Intro to Marketing Lecture 2
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Transcript of Intro to Marketing Lecture 2
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marketing Communications
…advertising
2
…introduction to…
…introduction to
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points to consider…...
the role advertising plays
the strong and weak theories of
advertising
the principle frameworks by which advertising is thought to influence individuals
what is an advertising plan?
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the role of
advertising...
engagementinternational, national, local, direct…
engages through… creating awareness, changing
perceptions/attitudes, building brand values,
influencing behaviour and… calling to action
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engagement
stimulated to… thin
kfeelact
about… product
s
brands
organisations
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DRIP…
• …to differentiate
• …to remind (or reassure)
• …to inform
• …to persuade
Chris Fill, 2016
DRIP
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the Advertising Plan...
an Advertising Plan consists of 3 key elements…
the message – what is to be said
the purpose of the advertising plan is to provide the means
by which appropriate messages are devised and delivered to
target audiences
the media – how the message will be conveyed
the timing – the manner in which the message will be carried
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message…the nature and form of the message is determined by the creative strategy
source credibilityexpertise, motives and trust
balanceemotional and informational
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message…
the nature and form of the message is determined by the creative strategy
structureGetting key points across – inform, motivate, action
presentationfactual, ‘slice-of-life’, demonstration, comparative
fear, humour, animation, sex, music, fantasy
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media...when the message is agreed a media
plan is developed
it provides the “optimum route for the delivery of the promotional message to the target audience” (Fill, 2016)
the choice of media, vehicles and
scheduling are all determined in relation to
the characteristics of the target audience
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media selection
media classbroadcast, print, outdoor, digital, in-store
media typebroadcast… television, radio, cinema, online
media vehiclestelevision… coronation street, x-factor radio… absolute, Heart, Capitalnewspaper… Telegraph, Metro, Sun
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timing…
Flighting – used over longer periods of time
Continuity – a more regular and uniform presentation
Pulsing – a combination of the previous
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uses of advertising…
(re)position brandscan be important to the creation/maintenance of a brand personality
used as a mobility barrier, deterring entry to a market by other organisations
provide a means for differentiation and competitive advantageused as an anchor for many integrated campaigns, to build awareness and develop brands
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emotion in advertising...
aligned with this approach is the concept of likeability
the use of emotion in order to influence and change attitudes
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information in advertising...the use of information in order to influence and change attitudes
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shock in advertising...
shock strategy is ‘one that deliberately, rather than inadvertently, startles and offends its audience.’
It gets attention as the cognitive engagement and message elaboration help us remember
audiences are surprised by the messages because
they don’t conform to social norms or expectations
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Expo
sure
Shock Advert
Norm
Vi
olat
ion
Surprise
Reac
tion
AttentionComprehensionElaborationRetentionBehaviour
Figure 18.1 A preliminary model of consumer reactions to shock appeals
(Dahl et al., 2003)
shock in advertising...
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shock in advertising...
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shock in advertising...
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Sexism and stereotypes in advertising...
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how does advertising work…
sequential models such as the AIDA and
Hierarchy of Effects model were very influential for a long timeassume that the consumer moves through stages logically…
learn - cognitive
attitude toward product was regarded as key
do - conativefeel - affective
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response hierarchy models…
Attention
Desire
Interest
Action
Awareness
Interest
Evaluation
Trial
Adoption
Unawareness
Awareness
Comprehension
Conviction
Action
Awareness
Knowledge
Liking
Preference
Conviction
Purchase
cognitive
affective
conative
AIDA The Innovation-Adoption Model
The Hierarchy-of-Effects Model
DAGMAR
Colley, 1961 Lavidge and Steiner, 1961
Lewis, 1898 Rogers, 1962
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Exposurebuyer response sequence…
Processing
Communication effects in relation to brand
positioning
Target audience action
Involvement
Rossiter and Percy (1997)
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advertising frameworks…
sales - advertising seeks short-term changes in behaviour. In this view advertising should adopt a promotional approach. persuasion - assumes advertising works rationally. Because messages are capable of being persuasive, customers are moved through sequential steps
involvement – advertising works by drawing members of the audience into the advertisement. salience - is based upon the premise that
advertising works by being different and
standing out. Fill, 2006 after Hall, 1991 and O’Malley,
1991
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strong and weak theories…
strong view… ads can increase sales through use of persuasive, manipulative techniques, deployed against passive customers who do not process information, such as the sequential models
weak view… Ehrenberg’s ATR‘N’ framework (awareness-trial-reinforcement-nudge)promotional messages do not make us buy products but rather consumers are driven by habithence, it is only after trial that our attitudes are changed
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Ehrenberg’s ‘nudge’ (weak) theory...
consumers should be ‘nudged’ into buying brands more frequently
ads just provide reinforcement to stimulate habitual
buyers into more frequent purchases of the brand from
their repertoireso the role of advertising is not to inform but to get lapsed or potential users to try the brand, to ‘nudge’ us into buying
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a little nudge…
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summary...
how advertising “works” depends
on… whether the product is new or establishedstrong theory for new brands?weak theory for established
brands?
how involved the consumer is, their personal motivations and the relevance of the advertisement