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chapter 03 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Business of Advertising.

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Presentation on theme: "chapter 03 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Business of Advertising."— Presentation transcript:

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2 chapter 03 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Business of Advertising

3 3-3 Chapter 3 Objectives Explain how advertisers organize Define the main types of ad agencies Discuss clients and revenue Explain what people do in ad agencies Debate pros and cons of in-house agencies Describe industry changes Describe the various groups in advertising Explain how suppliers and the media help Discuss differences between local and national advertisers

4 3-4 The Advertising Industry: Organizations Advertisers (Clients) Agencies Media Suppliers

5 3-5 The Advertising Industry: People Sales Technology Research Accounting Communication Arts Management Law Most are employed by advertisers, not clients

6 3-6 Advertisers: Local Directed to customers in the same geographic area Independent businesses Govt. & nonprofits Franchisees and dealers Chain retailers

7 3-7 Advertisers: Local Ad for Rubio’s Baja Grill showcases its unique products Insert photo 4.2, p. 99 Baja Grill Burrito Position = 2.9” horiz., 1.5” vertical Size = 4.6” TALL Resolution = 300 dpi

8 3-8 Advertisers: Local Department structure for small advertisers with high volumes of work Insert ex. 4-1, p. 100 Department structure for small advertisers Position = 2.9” horiz., 1.5” vertical Size = 4.6” TALL Resolution = 300 dpi

9 3-9 Create favorable image, increase awareness, foster goodwill Recruit employees, offer services, sell merchandise Regular price-line, sale or clearance Advertisers: Local Types of local advertising Classified Product Institutional

10 3-10 Advertisers: Local Local ad for Michaels stores

11 3-11 Advertisers: Cooperative Two key purposes Build manufacturer’s brand image Help distributors, dealers or retailers make more sales

12 3-12 Advertisers: Regional and National A national ad for Dunkin’ Donuts

13 3-13 Advertisers: Regional and National Regional: one or several states National: several regions or entire country

14 3-14 Advertisers: Regional and National Comparison of national and local advertising

15 3-15 Advertisers: Regional and National Centralized department structure

16 3-16 Decentralized department structure Advertisers: Regional and National

17 3-17 Heinz ketchup ad from the Leo Burnett Group, Copenhagen Advertisers: Transnational

18 3-18 Advertisers: Transnational Decentralized international structure Divisions have ad agencies to handle product lines Brands within a line handled by own managers Category managers for brand in each market

19 3-19 Advertisers: Global Standardized approach in all countries Extensive research to ensure ad is basic & universal Centralized global structure

20 3-20 Media Around the World International media Foreign media

21 3-21 Agencies: Definition Agency roles Develop marketing & ad plans Develop ads & promotions Purchase ad space and time

22 3-22 Agencies An ad for Strawberry Frog arguing that a different world may justify a different agency Pub: Please

23 3-23 Agencies: Types Reach Full-Service Specialty BoutiquesMedia Buyers Interactive Consumer BTB LocalNational Regional Internatl

24 3-24 Account management Research & account planning Creative concepts Traffic control Media buying & planning Production Other services Admin Agencies: People

25 3-25 Agencies: People Many departments contributed to Honda’s dealer kit

26 3-26 Agencies: Compensation  Media commissions Ad rate-card price: $100,000 Agency buys ad at 15% discount: $85,000 Agency bills client full ad amount: $100,000 $15,000 difference is kept by the agency

27 3-27 Agencies: Compensation  Media commissions  Markups Agency buys materials for campaign Materials cost $85,000 Agency bills for materials plus a 17.65% markup Agency bills $100,000 which is costs plus markup

28 3-28 Agencies: Compensation  Media commissions  Markups  Fees Fee- commission combination Straight-fee (retainer) method Incentive system

29 3-29 Agencies: In-House Pros May save money Allows tighter control May permit greater attention to the brand Lower creative quality Less experience and talent Loss of objectivity Cons

30 3-30 Agencies: Client Relationships Referrals Presentations Community relations & networking Soliciting for new business How agencies reach & attract new clients

31 3-31 Suppliers Art studios & web designers Printers & related specialists Film & video houses Research companies

32 3-32 Out-of-home Media Digital interactive Electronic Print Direct mail Other media

33 3-33 Current Trends Industry consolidation Decline of the commission system Changes resulting from new media


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