chapter 11 advertising and commercial culture
TRANSCRIPT
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Advertising and Commercial CultureCHAPTER 11
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Ads are Everywhere
Product placement: The purchase of spaces for particular goods to appear in a TV show, movie, or music video
Which ads do you watch for fun? How and when do ads annoy you? Can you think of ways you intentionally avoid advertising?
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Early Developments in American Advertising
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Early Advertising
Babylonian merchants hung signs outside of their stores Advertising has been discovered in Pompeii By 900 C.E., many European cities had town criers who called out
the news—and directed customers to various stores Handbills and posters existed as early as the 1400s The first newspaper ad in colonial America ran in the Boston
News-Letter in 1704
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The First Advertising Agencies
Before the Industrial Revolution, 90 percent of Americans lived in isolated areas and produced most of their own tools, clothes, and food
The limited existing advertising was generally for local merchants National advertising came along with the railroads in the 1850s The first American advertising agencies were space brokers,
individuals who purchased space in newspapers and sold it to various merchants
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Advertising in the 1800s
Agencies collected a fee from its advertising client for each ad placed
The fee covered the price that each media outlet charged for placement of the ad, plus a 15 percent commission for the agency
The more ads an agency placed, the larger the agency’s revenue Agencies had little incentive to buy fewer ads on behalf of their
clients Nowadays, many ad agencies work for a flat fee, and some will
agree to be paid on a performance basis
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Trademarks and Packaging
Manufacturers came to realize that if their products were distinctive and associated with quality, customers would ask for them by name
Advertising let manufacturers establish a special identity for their products, separate from those of their competitors
Studies suggest that although most ads are not very effective in the short run, over time they create demand by leading consumers to associate particular brands with quality
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Patent Medicines and Department Stores
By the end of the 1800s, patent medicines and department stores accounted for half of the revenues taken in by ad agencies
Some patent medicines contained up to 40 percent ethyl alcohol, and some even contained morphine
Many contemporary products—such as Coca Cola—originated as medicines, and it contained traces of cocaine
Post and Kellogg’s cereals claimed to cure stomach problems The Food and Drug Act passed in 1906 regulated these claims Department stores were criticized for undermining local stores,
but they could also put more of their profits into ads
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Advertising’s Impact on Newspapers
The companies that were the first to take advantage of the Industrial Revolution were also the first to advertise
Whereas newspapers in the mid 1880s featured 70-75 percent newshole, by the early 1900s, more than half the space in daily papers was devoted to advertising
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Promoting Social Change and Dictating Values
Advertising significantly influenced the transition from a producer-directed to a consumer-driven society
Advertising also promoted technological advances by showing how new machines—such as vacuums, washing machines, and cars—could improve daily life
Advertising encouraged economic growth by increasing sales, prompting manufacturers to produce greater quantities, which reduced the cost per unit
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Appealing to Female Customers
By the early 1900s, advertisers and ad agencies believed that women, who made up 70-80 percent of newspaper and magazine readers, controlled most household purchasing decisions
However, 99 percent of the copywriters and ad execs at the time were men
Many ads emphasized stereotyped appeals to women, believing that simple ads with emotional and even irrational content worked best
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Dealing with Criticism
The industry began to actively deflect criticism that advertising created consumer needs that ordinary citizens never knew they had
After WWII, the Ad Council was created (PSAs)
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Early Ad Regulation
Partly to keep tabs on deceptive advertising, advocates in the business community in 1912 created the nonprofit Better Business Bureau, which now has more than 100 offices in the U.S.
