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1 Seminar 228.443: Advertising Dr. Teri Shaffer. 2 Introduction to Advertising n Types of advertising n Advertising industry n Advertising trends.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Seminar 228.443: Advertising Dr. Teri Shaffer. 2 Introduction to Advertising n Types of advertising n Advertising industry n Advertising trends."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Seminar 228.443: Advertising Dr. Teri Shaffer

2 2 Introduction to Advertising n Types of advertising n Advertising industry n Advertising trends

3 3 What Is Advertising? n Paid, nonpersonal communication n Identified sponsor n Using mass media n To inform, persuade, or remind n An audience

4 4 Interactive Advertising Interactive Advertising Public Service Advertising Public Service Advertising Institutional Advertising Institutional Advertising Business-to- Business Advertising Business-to- Business Advertising Brand Advertising Brand Advertising Retail or Local Advertising Retail or Local Advertising Political Advertising Political Advertising Direct-Response Advertising Direct-Response Advertising Directory Advertising Directory Advertising Types of Advertising

5 5 Brand Advertising

6 6

7 7

8 8 Retail Advertising & Institutional Advertising

9 9 Retail Advertising & Brand Advertising

10 10 Retail Advertising

11 11 Retail Advertising

12 12 Political Advertising

13 13 Directory Advertising

14 14 Direct-Response Advertising

15 15 B2B

16 16 Institutional Advertising

17 17 Institutional Advertising

18 18 Public Service Advertising (PSA) or Advocacy Advertising

19 19 Public Service Advertising

20 20 Interactive Advertising

21 21 Comparative Advertising

22 22 Advertising & Demand n Competitive brand advertising n Comparative advertising n Build secondary demand n Pioneering advertising n Build primary demand

23 23 Pioneering Advertising

24 24 Pioneering Advertising

25 25 Advertising Industry n US Government Statistics Us Bureau of Labor Statistics n 395,200 people employed in US n $300 billion globally

26 26 Five “Players” of Advertising –Advertiser –Advertising Agency –Media –Vendors –Target Audience

27 27 1 st Player The Advertiser

28 28 Advertising Age n http://www.adage.com n Leading National Advertisers n Major brands with ad spending > $94.4 million in 1998

29 29 Leading National Advertisers (1998) n General Motors Corp. n Proctor & Gamble Co. n Phillip Morris Cos. n DaimlerChrysler n Sears, Roebuck, & Co. n Ford Motor Co. n AT&T Corp. n Walt Disney Co. n PepsiCo n Diageo

30 30 Domestic Spending by Category (1999) n Automotive n Retail n Movies & media n Financial n Medicines & pharmaceuticals n Telecommunications n Food n Restaurants & fast-food n Airline & ship travel; hotels & resorts n Direct response companies

31 31 Top Advertisers in Austria (1998) n Proctor & Gamble Co. n Unilever n BML-Konzern n SPAR n Mobilkom Austria AG n Mars Inc. n Henkel n Volkswagen n Max. MobilTelekom Service n Ost. Lotterien

32 32 Top Global Marketers (1999) n Proctor & Gamble Co. n Unilever n Nestle n Volkswagen n Ford Motor Co. n General Motors Corp. n Toyota Motor Co. n Coca-Cola Co. n Peugeot Citroen n L’Oreal

33 33 2 nd Player The Advertising Agency

34 34 Advertising Agency n Account management n Creative department n Media n Research & strategic planning

35 35 Account Management n Represents agency to client n Client relationship n Knowledge of client’s business –Competitive actions –Consumer trends n Helps set goals & budget n Coordinates day to day work

36 36 Creative Department n Creates ideas, images, & words make up commercials and ads n Copywriters n Art directors n Oversee print or broadcast production

37 37 Media Department n Planning –Plan media schedule n Buying –Execute media plan

38 38 Research n Strategic planning n Consumer research n How does consumer interact with brand? n How does brand fit into consumer lifestyle? n Pretest and posttests

39 39 Example n 1995 campaign for California Milk Processors Advisory Board n Declining sales from 1980 to 1993 n Result? n Increased sales

40 40 Paying the Agency n Commission system n Fees

41 41 Commission n Rebates offered by media advertising agencies (15%)

42 42 Commission System n Agency creates commercial for advertiser n Agency contacts TV station for air time n TV station bills ad agency Cost of air time $ 10,000 Less 15% (1,500) Due $ 8,500 n Agency bills advertiser $10,000

43 43 Fee-based Compensation n May vary according to departments or levels of salary n Or flat hourly rate n Charges for out-of-pocket expenses, travel, etc. n Media charges are net of commissions

44 44 Advertising Age (1998) Charges Over Time n 1982 n 71% commissions n 8% fees n 21% combination n 1997 n 35% commissions n 58% fees n 7% combination

45 45 Full Service Agencies n Four major staff functions – Account management – Creative – Media planning and buying – Research

46 46 Top Ten Agency Brands (1999) n Grey Advertising (NY) n J.Walter Thompson Co. (NY) n McCann-Erickson Worldwide (NY) n FCB Worldwide (NY) n Leo Burnett USA (Chicago) n Euro RSCG Worldwide (NY) n Young & Rubicam Inc. (NY) BBDO Worldwide (NY) n DDB Worldwide Communications (NY) n Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide (NY)

47 47 World Top Advertising Organizations (1999) n Omnicom (NY) n Interpublic Group of Cos. (NY) n WPP Group (London) n Havas Advertising (France) n Dentsu (Tokyo) n B Com3 Group (Chicago) n Young & Rubicam Inc. (NY) n Grey Advertising (NY) n True North (Chicago) n Publicis SA (Paris)

48 48 Agencies on the Internet n TBWA/Chiat/Day –http://www.chiatday.com/ n Fallon McElligott –http://www.fallon.com/ n Bozell Worldwide –http://www.bozell.com/

49 49 Agencies On The Internet n A comprehensive list of ad agencies can be found at the following address –http://www.digitaldirectory.com/ adagencies.html

50 50 Limited Service Agencies or Specialized Agencies Functions – Creative, media buying, etc. n Audiences – Minority, youth, etc. n Industries – Healthcare, computers, B2B, etc. n Communication Tool – Direct marketing, interactive, etc.

51 51 Top 100 US Interactive Agencies (1999) n MarchFirst n Digitas n iXL n Grey Interactive n Sapient Corp. n Modern Media n Aspen Interactive n OglivyInteractive n Luminant Worldwide Corp. n AppNet

52 52 In-House Agencies n Perform most of the functions of outside agency n Example: Large retailers

53 53 Why an In-House Agency? n Savings n Faster response n Specialization n Control

54 54 Problems with In-House? n Lack of initiative due to noncompetitive environment n Inability to keep up with marketplace n Less objective

55 55 From The Internet n The Advertising Agency Contract --http://www.smartbiz.com/ sbs/arts/cwa4.htm

56 56 3 rd Player The Media

57 57 The Media n Channels of communication that carry message from advertiser to audience

58 58 Media Organizations n Sell space in print media n Sell time in broadcast media n Sell space/time in electronic media n Assist in media selection and analysis n Help w/ad production

59 59 Top Leading Media Co. (1998) n Time Warner (NY) AT&T Corp. (NY) n CBS Corp. (NY) n Walt Disney Co. (NY) NBC TV (General Electric, Fairfield, Conn) n News Corp. (Sydney)

60 60 4 th Player Vendors

61 61 Vendors n Freelancers/consultants n Market researchers n Freelance copywriters and graphic artists n Photographers n Songwriters n Printers n Direct-mail production houses n Telemarketers n Public relations consultants

62 62 5 th Player The Target Audience

63 63 Target Audience n Kellogg cereal? n Consumer n Purchaser

64 64 Current Issues n Interactive advertising n Integrated marketing communications n Globalization n Consumer power, relationship marketing, permission marketing, and customization

65 65 Examples n Peapod n Mass customization –Levi’s Original Spin


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