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Creativity Mktg 340 Maureen O’Connor
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Where do creative ideas come from? Dan Wieden’s point of view http://www.adweek.com/aw/video/interviews_ player_page.jsp http://www.adweek.com/aw/video/interviews_ player_page.jsp “Imagination is the last legal means of gaining unfair advantage over your competition.” Tim McGillicott
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Start with a good brief… Understand the audience The social, cultural environment The support for the claims The key value or advantage (USP) The obstacles
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Canadian Club brief How does creative reflect the brief? http://www.effie.org/winners/showcase/2009/ 3517 http://www.effie.org/winners/showcase/2009/ 3517
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How do we communicate and interpret? Issues of: – Noise – Source credibility – Semiotics and meaning
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Start with Communication Theory SenderEncodingChannelDecodingReceiver
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Advertising Theory Advertising theories help us understand how consumers make product decisions 1. Hierarchy of effects Consumers proceed through a series of steps – Awareness – Knowledge/interest – Liking and preference – Purchase decision – Advertising must lead consumers through these steps – How can we know where our consumer is? Metrics
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Advertising theories (continued) 2. Means-End Theory – Link a product attribute (reduced calories) – To a benefit (you will lose weight and be healthy) – To a consumer value (you will feel good about yourself)
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Advertising theories (continued) 3. Verbal and Visual image Theory – Based on the idea that consumers respond best to visual images Attract more attention Better recall Concrete images work better than abstract images
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Visual Esperanto Important concept for global advertising Uses visual images that cross cultural boundaries – these images mean the same thing to people all over the world
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Coca Cola billboard using visual esperanto
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Advertising Appeals – 7 common approaches Fear: “purchase a lock for your bicycle so it won’t be stolen” Humor: grabs our attention by making us laugh Sex: cultural differences make it difficult to use; often used in fashion Music: increases recall of the product Rationality: logical presentation of product benefits Emotions: love, friendship, family bonds Scarcity: “our sale will only last three days!”
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Mastercard ad using emotional appeal
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Neutrogena ad using rational appeal
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Milk ad using humor appeal
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Executional frameworks Animation Slice of Life Dramatization Testimonial Fantasy Authority Demonstration
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Elements of an advertisement Tagline and logo Support for the claim Subheadline Headline
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Message Strategy Message strategy is the way we convince a consumer to buy – Through reason (cognitive) – Through feelings (affective) – Through action (conative)
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Cognitive (reason why) strategies Straight benefits – This perfume will make you smell good Unique Selling Proposition – this is the only toothpaste with a taste children like Hyperbole – this is the best bread in the world! Comparison – works better than the competition
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Affective (emotional) strategies Resonance – connect to consumer experience (“remember when?”) Emotional – generate feelings of friendship, love, anger (“this product will make you feel happy with your family)
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Conative (action) strategies Create the impulse buy (“Buy now!) Support promotions (“Join our Contest!”)
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Message strategy Use cognitive to build awareness and knowledge Use affective to build preference Use conative to generate purchase
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Message strategy The combination of appeals and executional frameworks to deliver the message in a way that engages the consumer and articulates the brand insight so that the consumer will be motivated… – To feel (affective – To think (cognitive) – To do (conative) …something about the product.
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