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Defining%20Modern%20Advertising

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Title: Defining%20Modern%20Advertising


1
Defining Modern Advertising
  • A complex form of communication using objectives
    and strategies to impact consumer thoughts,
    feelings, and actions.
  • A form of marketing communication (all the
    techniques marketers use to reach their customers
    and deliver their messages).

2
Defining Modern Advertising
  • Five Basic Factors of Advertising
  • Paid communication
  • Sponsor is identified
  • Tries to inform or persuade
  • Reaches a large audience
  • Message conveyed through many different kinds of
    largely nonpersonal mass media

Principle An effective advertisement is one
that can be proven to meet its objectives.
3
Four Components of Advertising
4
Four Components of Advertising
  • 1. Advertising Strategy
  • The strategy is the logic and planning behind the
    ad that gives it direction.
  • Advertisers develop ads to meet objectives.
  • Advertisers direct ads to identified audiences.
  • Advertisers create a message that speaks to the
    audiences concerns.
  • Advertisers run ads in the most effective media.

5
Four Components of Advertising
  • 2. Creative Idea
  • The creative concept is the central idea that
    grabs the consumers attention and sticks in
    memory.
  • Planning strategy requires creative problem
    solving.
  • Research involves creativity.
  • Buying and placing ads requires creative thinking.

6
Four Components of Advertising
  • 3. Creative Execution
  • Effective ads are well executed reflecting the
    highest production values in the industry.
  • Clients demand the best production the budget
    allows.

7
Four Components of Advertising
  • 4. Media Planning/Buying
  • Television, Internet, magazines, and other media
    are used to reach a broad audience.
  • Deciding how to deliver the message requires
    creativity.

Principle In advertising how you say something
and where you say it is just as important as what
you say.
8
Four Roles of Advertising
  • 1. The Marketing Role
  • Marketing is satisfying customer wants and needs
    by providing products (goods, services, and
    ideas).
  • The marketing department is responsible for
    selling the product using the 4 Ps (product,
    price, place/distribution, and promotion) and
    brand development.

Principle A product can be services and ideas
as well as goods.
9
Four Roles of Advertising
  • 2. The Communication Role
  • Advertising is a message to a consumer about a
    product, designed to create a response.
  • It is also a form of marketing communication.
  • Advertising uses mass communication to transmit
    product information to connect buyers and sellers
    in them marketplace.

Principle One of advertisings most important
strengths is its ability to reach a large
audience.
10

Table 1.1 The Strengths of Advertising
Examples A commercial in the Super Bowl can
reach more than 100 million consumers. The
1984 commercial for the Apple McIntosh sold out
the entire inventory in one day. The success of
the launch of the iPod was due in part to the
great silhouette posters that showed people
dancing to the music on their iPods. The success
of the new VW Beetle was largely built on its
ability to connect with the anti-status image of
the original lowly Beetle. The truth campaign
informs teens that Tobacco kills 1,200 people a
day. Procter Gambles Ivory Soap has been
advertised continuously since the late
1800s. Nike campaigns, with the Just do it
personal achievement message, have helped
increase sales by 300 percent during the 1990s.
Strengths Can reach a large audience Introduces
products and brands Builds awareness of
products and brands Creates brand
images Provides information Reminds and
reinforces Persuades
11
Four Roles of Advertising
  • 3. The Economic Role
  • Because it reaches large groups of people,
    advertising makes marketing more cost-efficient
    and lowers prices for consumers.
  • Advertising creates a demand for a brand using
    hard sell (persuading) and soft sell (image
    building) techniques.

12
The Economic Role
Advertising is a means to objectively provide
price-value information, creating a more rational
economy.
13
Four Roles of Advertising
  • 4. The Societal Role
  • Informs consumers about innovations and issues
  • Helps us compare products and features
  • Mirrors fashion and design trends
  • Teaches consumers about new products and how to
    use them
  • Helps shape consumer self-image
  • Facilitates self-expression through purchases
  • Presents images about diversity in our world

14
Types of Advertising
  • Brand Advertising
  • Focused on long-term brand identity and image
  • Retail or Local Advertising
  • Focused on selling merchandise in a geographical
    area
  • Direct Response Advertising
  • Tries to stimulate a sale directly
  • Business-to-Business
  • Sent from one business to another

Principle All types of advertising demand
creative, original messages that are
strategically sound and well executed.
15
Types of Advertising
  • Institutional Advertising
  • Focused on establishing a corporate identity or
    winning the public over to the organizations
    point of view
  • Nonprofit Advertising
  • Used by nonprofits like charities, associations,
    hospitals, orchestras, museums, and churches for
    customer, members, volunteers, and donors
  • Public Service Advertising
  • Usually produced and run for free on behalf of a
    good cause

