Unit 13 Advertising
Unit 13 Advertising
Unit 13 Advertising
1. What is advertising?
- Advertising refers to promoting a product, service, or idea through various communication channels to
reach and persuade the target audience. It involves creating compelling messages and delivering them
through different media platforms, such as television, radio, print publications, digital channels, and
outdoor displays.
- Advertising simply means a way of communication that reaches all types of sector. It provides
information and creates awareness among people relating to a product etc.
- AIDA Principle:
Attract Attention - Capture reader
Create Interest - You keen to find out more
Develop Desire - Feel a need to buy
Promote Action - Information that you will need to buy
2. Purpose of Advertising
The purpose of advertising is multi-faceted and depends on a business’s specific goals and objectives.
Some everyday purposes of advertising include:
Increasing Sales: Advertising aims to drive sales and revenue growth by attracting new customers and
encouraging repeat purchases. By creating awareness, generating interest, and influencing consumer
behavior, advertising helps businesses achieve their sales targets and improve profitability.
Building Brand Equity: Advertising is crucial in building and strengthening brand equity. It helps
businesses establish a strong brand image, increase brand awareness, and foster positive associations with
the brand. Brand equity contributes to long-term success and customer loyalty.
Expanding Market Share: Advertising helps businesses gain a competitive advantage by increasing their
market share. By reaching a wider audience and positioning the brand as the preferred choice, advertising
contributes to market penetration and growth. It allows businesses to capture a larger market share and
outperform competitors.
Educating Consumers: Advertising is an educational tool providing important information about
products, services, features, and benefits. By addressing consumer needs and highlighting solutions,
advertising helps consumers make informed decisions and choose products or services that best meet their
requirements.
Creating Brand Differentiation: Advertising helps businesses differentiate themselves from competitors
in a crowded marketplace. By showcasing unique features, quality, and value propositions, advertising
communicates the distinctiveness of a brand. It helps businesses stand out and position themselves as the
preferred choice among consumers.
3. Types of advertising
Informative advertising: new product, new service, new features, re-launch
Building a brand and company image
Telling the market about a new product
Explaining how the product works
Suggesting new usage of a product informing
Correcting false impression
Persuasive advertising: comparative ads
Reminder advertising: continuous ads • ex; coca cola
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Maintaining customer relationship
Reminding consumers that the product may be needed in the near future
Reminding consumers where to buy the product
4. Functions of advertising
Advertising serves several functions, each contributing to the overall marketing strategy of a business.
Let’s explore these functions in detail:
Informing
One of the primary functions of advertising is to inform the target audience about a company’s products,
services, or ideas. It aims to provide relevant and accurate information to consumers, helping them
understand the features, benefits, and value of what is being advertised. Informative advertising often
focuses on new product launches, product updates, pricing, availability, and other essential details
consumers need.
Influencing
Another vital function of advertising is to influence consumer behavior and decision-making. Advertising
aims to shape consumer perceptions, attitudes, and preferences through persuasive messaging, emotional
appeals, and engaging visuals. By presenting products or services in a desirable light, advertising influences
consumers to consider them viable options.
Increasing Salience
Advertising helps increase brand salience, which refers to the degree of awareness and prominence of a
brand in the minds of consumers. Through consistent and repetitive exposure, advertising keeps a brand at
the forefront of consumers’ minds, making it more likely to be considered when a related need or desire
arises.
Adding Value
Advertising adds value to products and services by emphasizing their unique features, benefits, and
advantages over competitors. By showcasing the value proposition of offerings, advertising helps
consumers perceive them as more desirable, worth the price, and capable of satisfying their needs or
desires.
Building Brand Equity
Advertising develops brand equity by shaping consumer perceptions, associations, and preferences. It helps
establish an emotional connection between the brand and its target audience. Through consistent
messaging, advertising reinforces the brand image and values. It ensures that consumers constantly
perceive the brand and its offerings over time.
Reinforcing Brand Image
Advertising plays a crucial role in shaping and reinforcing the brand image. It helps create a positive and
desirable perception of a brand in the minds of consumers. By consistently communicating the brand’s
values, personality, and unique selling propositions, advertising builds a solid and differentiated brand
image.
Creating Demand
One essential function of advertising is generating demand for products or services. By stimulating
consumer interest, desire, and purchase intent, advertising creates a sense of urgency and prompts
consumers to take action. Effective advertising campaigns generate excitement, curiosity, and interest
among consumers, increasing sales and revenue.
5. Benefits of advertising
The benefits of advertising include:
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Increased brand awareness and visibility.
Improved customer acquisition and retention.
Differentiation from competitors.
Enhanced product or service value perception.
Revenue growth and profitability.
Efficient communication of information.
Influencing consumer behavior and purchase decisions.
6. Type Of Advertising Media
Outdoor Advertising (Billboard, Transport) Media Advertising (Television, Radio)
Print Advertising (Newspaper, Magazine)
Internet Advertising
Celebrity Advertising
Cinema Advertising
Retailer/Local Advertising
Brand Advertising
7. Players In Advertising
Advertiser
Advertising Agency
Media
Vendors
Target Audience
8. Advertising agency
8.1 The four features of advertising agency
(1) Account planning
Account planning involves creating an accurate estimate of a client's requirements and preferences. Based
on client specifications, account planners research markets, establish achievable goals and review strategies
that have worked in similar cases. The planning phase of a campaign guides the work of individuals who
engage in creative services at a later stage.
(2) Creative services
Creative services involve the production of advertising materials such as visuals, text and videos for a range
of platforms. Advertisements may feature in newspapers and magazines or on billboards, hoardings, social
media or television. A team of content creators addresses workflow pertaining to ideation, conceptual
design and production. This involves writers, cameramen, creative directors and art directors. They
typically work with individuals on the client side to develop a comprehensive brief before they start
creating materials.
(3) Media planning and procurement
Media planning and procurement involve determining appropriate marketing channels through which
advertisers can disseminate marketing materials. Individuals responsible for media planning may liaise with
employees of media houses and publications to secure slots for airing or featuring advertisements. They
also negotiate the terms of remuneration for providing the rights to use different kinds of marketing
materials.
(4) Client services
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Client services primarily include liaising between the client side and creative contributors of an advertising
campaign. Individuals who address client services workflows act as communication channels between these
two teams and try to eliminate miscommunications that could affect the quality of advertisement materials.
They may also update individuals on the client side regarding project progress or schedule meetings
between involved parties for them to discuss changes to the initial brief or other campaign developments.
8.2 Functions of an advertising agency
The following are eight important functions of an advertising agency:
(1) Creating advertising plans
Individuals who work in advertising agencies start a project or campaign by creating a comprehensive
advertisement plan. This plan is a systematic, step-by-step breakdown of all the activities that contribute to
the development of the final campaign. Creating such a plan involves assigning specific responsibilities and
tasks to contributors and identifying dependencies in workflows. For example, a video editor may depend
on the output of cinematographers and sound designers, while a planner may schedule the tasks of these
contributors.
Before creating an advertisement plan, agency members may consult individuals on the client side to assess
requirements and perform initial research to evaluate the following:
What is the offering's unique selling point?
What are the offering's strengths and weaknesses?
Who comprises the brand's target demographic?
What is the brand's track record in the market in which it is selling its offerings?
Who are the brand's competitors and what similar products do they sell?
What are the brand's competitor's strengths and weaknesses?
After considering these aspects, advertising planners may identify what marketing materials to develop and
what channels to disseminate them through.
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also ensures that the advertising materials that an agency creates resonate well with the target audience of a
brand. Adequate research allows marketers to develop a nuanced understanding of customer needs and pain
points and create materials that accurately address them.
(7) Accounting
In an advertising agency, the function of accounting involves multiple aspects, some of which lie outside of
finance. Some agency staff members may verify how many times an advertisement appears in a particular
media channel. They may also inform management staff on both the agency's side and the channel's side in
case of a discrepancy. Other accounting responsibilities in an agency include bookkeeping, invoicing,
billing, collecting funds from clients and disbursing funds to media and publication houses.
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A product life cycle is the amount of time a product goes from being introduced into the market
until it's taken off the shelves.
There are four stages in a product's life cycle—introduction, growth, maturity, and decline.
A company often incurs higher marketing costs when introducing a product to the market but
experiences higher sales as product adoption grows.
Sales stabilize and peak when the product's adoption matures, though competition and obsolescence
may cause its decline.
The concept of product life cycle helps inform business decision-making, from pricing and
promotion to expansion or cost-cutting.
9.2 The four stages
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Product improvements.
increase in competition.
Increase in profits.
Reduction in price.
Strengthening the distribution channel.
(2) Maturity stage
Market becomes saturated because the household demand is satisfied & distribution channels are full. The
product has to face keen competition which brings pressure on prices. Though the sales of the product rises
but at a lower rate. Profit margin however decline due to keen competition.
Sales increases at decreasing rate.
Normal promotional expenses.
Uniform & lower prices.
Product modifications.
Dealer's support.
Profit margin decreases
(3) Decline stage
This is the finial stage, sooner or later actual sales begin to fall under the impact of new product
competition & changing consumer behavior. The sales & profits fall down sharply & the promotional
expenditure has to be cut down drastically.
Characteristics:
Rapid decrease in sales.
Further decrease in prices
No promotional expenses.
Suspension of production work.
3. Features of a product lifecycle
Every product has the life cycle as every human being has.
It denotes that the product passes from different stages at different speed in course of completing the whole
cycle.
The profit of business firm grow rapidly in the stage of growth & starts declining due to competitive
conditions at the stage of maturity. However the sales volume go on increasing.
No two products have identical life cycle.
The duration of each stage is different for different products. It depends upon factors(nature of products,
technological advancement, competition pressure, etc)
It is not necessary that all products go through ail stages, some fail at the initial stage , other may reach
maturity stage after a long time.
It provides a useful framework for developing effective marketing strategies in different stages of the
product life cycle.
4. Examples
4.1 Product life cycle for stylish products
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A style is the manner in which a product is presented and certain styles come and go.
AcctoKotler: " A style is a basic & distinctive mode of expression.". E.g., Furniture, automobile,
clothing, shoes.
The current style for mobile phone is touch screen and this style will last until a new technology
style appears.
So the shape of a style life cycle is like a wave, as one style fades out, another appears.
4.2 Product life cycle for fashion products
A fashion refer to a currently accepted style in a specific field. It is a current trend which can have a long or
short life cycle.
Fashion tends to grow slowly, remain popular for a while, then decline slowly
The demand for the product increases at a faster rate, reaches to its top & with the change in fashion the
product life enter to decline stage.
E.g., readymade garments, purses, bangles, shoes etc
4.3 Product life cycle for fad products
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Fads are fashions that enter quickly with great zeal, peak early & decline very quickly.
A fad is a product that is around for a short period.
E.g,, garments, caps, hair style, music albums, films & other fashion products.
Every product cycle start from an introduction of the product in the market & it is ceased after passing
through the market growth & market stages.
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Lowering the price to attract more consumer.
Middlemen's margin is increased, to create the interest.
Give proper emphasis on advertising & promotional programmes.
Change in the style & design of the product.
A firm can improve his sales by changing one or more elements of marketing mix. It can reduce the price to
attract new users & competitor's.
6.4 Declining stage
In this final stage, sales begin to fall & the product is gradually replaced by new innovation. This is because
of technical advancement, change in consumer preference, increased competition. For marketeer this stage
is very crucial.
Strategies:
Improve the product ¡n a functional sense.
Review the marketing & production programs.
Emphasis on cost control techniques to generate profits means cut all costs to minimum level.
Economy packs or models may be introduced to revive the market.
Adopt selective promotion of the product to reduce distribution costs.
Packaging may be made more attractive & reusable packages.
R&D efforts are increased to innovate the new product.
Sales incentive schemes are introduced to get dealer's support.
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