Contrasting Ads View as slide show How to frame offers Adapted from AdPrin.com.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
When Should Ads Link Payments to Consumption? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Advertisements

Pricing for new product introductions View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to keep creative ideas alive View as slide show Positive reactions to suggestions Adapted from AdPrin.com.
The Reason Why View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Assessing the effects of a competitor orientation: Prediction case View as slide show Competitor orientation Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When to Use Music in Commercials View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Add or Delete Features: Within store advertising View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Percents. What is percent? Percent (or per cent) means “per 100” or “out of 100” For example: If you answered 90 out of 100 questions correctly on a test.
Changing beliefs with research findings: Dead Sea Scrolls View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Multi-unit sales: Carpet Cleaning View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When are motion ads more persuasive than still ads? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Changing someone’s mind View as slide show Rational versus emotional method Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When to use emotion View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
What type of voice is persuasive? View as slide show Persuasiveness of voice Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How Scarcity Affects Satisfaction View as slide show Scarcity and satisfaction Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Specific or General Benefits? View as slide show Describing a benefit Adapted from AdPrin.com.
A new pricing policy View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Healing in a Former British colony View as slide show On the value of non-experimental data Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When to Avoid/Use Celebrities View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com Endorsements.
How would you hire creative people? View as slide show A checklist for an interview Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Do you get more if you ask for more? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Markup and Discount 6.5. markup Markup = (% of markup) (store’s cost)
Can the sound of a word help to persuade? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Target market conditions View as slide show How to classify target markets Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When Scarcity Works in Ads View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Distraction for High-involvement Products View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to Use Scarcity: Wine Study View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to Set Objectives View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Habitat for Humanity Experiment View as slide show Prediction case Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to Frame Data: Funding for a Rare Disease View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When is it persuasive to distract customers? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Media Expenditures View as slideshow Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Should organizations let customers know that they will be receiving a satisfaction survey? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to avoid violating tastes and standards View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Are good looking people more persuasive? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Recommend a Choice? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When should ads use two-sided arguments? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Attractive models View as slide show When an attractive model can be persuasive Adapted from AdPrin.com.
The Beach Beer Problem View as slide show How Retail Stores Can Be Used in Advertising Adapted from AdPrin.com.
A item is marked 25% off and then you are given an additional discount of 10%. What will you pay? Are receiving a total of 35% off? Explain why or why.
Using Illustrations to Persuade View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
The Big Guys’ Case View as slide show Is market share a good objective? Adapted from AdPrin.com1.
How to improve decision-making with non-experimental data View as slide show How to use non-experimental data Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Margarine Experiment View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com Using Self-awareness to Create Guilt.
What time is it? View as slide show On the value of systematic and explicit observation Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Should Announcers Talk Fast? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to Pre-test Ads View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Virtual meetings for producing ideas View as slide show Virtual meetings’ benefits and costs for creativity Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Buying a gift for the King’s children View as slide show How to solve complex problems Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Analyzing the Bose Wave Radio Ad View as slide show How to analyze an ad for effectiveness Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Markup and Discount 6.6. markup Markup = (% of markup) (store’s cost)
Multi-dimensional choices View as slide show Is there a paradox of choices? Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Identify the slogans View as slide show Slogans Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When should an ad use direct conclusions? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Percent of Change. Objective: To find the sale price of various items. To use the percent of change formula to find discount.
Short quiz on problem solving: “The Bat and the Ball study” View as slide show High and low involvement Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Distraction for low-involvement products View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Power of Gifts: Address Labels Experiment View as slide show Gifts for the target market Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Persuade someone to buy crystal glassware View as slide show Types of calls to action Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to choose a doctor for diagnosis View as slide show On the value of evidence-based learning Adapted from AdPrin.com.
When to Use Favorable Images View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
How to use attack ads View as slide show Attack ads Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Are Adjectives Persuasive? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Provoking the target audience View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
Devil’s advocate and an alternative: MAAD View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com Using your group to evaluate your own proposals.
Examples versus statistics View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com Persuasive proof.
Heart Association fund drive View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com Foot-in-the-Door Application.
When should an ad forewarn customers about an offer? View as slide show Adapted from AdPrin.com.
MGT 210 Week 3 Assignment Exercise 7-2 To purchase this material click on below link 210/MGT-210-Week-3-Assignment-Exercise-7-
Lesson Quizzes Standard Lesson Quiz
Presentation transcript:

Contrasting Ads View as slide show How to frame offers Adapted from AdPrin.com

Subjects in the U.S were randomly assigned to ads for a camera phone that were identical except for these offers: ___ A: “Get 20% off the regular price,” ___ B: “Pay 80% of the regular price.” Which print ad for a camera phone was more effective -- and why? Write your answer, then click for the evidence. Intentions for B were 28% higher than for A (Kim and Kramer 2006 in Persuasive Advertising p 221)Kim and Kramer 2006 When strong arguments exist, consider using ads that contrast with competitors’ ads (8.3.1) Contrasting Ads Adapted from AdPrin.com2

The findings were reversed in Hong Kong. Why? In Hong Kong, sale prices are normally expressed as “Pay x% of the regular price.” As a result, “Save 20 percent” led to purchase intentions that were 33% higher than the “Pay 80 percent” (Persuasive Advertising p 221).

Based on this exercise, write a small application step for yourself, and set a deadline, preferably within one week. If you are working with someone else, share your application plan and the results of your application. For example, consider framing a offer in a way different from competing firms. Adapted from AdPrin.com