Remember the old joke about the camel? That it's a horse built by a committee? Many of the ads targeting mature consumers these days appear to be built by committee. Chock full of pictures. Lots of messages all at once. You could consider them visual camels. In fact, research into the photo preferences of older adults shows Boomers and beyond want ads that are lean, like thoroughbreds. Released earlier this year, Creating Results Photo Finish survey looked at what styles of imagery were most effective with mature consumers. From the just-turned-40-Gen Xers to the nearing-their-90s Greatest Generation, the majority of respondents agreed on one thing: Single images are more effective than collage-style layouts. As Baby Boomers have grown up, so has advertising. This was one of the first generations to be mass marketed to. (Heck, given the size of the Baby Boom, it was mass everything.) They're savvy consumers -- seen and heard it all. It's easy for these mature consumers to tune out the painstakingly created and pricy advertising. To engage Boomers today you need to appeal to their brains as they are today. In his seminal book, Ageless Marketing, David Wolfe beautifully explains the changes that happen in our brains, bodies and behavior as we age, and what that means for marketing. For example, Wolfe shows clearly that verbal memory declines faster than visual, and that consumers become more right-brain oriented. The right brain is where emotions and memories reside. The right brain works in sensual imagery, not words. What does that mean? A picture will tell your story far more effectively than words. Photos do tell a story -- a complete story that is more quickly perceived by older customers than younger customers. This is one of the great benefits to the way our brains age: mature consumers get the gist faster. In our research, 66% of all respondents chose single-image ads over those featuring multiple photos. This preference grew stronger with age, education and income level. So why are many marketers still churning out ads chock full of small images? Reasons include: