 | Advertising: Encyclopedia II - Advertising - Objectives
Advertising - Objectives
Whereas marketing aims to identify markets that will purchase a Product or support an idea and then facilitate that purchase, advertising is the communication by which information about the product or idea is transmitted to potential consumers.
In general, advertising is used to convey availability of a "product" (which can be a physical product, a service, or an idea) and to provide information regarding the product. This can stimulate demand for the product, one of the main objectives of advertising. More specifically, there are three generic objectives of advertisements : communicate information about a particular product, service, or brand (including announcing the existence of the product, where to purchase it, and how to use it), persuade people to buy the product, and keep the organization in the public eye (called institutional advertising). Most advertising blends elements of all three objectives. Typically new products are supported with informative and persuasive ads, while mature products use institutional and persuasive ads (sometimes called reminder ads). Advertising frequently uses persuasive appeals, both logical and emotional (that is, it is a form of propaganda), sometimes even to the exclusion of any product information. More specific objectives include increases in short or long term sales, market share, awareness, product trial, mind share, brand name recall, product use information, positioning or repositioning, and organizational image improvement.
Examples of the ideas, informative or otherwise, that advertising tries to communicate are product details, benefits and brand information. Advertising usually seeks to find a unique selling proposition (USP) of any product and communicate that to the user. This may take the form of a unique product feature or a perceived benefit. In the face of increased competition within the market due to growing numbers of substitutes there is more branding occurring in advertising. This branding attributes a certain personality or reputation to a brand, termed brand equity, which is distinctive from its competition. Generally, brand equity is a measure of the volume and homogeneity of, as well as positive and negative characteristics of, individual and cultural ideas associated with the product.
Co-op advertising is money offered by manufacturers or distributors to assist retailers in advertising certain merchandise lines.
Effective advertising will stimulate demand for a product and build brand equity and brand franchise. When enough brand equity is created that the brand has the ability to draw buyers (even without further advertising), it is said to have brand franchise. The ultimate brand franchise is when the brand is so prevalent in people's mind (called mind share), that it is used to describe the whole category of products. This phenomena is sometimes known as "hyperbranding." Kleenex, for example, can distinguish itself as a type of tissue or a label for a category of products. That is, it is frequently used as a generic term. One of the most successful firms to have achieved a dominant brand franchise is Hoover, whose name was for a very long time synonymous with vacuum cleaner (and Dyson has subsequently managed to achieve similar status, having moved into the Hoover market with a more sophisticated model of vacuum cleaner). The strength of a brand franchise can be established to a greater or lesser degrees in various markets. In Texas, for example, it is common to hear people refer to any soft drink as a Coke, regardless of whether it is actually produced by Coca-Cola or not (more accurate terms would be 'cola' or 'soda').
A legal risk of the dominant brand franchise is that the name can become so widely accepted that it becomes a generic term, and loses trademark protection. Examples include "escalator", "aspirin" and "mimeograph". (See genericized trademark)
Advertising - Political uses
The control of advertising translates into the control of money and power. Thus, it can and has been used for political purposes. The American culture wars between family oriented religious organizations on one hand, and organizations supporting the freedom of homosexual expression on the other, are one example. In spring of 2005, the American Family Association threatened a boycott of Ford products to protest Ford's perceived support of "the homosexual agenda and homosexual marriage." Later in the year Ford announced it was curtailing ads in a number of major gay publications, an action it claimed to be determined not by cultural but by economic factors. That statement was contradicted by the AFA, which claimed it had a "good faith agreement" that Ford would cease such ads. Soon afterwards, as a result of a strong upcry from the gay community, Ford backtracked and announced it would continue ads in gay publications, in response to which the AFA denounced Ford for backing out of the agreement and renewed threats of a boycott.Anti-Gay Group Renews Ford Boycott Threat
Other related archives15th, 16th century, 17th century, 1843, 1960s, 1987, 19th century, 2005, 20th century, 24 Hour Fitness, AIDS, ASA, AdBusters, Advertising magnates, Advertising regulation, Advertising slogans, Advertising-free media, America, American, Appeal to emotion, Appeals to pity, Arkansas, Association, Bait and switch, Bandwagon, Benetton, Brand, Bulgari, Cadillac, Clear Tape, Coca-Cola, Controversy, David Ogilvy, Dyson, E-mail, Egyptians, European Court of Justice, FCC, Florida, Ford, Geico, Geo (Marketing), Greece, International Space Station, Kleenex, List of advertising characters, MP3 Player, Maine, Marketers, Marketing, Minority Report, Nokia, Philadelphia, Pigovian tax, Pompeii, Portrayals of the advertising industry in television and film, Product, Promotion, Propaganda, Public, Public service advertising, Quack ads, Repetition, Rome, Ruslanas, Scotch Tape, Super Bowl, Swedish, TV commercial, Testimonials, Texas, The Matrix Reloaded, TiVo, Tom Cruise, United States, Volkswagen, Volney Palmer, World Wide Web, Xerox, advertising agency, ageism, airtime, appeal to authority, appeal to flattery, appeal to ridicule, appeals to fear, appeals to spite, aspirin, billboards, brand, brand equity, branding, bus stop, cinema, classified ads, companies, consumerism, consumption, corporate logos, culture jamming, demographics, diapers, disease, economic, election campaign, escalator, film, flyers, football, freely taken advantage of, genericized trademark, goods, guerrilla, iPod, interest groups, irony, magazines, marketing, mass production, media, medicines, medium, mimeograph, mind control, mind share, models, musical stage shows, newspapers, non-commercial advertising, nuisance, papyrus, personal selling, photocopier, popups, positioning, product placement, propaganda, public relations, publicity, racism, radio, regulation of advertising, rockets, sales promotion, service, services, sex in advertising, sexism, sides of buses, skywriting, soft drink, spam, sponsor, stereotypes, streaming, street furniture components, subliminal advertising, subway, supermarkets, taxicab, television, tissue, tobacco advertising, town criers, trademark, unique selling proposition, web banners, wishful thinking, word of mouth
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Objectives", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |