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Published byGwenda Reed Modified over 8 years ago
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2-1 Federal Regulation: Agencies Nutritional Labeling & Education Act (NLEA) Broadcast media licensing Deceptive, unfair, & comparative ads FCCFTCFDA Intellectual property Patent & Trademark Office Copyrights “works of authorship” Library of Congress
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Flexibility in readership and advertising. High-quality color. Permanence. Prestige. Audience selectivity. Proven selling power. Reader loyalty can be high. Pass-along readership. Lacks immediacy. Shallow geographical coverage (compared to broadcast). Costly for reaching the masses. Long lead time. Clutter. Leading mags tend to have more ad pages than editorial. Cost per thousand (CPM) can be comparatively high.
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Mass medium reaches many segments of society. Local medium with broad reach. Comprehensive content. Geographic selectivity, sometimes down to neighborhood level. Timeliness. Credibility (compared to ads in other media). Permanent record. Lack of socioeconomic selectivity. Short life span (unless readers clip the ad). Low production qauality. Clutter. Lots and lots of other ads, plus editorial matter. Lack of control over ad placement, unless you pay a premium. Some overlapping circulation. Losing readership.
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Broad coverage. TVs are in 98% of American homes and are watched 8 hours a day. Huge audience exposure can offset production costs and provide good CPM. Impact and creativity. Sight, sound, motion, color.... Social dominance. Cable TV narrowcasting allows for selectivity. Cable TV costs can be surprisingly low. Cable TV ads can be long (even 30 minutes). Enormous production costs. Air-time cost is high on prime-time shows. Brevity. Viewers tend to forget ads quickly. Clutter. Broadcast TV offers limited selectivity. Competition for cable from satellite and Internet. Fragmentation of audience (especially cable). Cable sometimes lacks quality. Zipping and zapping.
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Nice combination of reach and frequency. Selectivity, thanks to specialized formats. Low cost per thousand (CPM). Cheaper production than video. Timeliness, immediacy. Local relevance. Poor visuals. Some ads need to be seen. Segmented audience can mean multiple stations to blanket the market. Fleeting. Half-heard. Radio is often background noise that competes for attention. Clutter. Losing audience to Net.
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Truly interactive medium Enormous audience. Unrivaled immediate response. Unmatched targeting. Proximity to purchase. Provides in-depth info. Good for biz-to-biz. Social media reach people where they spend their time and allows them to help advertise. Phone access means 24/7 access. Standardization lacking. Uncertain measurements for exposure, pricing. Crashes and slowdowns. Security concerns. Privacy concerns.
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Accessibility. 24/7, and it can’t be avoided. Can have best reach. Frequency. Lots of repeat viewings. Geographic flexibility. Demographic flexibility, to a degree. Lowest cost per exposure. Impact can be significant with short, simple messages. Creative flexibility. Location—reaches people near point of purchase. Fleeting message. Environment (what’s around the sign) can have a negative impact. Hard to measure audience. Hard to inspect each panel in a large campaign. Long lead time. Visual pollution of outdoor ads can lead to blowback from irritated consumers.
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