At the same time, advertisers wanted a formal service that tracked newspaper readership, guaranteed accurate audience measures, and ensured that papers would not overcharge ad agencies and their clients
As a result, publishers formed the Audit Bureau of Circulations, now known as the Alliance for Audited Media
1914, the government created the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) The industry created the American Association of Advertising Agencies to
minimize government oversight Subliminal advertising: Hidden or disguised print and visual messages,
banned in 1958
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The Shape of U.S. Advertising Today
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Advertising Today
Until the 1960s, most ads were determined by a slogan, the phrase that attempts to sell a product by capturing its essence in words
Through the influence of European design, TV, and (now) multimedia devices, such as the iPad, visual style became dominant in U.S. ad agencies
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The Influence of Visual Design
Part of the visual revolution in the 1960s and 1970s was due to magazines such as Vogue and Vanity Fair hiring European designers as art directors. Europe had government-sponsored radio with no ads, so they were driven by visuals rather than words
By the 1970s, ad agencies had put together teams of writers and artists, granting equal status to words and images
The quick-edits and musical/visual style of MTV influence advertising
Now, popular songs and music are regularly featured in ads… Ads are now more interactive, often 3D, very visual, but design
has become much simpler
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Types of Advertising Agencies
About 14,000 ad agencies currently operate in the U.S. Mega-agencies: Large ad firms that formed by merging several
agencies that maintain regional offices worldwide Boutique agencies: Devote their talents to only a handful of
select clients Both types of agencies suffered declines in 2008 and 2009 due to
the economic decline, but had slowly improved by 2013
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Mega-Agencies
Mega-agencies provide a full range of services, from advertising and public relations to operating their own in-house radio and TV production studios
The trend towards mega-agencies has stirred debate among consumer and media watchdog groups
Some consider large agencies a threat to the independence of smaller firms, which are slowly being bought out
The four largest firms control more than half of advertising dollars globally
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Boutique Agencies
The visual revolutions in advertising during the 1960s elevated the standing of designers and graphic artists, who became closely identified with the look of particular ads
Offering more personal services, the boutiques prospered, bolstered by innovative ad campaigns and increasing profits from TV accounts
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The Structure of Ad Agencies
Ad agencies, regardless of size, generally divide the labor of creating and maintaining advertising campaigns among four departments:
1. Account planning2. Creative development3. Media coordination4. Account management
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Account Planning, Market Research, and VALS
The account planner’s role is to develop an effective advertising strategy by combining the views of the client, the creative team, and consumers
Market research: Assesses the behaviors and attitudes of consumers toward particular products long before any ads are created
Demographics: Age, gender, occupation, ethnicity, education, and income
Psychographics: Categorizes consumers according to their attitudes, beliefs, interests, and motivations
VALS (Values and Lifestyles): Researchers measure psychological factors and divide consumers into types (thinkers, achievers, experiencers)
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Creative Development
Teams of writers and artists outline the rough sketches for print and online ads, and then develop the words and graphics
They do everything from choosing a narrator’s voice to determining sound effects
Viral marketing: short videos or other content that quickly gains widespread attention as users share it with friends online or by word of mouth
Often the creative side of the business finds itself in conflict with the research side
Both sides acknowledge that they can’t predict which ads and which campaigns will succeed
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Media Coordination: Planning and Placing Advertising
Media buyers: People who choose and purchase the types of media that are best suited to carry a client’s ads, reach the target audience, and measure the effectiveness of those ad placements
Saturation advertising: A variety of media are inundated with ads aimed at target audiences
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Account and Client Management
Account executives: Responsible for bringing in new business and managing the accounts of established clients
Oversees new ad campaigns in which several agencies bid for the client’s business
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Trends in Online Advertising
The earliest form of online advertising was banner ads Different formats have emerged, including video ads,
sponsorships, and rich media like pop ups, pop unders, flash multimedia ads, and interstitials, which popup in new screen windows as a user clicks to a new web page, or spam
Paid search advertising has become the dominant format of web advertising
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Online Advertising Challenges Traditional Media
Because internet advertising is the leading growth area, advertising mega-agencies have added digital media agencies and departments to develop and sell ads online
Facebook has made big strides in mobile advertising Google and Facebook account for the most online advertising
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Online Marketers Target Individuals
Internet ads offer many advantages to advertisers, compared to traditional media outlets
Perhaps the biggest advantage is that marketers can develop consumer profiles that direct targeted ads to specific web site visitors
They do this by collecting information about each internet user through cookies and online surveys
Agencies can also add online and retail sales data to user profiles to create a database, largely without your knowledge
Online ads are beneficial because they are precisely targeted and easily measured
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Advertising Invades Social Media
Social media provide a wealth of data for advertisers to mine Social media are helping advertisers use personal endorsements
to further their own products and marketing messages—basically letting consumers do the work for them
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Persuasive Techniques in Contemporary Advertising
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Conventional Persuasive Strategies
Famous-person testimonial: A product is endorsed by a well-known person Plain-folks pitch: Associates a product with simplicity Snob-appeal approach: Using a product will maintain or elevate their social
status Bandwagon effect: Everyone is using a particular product Hidden-fear appeal: Plays on consumers’ sense of insecurity Irritation advertising: Creating name recognition by being annoying or obnoxious
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The Association Principle
Association principle: A widely used persuasive technique that associates a product with a positive cultural value or image even if it has little connection to the product
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Disassociation as an Advertising Strategy
Companies sometimes create second, dummy corporations to link new brands in a product line to eccentric or simple regional places rather than to images conjured up by big cities and multinational conglomerates
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Advertising as Myth and Story
Myths help us define people, organizations, and social norms According to myth analysis, most ads are narratives with stories
to tell and social conflicts to resolve. Three common mythical elements are found in many types of ads:
1. Ads incorporate myths in mini-story form, featuring characters, settings, and plots
2. Most stories in ads involve conflicts, pitting one set of characters or social values against another
3. Such conflicts are negotiated or resolved by the end of the ad, usually by purchasing a product. The product or those who use it often emerge as the heroes of the story
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Product Placement
Product placement: Strategically placing ads or buying space in movies, TV shows, comic books, video games, blogs, and music videos so that products appear as part of a story’s set environment
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Commercial Speech and Regulating Advertising
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Commercial Speech and Regulating Advertising
The First Amendment ensures that citizens and journalists can generally say and write what they want, but it says nothing directly about commercial speech—any print or broadcast expression for which a fee is charged to organizations and individuals buying time or space in the mass media
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Critical Issues in Advertising
Is advertising manipulating helpless consumers? Does it attack our dignity, and invade the privacy of our minds?