16
The Key Players the Advertiser
  • Wants to send out a message about its business
  • Initiates effort by identifying a problem that
    advertising can solve
  • Selects the target audience, sets the budget, and
    approves the ad plan
  • Hires the agency
  • Agency of record (AOR) does the most business
    manages other agencies

17
Top Ten U.S. Advertising Categories1. Telecom2.
Auto, Non-Domestic3. Local Services and
Amusements4. Financial Services5. Miscellaneous
Retail6. Auto, Domestic7. Direct Response8.
Personal Care9. Travel Tourism10.
Pharmaceuticals
18
Top Ten U.S. Advertisers1. Proctor Gamble2.
General Motors3. ATT4. Verizon
Communications5. Time Warner6. Ford Motor
Company7. Walt Disney8. Daimler Chrysler9.
Johnson Johnson10. News Corp
19
Key Players Agency
  • Agencies have the strategic and creative
    expertise, media knowledge, talent, and
    negotiating abilities to operate more efficiently
    than the advertiser.
  • Some large advertisers have in-house departments.

20
Key Players Media
  • Media are channels of communication that carry
    the message to the audience
  • Theyre vehicles, but also large media
    conglomerates like Time Warner and Viacom.

Principle Mass media advertising can be cost
effective because the costs are spread over the
large number of people the ad reaches.
21
Key Players Suppliers
  • Group of service organizations that assist
    advertisers, agencies, and the media in creating
    and placing ads by providing specialized services
  • Artists, writers, photographers, directors,
    producers, printers, freelancers, and consultants

Insert
22
Key Players Target Audiences
  • People to whom an ad is directedtheir responses
    determine if advertising is effective.
  • Targeting is the process of identifying the
    people in the desired audience.
  • Interactive technology allows ads to be
    customized to the target audiences individual
    needs.

23
Current Developments
  • The New Advertising
  • Electronic media are making advertising more
    intimate, interactive, and personalized.
  • Advertising must evolve to keep up with
    technology.
  • Creativity involves more than just the ads big
    idea, but finding new ways to engage consumers
    beyond traditional mass media.

24
Current Developments
  • Interactivity
  • Buzz is getting people to talk about the event,
    idea or brand.
  • People contact companies by phone, the Internet,
    and through friends.
  • Advertising must change to also become more
    interactive.

25
Current Developments
  • Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC)
  • IMC means unifying all marketing communication
    messages and tools to send a consistent,
    persuasive message promoting the brands goals.
  • Stakeholders are also important in IMC.
  • Synergy means messages have more impact working
    jointly than on their own.

26
Current Developments
  • Globalization
  • The elimination of trade barriers in the 1990s
    opened huge international markets.
  • Agencies are forming multinational operations to
    to address these markets.
  • Should advertisers practice local or global
    advertising?

27
Current Developments
  • What makes an ad effective?
  • Gets attention
  • Creates a positive impression for a brand
  • Separates the brand from the competition
  • Influences people to respond in the desired way

Principle An ad that worksthat is effectiveis
one where the target audience responds as the
advertiser intended.
28
Advertising and Ethics
  • Proponents
  • Encourages a standard of living improvement
  • Produces jobs
  • Promotes competition
  • Critics
  • Creates needs and faults
  • More propaganda than information
  • Promotes materialism

29
Ethics in Promotion
  • Not all issues can be regulated
  • A marketing or promotion action may be legal but
    not considered ethical
  • Marketers must make decisions regarding the
    appropriateness of their actions
  • Companies are scrutinized for their ethics

30
Social and Ethical Criticisms of Promotion
  • Advertising as untruthful or deceptive
  • Advertising as offensive or in bad taste
  • Advertising of personal productsSexual appeals
  • Advertising and Children
  • Social and Cultural ConsequencesMaking people
    buy things they dont needEncouraging
    materialismStereotypingAdvertisings influence
    on the media

31
Social and Ethical Criticisms of Promotion
  • Advertising as untruthful or deceptive
  • General mistrust of ads
  • Deliberately untruthful or misleading vs.
    puffery
  • Problems often more at local level rather than
    national

32
Puffery Some Examples
Presentations that praise the item to be sold
with subjective opinions, superlatives, or
exaggerations, vaguely and generally, stating no
specific facts
33
Social and Ethical Criticisms of Promotion
  • Advertising as offensive, in bad taste, or
    irritating
  • Advertising of personal products
  • Sexual appeals
  • ??Suggestive, demeaning, raunchy

34
Children and Promotion
  • Children's TV Watching Behavior
  • Children between ages 2-11 watch on average 21.5
    hours of TV per week and may see 22,000
    commercials per year
  • Television is an important source of information
    for children about products

35
Children and Promotion
  • Some studies have shown
  • Children lack experience and knowledge to
    evaluate advertising critically
  • They can not differentiate between commercials
    and program (fantasy vs. reality)
  • Children are vulnerable to advertising

