niedziela, 9 czerwca 2013

Advertisement analysys

Have you ever analized and advertisement? Did you wonder what's the purpose, choice of language or techniques helpful in persuading you to buy the advertising product? If not, those information may be helpful for you.

Advertisement analysys doesn't really differ from any other analysys. You can see how the ad works by  breaking it down into following parts:


Purpose— The majority of ads have a very simple purpose: To convince the audience to purchase a particular product or service. Other types of ads include public service (information) ads and ideological ads such as those for Greenpeace or the National Rifle Association (selling ideas).
Picture —Nothing in the picture is there by accident; Look for a pattern of symbols or images. For example, a champagne advertisement may have a couple walking hand in hand on a moonlit beach (symbols of romance). The key is the association of the product to a certain idea. In other words, advertisements are primarily illogical. They are used to persuade. So, this champagne advertisement will not tell how much the product costs, what it tastes like, and so on. The goal of the advertiser is to get the audience to associate the product with something positive, so champagne = romance. Look for patterns of symbols or images that develop a certain dominant theme(s).
Language— Similar to the picture, none of the words in an ad are there by accident; they are all very carefully chosen, and this includes not only the wording in the ad but also the product name and slogan. Look again for patterns of words that develop certain themes. For example, a computer advertisement will contain words like “high performance,” “powerful,” and so on. Usually, the themes present in the language will echo or reinforce the themes present in the picture.
Audience— There is no such thing as a general audience. Advertisers direct their ads toward specific audiences. Audiences are broken down in such categories as age, race, gender, economic class, region of the country, and so on. The magazine the ad is placed in will give a very clear indication of the specific audience targeted. In other words, Bride magazine has a very specific audience. An advertisement in Business Week will target business people. Cosmopolitan ads target contemporary women. You will not find many Harley Davidson motorcycle ads in Cosmo, just like you will not find any champagne advertisements in Field and Stream. The magazine, the product, the language, and the picture will help to clarify whom the specific audience that is being targeted by advertisers. Try to be as specific as possible when narrowing down the audience.
Techniques The ultimate goal is to uncover the specific persuasive techniques employed by the advertisers to sell their product. The following techniques are generally the most common strategies used by advertisers:
  1. Purpose—The majority of ads have a very simple purpose: To convince the audience to purchase a particular product or service. Other types of ads include public service (information) ads and ideological ads such as those for Greenpeace or the National Rifle Association (selling ideas).
    Picture—Nothing in the picture is there by accident; everything has a purpose. Look for a pattern of symbols or images. For example, a champagne advertisement may have a couple walking hand in hand on a moonlit beach (symbols of romance). The key is the association of the product to a certain idea. In other words, advertisements are primarily illogical. They are used to persuade. So, this champagne advertisement will not tell how much the product costs, what it tastes like, and so on. The goal of the advertiser is to get the audience to associate the product with something positive, so champagne = romance. Look for patterns of symbols or images that develop a certain dominant theme(s).
    Language—Similar to the picture, none of the words in an ad are there by accident; they are all very carefully chosen, and this includes not only the wording in the ad but also the product name and slogan. Look again for patterns of words that develop certain themes. For example, a computer advertisement will contain words like “high performance,” “powerful,” and so on. Usually, the themes present in the language will echo or reinforce the themes present in the picture.
    Audience—There is no such thing as a general audience. Advertisers direct their ads toward specific audiences. Audiences are broken down in such categories as age, race, gender, economic class, region of the country, and so on. In addition, these are the broad categories. The magazine the ad is placed in will give a very clear indication of the specific audience targeted. In other words, Bride magazine has a very specific audience. An advertisement in Business Week will target business people. Cosmopolitan ads target contemporary women. You will not find many Harley Davidson motorcycle ads in Cosmo, just like you will not find any champagne advertisements in Field and Stream. The magazine, the product, the language, and the picture will help to clarify whom the specific audience that is being targeted by advertisers. Try to be as specific as possible when narrowing down the audience.
    Techniques The ultimate goal is to uncover the specific persuasive techniques employed by the advertisers to sell their product. The following techniques are generally the most common strategies used by advertisers:

    1. Name calling— When a company puts down another company or product in order to make itself or its product look superior. When Ford refers to Honda or Toyota as “foreign” cars. 
    2. Bandwagon— The majority is right. If you want to be popular or successful, you need to be using this product, like the popular, successful people in the ad. Very often targeting a young audience, most ads on MTV are bandwagon ads. If you want to be popular like these people having such a fun time, you need to wear the jeans they are wearing. Join the Pepsi Generation is another such ad. Everyone is using this product so why aren't you?
    3. Glittering Generalities Advertisements associating the product with positive language, either in the wording of the ad, the slogan, or the product name. Joy Liquid Detergent, Huggies Diapers, Chevy—The Heartbeat of America are some examples. A recent Armed Services recruiting ad promised “numerous rewards and opportunities in a sophisticated and technologically-advanced atmosphere”—you do not get much more “glittering” than that.
    4. Transfer Advertisements associating positive symbols/images with the product. The good hands of Allstate, the Rock of Prudential, the Statue of Liberty with Liberty Mutual Insurance, the American flag in the background of all NRA ads, bikini-clad women in Budweiser ads.


            (...)


    E. Emotional AppealAdvertisers associate their products with emotional elements like family, country, children, and animals. For example, the golden retriever puppies in the Red Devil vacuum cleaner commercials, the little girl in the Pepsi commercials, the Coca-Cola Polar Bears. This type of strategy could also use scare tactics, such as protecting your family from intruders in security system ads.

    F. Stereotypes —Be aware of the stereotypes, especially gender, in ads. The advertising world is somewhat trapped in the two-parent, suburban, white picket fence, wood-panaled station wagon world of the past, where the father goes off to work and the mother raises the kids and cleans the house. Domestic and cleaning products are usually pictured with women, while tools and other outdoor equipment are associated with men. Some advertisements are starting to appeal to professional women, but overall the ad world is slow to change in this respect.


    SOURCE:

    http://nccei.org/teaching/adanalysis5.html

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