Persuading audiences to take action with respect to products, ideas or services.
The idea is to drive consumer behavior in a particular way in regard to a product, service or concept.
Definition of advertising
There is not a single generally accepted definition of advertising.
Instead, there are several ways to define it. In summary:
Advertising is the paid, impersonal, one-way marketing of persuasive information from an identified sponsor disseminated through channels of mass communication to promote the adoption of goods, services or ideas.Any mass medium can deliver advertising. Some random examples:
newspapers, magazines, radio and television broadcasts, films, stage shows, websites,How is advertising different from public relations?
billboards, posters, wall paintings, town criers, human billboards, flyers, rack cards,
the back of event tickets, elastic bands on disposable diapers, bathroom stall doors,
cars, taxicabs, buses, trains, subway platforms, bus stop benches, street furniture,
airplanes, in-flight seat-back trays, overhead bins, passenger screens, skywriting,
shopping carts, stickers on fruit in supermarkets, supermarket receipts, coffee cups,
mobile phone screens, opening billboards in streaming audio and video.
One simple answer is the advertiser has full control of the message all the way to the audience while the public relations professional has control only until the message is released to media gatekeepers who make decisions about whether to pass it on to the audience and in what form.
Some lingo
- Advertisers want to generate increased consumption of their commercial products and services.
- Advertising messages are media content paid for by sponsors.
- Sponsors finance the
production of advertisements and buy space for them in print media or
online, or time for them to be broadcast in radio or television
programs.
- An advertisement is a paid announcement. For example, a persuasive message selling a product.
- Advertisements are placed
in traditional media such as newspapers, magazines, television, radio
and outdoor signs, and in new media such as websites, text messages and
social media. Placing is the buying of specific space in print and online or time on the air. Placement is where the ad is positioned in a medium.
- Branding involves the
frequent repetition of a product's name or image in an attempt to have
the desirable qualities of that product stick in the minds of consumers.
- An Infomercial is a long television commercial of five minutes to an hour in length designed to create an immediate impulse purchase.
Advertising agencies
- An advertising agency is a service business that helps client businesses sell goods and services by producing and placing advertisements.
- A client is a customer
who buys and receives services, help and advice from an advertising
professional. Ad agency clients include businesses and corporations,
non-profit organizations, educational institutions, government agencies
and others.
- Non-commercial advertisers, such as charities, political parties, interest groups, religious organizations, governmental agencies and other non-profits, also use advertising to sell their causes and services.
- Non-profit or not-for-profit organizations
are agencies, institutions or organizations that are not commercially
motivated and have no interest in profit. They rely sometimes on paid
advertising and most heavily on free messaging, such as a public service
announcements, which are not considered to be advertising.
- Free media is
persuasive information produced by advertising and public relations
professionals for publicity purposes and placed in mass media at no cost
to the originator. Such PR messaging is not advertising. While there
may be production costs, the advertising or public relations
professional and the client do not pay a fee for placement of their
publicity information in media.
- An integrated media campaign combines paid advertising with free media. These also are referred to as integrated marketing communications.
Advertising media
- Newspaper and magazine advertising
return money for space on their pages. An ad placement can cost from a
few dollars for a small display ad in a newspaper up to more than
$100,000 for a full page 4-color ad in a magazine. That doesn't include
the cost of producing the ad.
- Radio and television advertising
return money for time on their air. An ad placement can cost from a few
dollars for a few seconds on the air at a local radio station up to
nearly $3 million for 30 seconds in the Super Bowl telecast. That
doesn't include the cost of producing the ad.
- Online advertising
sells products and services at websites with banner ads, contextual ads,
email marketing, spam, social networking couponing, etc. Couponing is the collection of coupons from websites to buy brand-name products at low cost. Banner ads
on a website could cost $25 a month or less and up to several hundred
dollars a month depending on the traffic passing through the site. Traffic is the number of visitors in a period time and the number of pages on the site they visit.
- Classified ads are
small messages in newspapers, magazines and online grouped together
under content listings. Generally, they are the most inexpensive way to
advertise.
- In-store advertising appears beside product displays and at check-out lines to catch a shopper's eye and promote a purchase.
- Billboard advertising is outdoor advertising on large signs that can be seen at a distance.
- Global advertising refers to a worldwide advertising campaign to build a brand internationally while speaking with one voice.
Advertising elements
- Copy is the text printed or words spoken in an advertisement. Copywriting is the creating and arranging of words for an advertisement.
- Artwork includes the
Illustrations, photographs, paintings, drawings, graphs and other
non-text artistic works prepared for an advertisement.
- An ad layout is a rough draft or sketch that shows the general arrangement and appearance plan for a finished advertisement.
- Slogans are memorable
phrases used in advertising campaigns. The ad agency N.W. Ayer & Son
coined some of the best known advertising slogans in history:
- When it rains it pours Morton Salt, 1912
- I'd walk a mile for a Camel R.J. Reynolds, 1921
- A diamond is forever De Beers, 1947
- Reach out and touch someone AT&T, 1979
- Be all you can be United States Army, 1981
Truck ad courtesy of Toxel |
Some history
- Viral marketing uses social
networks to increase brand awareness. The technique includes creation
and placement of videos, ebooks, interactive flash games, text messages,
etc. If a message the marketer is picked up by a social medium, its
message will be received my millions.
- Niche marketing is advertising targeted to people in specific demographic categories with specific needs and wants.
- Product placement
places the brand-name of a product or service in front of an audience
without a traditional advertisement. For instance, if you are watching a
movie and you see a character drinking a Coke while using a Macintosh
computer, rather than generic products, those are the result of product
placements.
- Celebrity branding
uses a celebrity to endorse a product or service. It works because
people pay attention to celebrities, copying their hairstyles or their
clothing styles and admiring them for what they do. Examples are George
Foreman commercials in which he sells a grill or Britney Spears selling
perfumes. There also are celebrity voice-overs. Some celebrities have
distinct, recognizable voices which they lend through celebrity branding
to a product or service.
- Email advertising is the unsolicited sending of bulk emails, sometimes called spam.
- Shock advertising
disturbs the audience and offends people. It ranges beyond the usually
acceptable advertisement to make a strong point. Some shocking ads have
suggestive sexual content and nudity. It's intended to help people
remember an ad.
- Interactive advertising
uses online media to drive consumers toward products, brands, services,
political groups, etc., by asking them to respond immediately on-screen
to an ad.
- Embedded ads are
marketing messages placed inside non-advertising products such as video
games or news articles to steer readers to branded goods or services.
- Crowdsourcing
outsources tasks to an undefined group of people in a community through
an open call. Those people most fit to solve problems, perform tasks and
contribute are gathered together to create the best solution.
- Guerrilla marketing
follows unusual approaches such as staged encounters in public places,
giveaways of products such as cars that are covered with brand messages,
and interactive advertising where the viewer can respond to become part
of the advertising message.
- Meta-advertising is
advertising for another advertisement. For instance, an advertiser will
advertise for viewers to watch an ad for a new product.
- Contextual advertising
emphasizes contextually relevant, unobtrusive ads on a website intended
to help users. This has fed the increasing trend toward interactive
advertising. Many websites, including the search engine Google, present
contextual ads.
- Consumer voting through text messages and other innovations of social networks such as Facebook.
Advertising Resource Center »
1949 Ford ad courtesy of The Henry Ford |
The Middle Ages. Most people were unable to read, but images of clothing, shoes, horse shoes or bags of flour on signs pointed out the tailor, cobbler, blacksmith or miller.
17th century. As reading spread, advertising was printed on handbills. Advertisements promoting medicines and books were printed in weekly newspapers.
19th century Advertising grew as the relative wealth of nations expanded. Advertising developed with the rise of mass production from the late 19th century.
In 1836 in France, the newspaper La Presse printed paid advertising on its pages. Because of the money it received for advertising, the paper was able to lower the price it charged readers for a copy. That let it extend its readership which increased its profitability.
The beginnings of an advertising agency was conceived by Volney B. Palmer in Philadelphia. In 1842, he bought quantities of space in newspapers at a discounted rate, then resold the space at higher rates to advertisers. Palmer was only a space broker – the ad copy, artwork and layout were prepared by the company that had something to advertise.
The first true advertising agency was N.W. Ayer & Son in Philadelphia in 1869. Ayer planned, created and placed complete advertising campaigns for its customers.
20th century. Advertising became a profession with agencies as the focal point of creative planning.
Women were responsible for purchasing for most households, so agencies recognized their insight in the creative process. That led advertising to become a business career choice for women.
The first American advertisement to use a sexual sales appeal, created by J. Walter Thompson Co. for Woodbury Soap, depicted a couple with the message The skin you love to touch.
