Tuesday, February 16, 2010

HOW COMPANIES ADVERTISE

Advertising informs consumers about the existence and benefits of products and services, and attempts to persuade them to buy them. The best from advertising is probably word-of-mouth advertising, which occurs when people tell their friends about the benefits of products or services that they have purchased. Yet virtually no providers of goods or services rely on this alone, but use paid advertising instead. Indeed, many organizations also use institutional or prestige advertising, which is designed to build up their reputation rather than to sell particular products.
Although large companies could easily set up their own advertising departments, write their own advertisements, and buy media space themselves, they tend to use the services of large advertising agencies. These are likely to have more resources, and more knowledge about all aspects of advertising and advertising media than a single company. The most talented advertising people generally prefer to work for agencies rather then individual companies as this gives them the chance to work on a variety of advertising accounts (contracts to advertise products or services). It is also easier for a dissatisfied company to give its account to another agency than it would be to fire its own advertising staff.
The client company generally gives the advertising agency an agreed budget; a statement of the objectives of the advertising campaign, known as a brief; and an overall advertising strategy concerning the message to be communicated to the target customers. The agency creates advertisements (the word is often abbreviated to adverts or ads), and develops a media plan specifying which media - newspapers, magazines, radio, television, cinema, posters, mail, etc. - will be used and in which proportions. (On television and radio, ads are often known as commercials.) Agencies often produce alternative ads or commercials that are pre-tested in newspapers, television stations, etc. in different parts of a country before a final choice is made prior to a national campaign.
The agency's media planners have to decide what percentage of the target market they want to reach (how many people will be exposed to the ads) and the number of times they are likely to see them. Advertising people talk about frequency or 'OTS' (opportunities to see) and the threshold effect - the point at which advertising becomes effective. The choice of advertising media is generally strongly influenced by the comparative cost of reaching 1,000 members of the target audience the cost per thousand (often abbreviated to CPM, using the Roman numeral for 1,000). The timing of advertising campaigns depends on factors such as purchasing frequency and buyer turnover (new buyers entering the market).
How much to spend on advertising is always problematic. Some companies use the
comparative-parity method - they simply match their competitors' spending, thereby avoiding advertising wars. Others set their ad budget at a certain percentage of current sales revenue. But both these methods disregard the fact that increased ad spending or counter-cyclical advertising can increase current sales. On the other hand, excessive advertising is counter-productive because after too many exposures people tend to stop noticing ads, or begin to find them irritating. And once the most promising prospective customers have been reached, there are diminishing returns, i.e. an ever-smaller increase in sales in relation to increased advertising spending.



posted by Panciuc Daniela & Postica Zinaida

1 comment:

  1. Advertising is a non-personal form of promotion that is delivered through selected media outlets that, under most circumstances, require the marketer to pay for message placement. It is an important contributor to economic growth. Advertising is almost everywhere: we see or hear a lot of advertisements on the TV sets, in the underground, on billboards, in newspapers and in the public transport. Today it's almost impossible to imagine our lives without advertisements. The main aim of advertisers is to attract your attention and then to make you buy this or that product whether you like it or not. The only way to make you buy it is to persuade you with the help of logical arguments that you really need it. Advertising is the promotion of goods, services, companies and ideas, most often through paid messages. Marketers see advertising as part of an overall promotional strategy.
    Within the field of economics, there are two divergent viewpoints about the role of advertising in the economy. The first one, advertising is a source of information for consumers who can use it to make more informed decisions in the market place. Seen this way, advertising is understood to increase market efficiency by providing information about alternatives. And the second views advertising as manipulating the public by creating artificial needs and wants.
    Strong points:
    *Advertising makes jobs. It makes more jobs for more people;
    * Advertising reduces selling costs;
    * Advertising increases company profits;
    * Advertising increases company security;
    *Our enormous and growing productivity needs advertising to speed up consumption;
    *Advertising is essential for business, especially for launching new consumer products.
    Weak points:
    *Advertising is increasingly invading public spaces, such as schools, and this is a form of child exploitation;
    *Advertising causes people to spend needlessly;
    *A large reduction of advertising would decrease sales;
    *Spending on advertising is huge.
    In conclusion, so what is advertising? Advertising is a complex phenomenon — intimately tied to society, culture, history, and the economy — that defies any simple or single definition. It sometimes provides new information, and always attempts to persuade. In addition to selling messages, it encodes cultural values and social ideals. And depending on your point of view, it is a positive or negative force in society and the economy.
    In the end I'd like to admit that whether we like it or not but today advertising influences and changes our minds a lot. And the only thing we can do is try to think do we really need this or that thing.

    Teisanu Elena,EMREI 295

    ReplyDelete