36
Children and Promotion
  • while other studies argue that
  • Children must learn through the consumer
    socialization process need to acquire skills to
    function in the marketplace
  • Acquired skills have helped teens evaluate ads
    and recognize persuasion techniques

37
Ethical Issues in Packaging and Branding
  • Four Aspects
  • 1) Label information
  • 2) Packaging graphics
  • 3) Packaging safety
  • 4) Environmental implications

38
Ethical Issues in Online Marketing
  • Overlap with ethics on advertising and promotions
  • Privacy is the most important ethical issue with
    online marketing
  • Invade individuals privacy rights by selling
    information to other sources without the
    consumers consent

39
Fostering Ethical Marketing Communications
  • Act in a way that you would want others to act
    toward you

The Golden Rule
Take only actions that would be viewed as proper
by an objective panel of your professional colleag
ues
The Professional Ethics
Would l feel comfortable explaining this action
on television to the general public?
The TV test
40
When is Regulation Justified - Benefits
  • Consumer choice among alternatives is improved
    when consumers are better informed
  • Product quality tends to improve in response to
    consumers changing needs and preferences
  • Reduced prices resulting from a reduction in a
    sellers informational market power

41
When is Regulation Justified - Costs
  • Companies incur the cost of complying with a
    regulatory remedy
  • Enforcement costs incurred by regulatory agencies
    and paid for by taxpayers
  • Unintended side effects result from regulations
    at a cost to both buyers and sellers

42
Regulation of Deceptive Advertising
  • FTC will find a business practice
  • deceptive if there is a representation,
  • omission or practice that is likely to
  • mislead the consumer acting
  • reasonably in the circumstances, to
  • the consumers detriment.

43
Regulation of Unfair Practices
  • Three major areas
  • Offends public policy as it has been established
    by statutes
  • Is immoral, unethical, oppressive, or
    unscrupulous
  • Causes substantial injury to consumers,
    competitors, or other businesses.

44
Suing Competitors
45
Unfair Advertising
  • Acts or practices that cause or are likely to
    cause substantial injury to consumers, which is
    not reasonably avoidable by consumers themselves
    and not outweighed by countervailing benefits to
    consumers or competition.

46
Regulation of Product Labeling
  • Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
  • Responsible for regulating information on the
    packages of food and drug products
  • Responsible for regulating ads for prescription
    drugs
  • Requires advertisers to present a balanced
    perspective when advertising drugs

47
Stereotyping
  • Portrayal of women
  • Gender stereotyping
  • Portrayal of women as sex objects
  • Role portrayal of women to reflect changing role
    in society
  • Blacks and Hispanics
  • Gays
  • Elderly

48
Do You Agree With Leo Burnett?
  • It must be said that without advertising we
    would have a far different nation, and one that
    would be much the poorer-not merely in material
    commodities, but in the life of the spirit.
  • These excerpters are from a speech given by Leo
    Burnett on the American Association or
    Advertising Agencies 50th anniversary, April
    20,1967

49
Business Actions Toward Socially Responsible
Marketing
  • Enlightened Marketing
  • Enlightened marketing refers to a companys
    marketing effort supporting the best long-run
    performance of the marketing system and consists
    of five principles
  • Consumer-oriented marketing
  • Customer-value marketing
  • Innovative marketing
  • Sense-of-mission marketing
  • Societal marketing

50
Business Actions Toward Socially Responsible
Marketing
  • Enlightened Marketing
  • Consumer-oriented marketing means that a company
    should view and organize its marketing activities
    from the consumers perspective
  • Customer-value marketing means that the company
    should put most of its resources into
    customer-value-building marketing
    investmentslong-term customer loyalty and
    relationshipsby continually improving the value
    consumers receive from the firms market
    offerings
  • Innovative marketing requires the company to
    continually seek real product and marketing
    improvements

51
Business Actions Toward Socially Responsible
Marketing
  • Enlightened Marketing
  • Sense-of-mission marketing means the company
    should define its mission in broad social terms
    rather than narrow product terms
  • Societal marketing means the company makes
    marketing decisions by considering consumers
    wants and interests, the companys requirements,
    and societys long-run interests
  • Views societal problems as opportunities
  • Designs pleasing and beneficial products

52
Business Actions Toward Socially Responsible
Marketing
  • Enlightened Marketing
  • Deficient products have neither immediate appeal
    nor long-term benefits
  • Bad-tasting and ineffective medicine
  • Pleasing products have high immediate
    satisfaction but may hurt consumers in the long
    run
  • Cigarettes and junk food

53
Business Actions Toward Socially Responsible
Marketing
  • Enlightened Marketing
  • Salutary products have low appeal but may benefit
    consumers in the long run
  • Seat belts and air bags
  • Desirable products give both immediate
    satisfaction and high long-term benefits
  • Tasty and nutritious breakfast food
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