According to this view, the advertising industry was all-powerful Most people are not easily persuaded by advertising Between 75 and 90 percent of new consumer products typically fail
because they are not embraced by the buying public However, advertising has raised the American standard of living and
finances most media industries Critics continue to condemn ads that stereotype or associate products
with sex appeal, youth, and narrow definitions of beauty Some of the most serious concerns involve children, teens, and health
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Children and Advertising
Groups have worked to limit advertising aimed at children Some TV shows are developed directly to promote a line of toys
Parents groups have worried about the heavy promotion of products like sugar-coated cereals
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Advertising in Schools
Channel One offered free video and satellite equipment (tuned exclusively to Channel One) in exchange for a 12 minute package of current events programming that included two minutes of ads
Public pressure managed to get most junk food ads removed from Channel One by 2006
Organizations like the National Dairy Council have provided posters, folders, or magazines
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Health and Advertising—Eating Disorders
Advertising has a powerful impact on the standards of beauty in our culture
A long-standing trend in advertising is the association of certain products with ultra-thin female models
This type of advertising suggests standards of style and beauty that are not only unattainable, but unhealthy. It can lead to an increase in anorexia and bulimia, and an increase in plastic surgery
Advertising has also been blamed for the tripling of obesity rates in the U.S. since the 1980s
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Health and Advertising—Tobacco
Cigarette ads on TV have been banned since 1971 Cartoon characters are banned in cigarette ads (no more Joe
Camel) Cigarette advertising campaigns often target a specific group of
people, such as women, African Americans, or young people
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Health and Advertising—Alcohol
Like tobacco ads, alcohol ads have been accused of using cartoon characters to appeal to young audiences
College students are often targeted by alcohol advertising
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Health and Advertising—Prescription Drugs
TV ads have made household names out of prescription drugs like Nexium, Claritin, Paxil, and Xanax
Nearly 1 in 3 adults have asked a doctor about a prescription drug they saw on TV
The growth of prescription drug advertising brings the potential for false and misleading claims, particularly because a brief TV ad can’t communicate all the relevant cautionary information
Only the U.S. and New Zealand allow advertising for prescription drugs
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Watching Over Advertising—Excessive Commercialism
Commercial Alert—a nonprofit, brings attention to the ways that advertising has crept out of its “proper sphere,” such as movies cross-promoting with fast-food restaurants
They also bring attention to corporate partnerships in children’s books, and the placement of products woven into stories aimed at teens
They question the limit of corporate influence on publicly elected government bodies
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The FTC Takes on Puffery and Deception
The FTC (Federal Trade Commission) enforces truth-in-advertising rules
Commercials must not be deceptive When the FTC discovers deceptive ads, it usually requires
advertisers to change them or remove them from circulation They can also impose fines or require an advertiser to run spots
to correct the deceptive ads
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Alternative Voices
The Truth Foundation uses TV and print ads to combat smoking
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The Future of Advertising
Although commercialism has generated cultural feedback that is often critical of advertising’s pervasiveness, the growth of the industry has not diminished
Many consumers buy magazines or watch the Super Bowl just for the advertising
Many consumers dismiss advertising as trivial, or a “necessary evil”
As a society, we have developed an uneasy relationship with advertising