Understanding
the Psychology of Advertising - Another Free Article From
Lismore Lawyers
Advertising has been a form of glorifying or gaining
publicity for goods and merchandize since very early times. In
fact, advertising has been around as an informal concept since
the beginning of civilizations and former methods were oral
advertising or claiming the benefits of products verbally when
merchants sold goods to people directly on the streets. However
with the advent of paper and writing, advertising took a more
formal shape.
Egyptians and Ancient Greeks used the papyrus for
advertising and rock painting was also used. Advertising in
English in magazines as we know today dates back to the end of
the 17th century and newspaper advertising in America began
during the first part of the 18th century with advertisements
for estates. With the growth of mass media and different forms
and avenues of communication like radio, TV, newspapers,
magazines, and of course the internet in the 20th century,
advertising started becoming an important aspect for
commercialization of products. People started understanding the
potential of advertisements and it became a business with the
establishment of advertising agencies with the first
advertising agency in US opened in 1841.
With advertising becoming a business in itself, the methods
of using advertisements became even more formalized, controlled
and systematic and the advertisements for products started
appearing as newspaper ads, on billboards, hoardings, as
handbills, leaflets, on magazines, newspapers, on TV and radio
as commercials and more recently on the internet. Web
advertising is now a very powerful means to take the message
across to the customers. However to actually appeal to
customers, advertising will have to work in accordance with the
principles of psychology and sociology. Thus an advertiser or
an advertising professional will also have to be a sociologist
and a psychologist to really have an impact on the minds of
consumers.
The principles of advertising are largely based on cognitive
psychology and the psychological processes of attention,
perception, association and memory to bring out the complete
impact or uses of a product or 'brand'. Any advertisement will
have to first focus on the attention that it is able to capture
of the consumers. Strong messages, strong visuals and glaring
colors are sometimes used on hoardings and billboards. For
commercials, attention catching clothes and attractive models
are sometimes used.
Once the attention is drawn with the colors and the sounds
or words, the focus is on retaining consumer interests by using
'association'. Themes or products which a particular segment of
customers could associate with are used thus for baby food,
mothers and babies are featured so association would have more
to do with relevance or context of the advertisement. Certain
colors also have associative value and certain brands and
companies use a specific color to promote their products. For
example easygroup uses orange and Vodafone uses red as standard
color for all advertising. The company logo or symbol is also a
part of developing a brand and helps in giving identity to a
brand and has a strong associative value.
The association should be such that it not only serves the
purpose of quick understanding and perception of the consumers
but is also retained in their memory for a long time. Thus
memory or retention is an important aspect of the psychology of
advertising as only an advertisement that consumers can easily
remember for a long time for its novelty or use of words,
colors and figures will be the most effective.
The development of a 'brand' is just as effective because a
brand helps in driving attention, in developing association
(for example, we associate Coca Cola with youth, celebration
and a soft drink popular for all occasions) and in memory or
retention of any image associated with a service or product. So
branding is vital in advertisements as brands help in giving a
name and distinct identity of a product. So a Gucci bag or a
Sony camera is known for the brand rather than the product.
A brand is recognized in terms of its name, its quality and
its reputation with advertisements these days highlighting the
uniqueness of brands. For example, HSBC recent advertisements
across airports around the world, focus on the differing points
of view and different likes and preferences of people across
cultures. So when you see such advertisements showing two
different perspectives for the same thing, you know this is
HSBC. Certain brands develop taglines or motto that sets the
brand apart and gives it a distinct character.
You might have wondered why models look lifeless on fashion
shows. Fashion shows are usually arranged for designer brands
selling clothes and accessories and usually these fashion shows
try to accentuate the clothes and that is why the models tend
to be rather 'expressionless'. Although these fashion shows
project the clothes sans the emoting, in case of commercials,
expressions are widely used because through visual medium,
emotions have to be transported through the screen to the
consumers to create an effect. Putting across a message through
a medium is a challenge and advertisers use emotions widely to
help people retain the message that describes the product.
Whatever it is, the mantra is to create an impact and have a
lasting effect on the minds of the consumers. The message of
the product, the motto of the brand and the mind of the
consumer, these are the three Ms that are important in
advertising.
However it is important to understand that advertising will
have to be different for different media. Radio ads should
focus on the strength of sounds and words; internet ads will
focus on visuals and colors; newspaper ads will focus on space
and the theme; and TV ads would focus more on the emotions and
the context used. Using motion, capitalized letters,
contrasting colors etc are all important and in order to draw
attention to the product, some form of highlighting of the
product is also done.
How does all this affect the masses, the consumers who will
actually buy the product? Apart from the attention drawing
process, the retention producing sounds and words that help
memory and the associative value of the products and the
advertisements, there is another factor namely necessity of the
consumer. Advertising is not just enough, as a customer is
driven to buy a product largely considering the necessity,
quality, features and price of the product.
If a company solely focuses on the physical aspects of any
product, like say - an Apple iPhone looks good on the table,
then it's probably not the best method to have an impact on the
market. The features are as important as the price. Then of
course, the 'hype' that triggers a certain mass psychology in a
certain way so people sometimes queue up for newly released
products. But trying to tap in on mass psychology or a kind of
hype or hysteria for a product is only a short term advertising
strategy. The longer term establishment of a product is through
real quality, usability and price and all companies should
emphasize on these ultimately.
Competition may have a lot to do with the type of
advertising used by companies, so the weaknesses of other
similar products by other companies are highlighted subtly
although this may not always have a positive impact on the mind
of the customer. Usually most products advertised as unique and
not even remotely similar to other products can have a positive
effect and can effectively generate hype and consumer
curiosity. Focusing on the unique and highlighting the
dissimilarity and novelty of a product in a way that attracts
curiosity is a certain method to improve popularity of a
product, so this gives consumers the reason to know more and
they will enter the shops to enquire about the product.
Although celebrities are largely used in advertisements to
endorse products or promote a brand, the celebrity culture
affects only the youth strongly so the entire value of
celebrity advertising may be a bit overrated. This will require
a separate discussion on celebrity culture.
The final goal of all advertisers and promoters is to ensure
that products and services sell and to increase sales and
potential consumer interest creating curiosity is a first short
term step while introducing a new product into the market.
Retaining customer interest is a different ballgame and
requires reputation of the brand, product quality, right
pricing and continued high quality advertising to ultimately
ensure success of the product.
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