The top 100 advertising campaigns of all time »
Advertising arrived on the air with radio in the 1920s and the practice of sponsoring programs became popular. With the coming of television in the 1940s, the networks sold ad time on the air to sponsors.
Cable television wired the country from the 1980s and satellite TV emerged from the 1990s. They brought new advertising opportunities on the expanded number of channels.
Marketing on Internet websites opened new frontiers for advertisers from the mid-1990s.
21st century. Advertising continues in all mass media including newspapers, magazines, radio, television, billboards, classified advertising in print and online, in-store advertising and websites.
Recent emphases and innovations include:
The largest advertising agency conglomerates in the world, known in the advertising, public relations and marketing professions as The Big Four, are Interpublic, Omnicom, Publicis and WPP.
How important is advertising?
The share of advertising spending relative to the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) has changed little across large changes in media.
For example, in the U.S. in 1925, the main advertising media were newspapers, magazines, signs on streetcars and outdoor posters. Advertising spending as a share of GDP was about 2.9 percent.
By 1998, television and radio had become major advertising media. Nonetheless, advertising spending was about 2.4 percent of GDP.
In 2010, spending on advertising was estimated at more than $300 billion in the United States and $500 billion worldwide. Source: Wikpedia
What do ads look like?
Advertisements include text, audio, video, photography and graphic designs.
An effective ad has:
- Smart placement where it will be seen by your target audience.
- A compelling headline,
which is the most important technical aspect of your ad. A powerful
headline suggests benefits, news, how-to or something curious. Readers
scan headlines. If yours doesn't grab attention, your ad won't be read.
- Eye-catching graphics
are a means of getting your audience to read your ad. An attractive
graphic and a strong headline will pull a reader or viewer into your ad.
- A focus on the objective
with all the elements of your ad working to persuade consumers to
fulfill your one main objective. Having multiple objectives will confuse
people and then they will do nothing.
- An irresistible offer
including valuable bonuses and risk-free, easy-pay terms. If your offer
seems too good to be true, give a plausible explanation for your low
price. Help purchasers reconcile your offer in their minds so it makes
sense and is believable.
- A risk-free offer
using testimonials and a strong guarantee. Include facts and statistics.
Consumers are skeptical, so make your ad credible and risk-free.
- People don't like to be guinea pigs, so testimonials from real people are powerful. Pictures of the endorser will double the effectiveness of your testimonial.
- Provide as strong a guaranteed as absolutely possible. Remember that guarantees are exercised infrequently.
- People take comfort from positive, scientific proof, so use facts and statistics from reliable sources.
- A unique competitive advantage
tells your prospects why they should do business with you. Often your
unique competitive advantage is the best benefit you can offer so
consider including it in your headline or prominent place in the ad.
- Selling benefits that
your prospects care about. Ultimately, people want to gain pleasure or
avoid pain, so tell them how your product or service will help them gain
pleasure or avoid pain. They care about what your product or service
will do for them personally. Studies show people respond better to the
fear of loss (pain) then they do to the promise of gain (pleasure).
- Advertorial style
makes your ad look like a news story, which will give it credibility.
Advertorials have compelling headlines, lots of informative, interesting
text, quotes and graphics. People are tired of in-your-face ads and
prefer this soft sell today.
- A call to action that is explicit and clear, so your customer knows exactly what to do.
- A sense of urgency to
overcome naturally laziness and procrastination. Lend a sense of
scarcity so the customer will act immediately. Limit the quantity of the
product available or the length of time it is available.
- A simple way to respond
urges people buy on impulse rather than logic. Make it easy to do
business with you. Because some people like to telephone, others like to
the Internet, and others will only fax their order, it's important to
offer multiple ways to be contacted.
- Accountability means don't waste your ad dollars. Track your ads to see which are pulling better than others.
Criticism of advertising
Advertising has social costs:
Unsolicited e-mail spam is a major nuisance and a financial burden on internet service providers
Advertising is invading public spaces including schools where some call it child exploitation, green vistas where pollution is an unintended consequence, and politics where some say it fosters dishonesty and ethical issues.
Advertising exerts psychological pressure on consumers, which could be harmful. For example, appealing to fear of losing loved ones or feelings of inadequacy.
taken from http://www.uncp.edu/home/acurtis/Courses/ResourcesForCourses/Advertising/AdvertisingWhatIsIt.html
If you are looking for an excellent contextual advertising network, I suggest you have a look at ExoClick.
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