it’s an ad ad ad ad world
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It’s an Ad Ad Ad Ad World. Advertising is nonpersonal communication paid for by an identified sponsor using mass media to persuade, inform, and remind an audience. Types of Advertising. Product advertising - message focuses on a specific product - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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It’s an Ad Ad Ad Ad World
• Advertising is nonpersonal communication paid for by an identified sponsor using mass media to persuade, inform, and remind an audience.
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Types of Advertising
• Product advertising - message focuses on a specific product
• Institutional advertising - message focuses on activities, personality, or point of view of a company
– advocacy advertising
– public service advertisements (PSAs)
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Purposes of Product Advertising
• To educate people about a new product and what it does
• To emphasize a brand’s features and try to convince the target market to choose it over other options
• To ensure that people won’t forget about a well-established product
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Product Advertising
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Who Creates Advertising?
• An advertising campaign is a coordinated, comprehensive plan that carries out promotion objectives and results in a series of advertisements placed in media over a period of time
• Agencies– limited-service– full-service
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Largest Ad Agencies
• J. Walter Thompson
• Leo Burnett Worldwide
• McCann-Erickson Worldwide
• BBDO Worldwide
• Grey Worldwide
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Leo Burnett
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Developing the Campaign
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Step 1: Identifying the Target Market?
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Click here
Establish Advertising Objectives
• Message objectives• Budget objectives
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Advertising Appeals
• Reasons Why (USP)
• Comparative Advertising
• Demonstration
• Testimonial
• Slice-of-Life
• Lifestyle
• Fear
• Sex
• Humor
• Slogans and Jingles
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USP Creative Strategy
USP clearly communicates the reason a product can satisfy a need
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Step 4: Pretest What Will Be Said
• Copy testing measures ad effectiveness
– Concept testing
– Test commercials
– Finished testing
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Step 5: Choose the Media
• Media planning is a problem-solving process for getting a message to a target audience in the most effective fashion
– Where to say it
– When to say it
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Changes in Media Usage
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Television
Pros• Creative and flexible• Prestigious• High impact messages• Network TV is cost
effective for reaching mass audience
• Cable TV is good for reaching targeted group
Cons• Quickly forgotten• Requires frequent
repetition• Increasingly fragmented
audiences• High costs on an
absolute basis• Shorter ads result in
increased clutter
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Radio
Pros• Good for selective
targeting• Heard out of home• Relatively low cost• Can be modified
quickly• Uses listener
imagination
Cons• Listeners may not
pay full attention• Small audiences
mean ads must be repeated frequently
• Not appropriate for products requiring demonstration
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Newspapers
Pros• Wide exposure and
extensive market coverage
• Flexible format permits use of color, different sizes and editions
• Useful for comparison shopping
• Local retailers can tie in with national ads
Cons• Most don’t spend much
time reading newspapers
• Low readership among teens and young adults
• Short life span• Very cluttered
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Magazines
Pros• Narrowly targeted
audiences by specialized magazines
• High credibility and interest level provide good ad environment
• Long life span and pass along rate
• Excellent visual quality
Cons• With exception of direct
mail, the most expensive form
• Long deadlines• Must use several
magazines to reach target
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Outdoor
Pros• Very high reach• Low cost• Good for
supplementing other media
Cons• Hard to
communicate complex messages
• Cannot demonstrate product effectiveness
• Controversial and disliked
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Out-of-Home Media
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Place-based Media
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Internet Advertising
• Banners
• Buttons
• Search engine and directory listings
• Pop-up ads
– permission marketing
– spamming
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Media Scheduling Terms_1
• Impressions - the number of people who will be exposed to a message placed in one or more media vehicles
• Reach - the percentage of the target market exposed to the media vehicle
• Frequency - the average number of times a person in the target group will be exposed to the vehicle
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Media Scheduling Terms_2
• Gross Rating Points (GRPs) - reach * frequency
• Cost per Thousand (CPM) - compares the relative cost effectiveness of different media vehicles that have different exposure rates; it reflects the cost to deliver a message to 1000 people
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Media Scheduling: How Often?
• Continuous - steady stream throughout year
• Pulsing - varies amount of advertising based on when product is in demand (e.g., suntan lotion)
• Flighting - advertising appears in short, intense bursts alternative with period of little to no activity
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Evaluating Advertising
• Posttesting means conducting research on consumers’ responses to advertising messages they have seen or heard
– unaided recall
– aided recall
– attitudinal measures
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Public Relations
• Attempts to influence the attitudes and perceptions of consumers, stockholders, and other stakeholders toward companies, brands, politicians, celebrities, not-for-profit organizations
• Do something good, then talk about it
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Objectives of Public Relations
• Introducing new products to manufacturers
• Introducing new products to consumers
• Influencing government legislation
• Enhancing the image of a city, region, or country
• Calling attention to a firm’s involvement with the community
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Planning a PR Campaign
Develop Objectives
Execute the PR Campaign
Evaluate the Campaign
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PR Activities
• Press Releases• Internal PR• Lobbying• Speech writing• Corporate identity• Media relations• Sponsorships• Special events• Advice and counsel
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Press Release Types
• Timely topics
• Research project stories
• Consumer information
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Press Releases
Accessing recent press releases – press room on the web
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Oscar Mayer
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Sponsorships
• PR activities through which companies provide financial support to help fund an event in return for publicized recognition of the company’s contribution
• Examples:
– Olympics
– NASCAR
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Measuring Effectiveness of PR Efforts
• In-house assessment
• Awareness and Preference Studies
• Counting of press clippings
• Impression counts
• Media equivalencies
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Direct Marketing
• Any direct communication to a consumer or business recipient that is designed to generate a response in the form of an order, a request for further information, and/or a visit to a store or other place of business for purchase of a product
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Forms of Direct Marketing
• Mail order
– Catalogs
– Direct mail
• Telemarketing
• Direct response television
– Infomercials
– Home shopping networks
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M-Commerce
• Promotional activities transmitted over mobile phones and other mobile devices such as personal digital assistants (PDAs)
– Prevalent in Europe and Asia
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M-Commerce
• Improvements in mobile phone technology are making M-commerce more attractive