In addition to meeting technical specifications, these qualities make for the best pictures:
Here are some more tips on photographs derived from eye-tracking research studies: