Introduction and Overview of Advertising Psychology
Introduction and Overview of Advertising Psychology
Introduction and Overview of Advertising Psychology
PI 31003
ADVERTISING PSYCHOLOGY
MDM. JASMINE ADELA MUTANG
WHAT IS ADVERTISING?
• Everyday we are exposed to
hundreds/thousands of commercial messages
• Forms of (i) Campaign:
- Magazine ads
- Billboards
- Pre-movie commercials
- Web sites
• Everyday we are exposed to
hundreds/thousands of commercial messages
• Forms of ad:
(i) Campaign
- Magazine ads
- Billboards
- Pre-movie commercials
- Web sites
(ii) Publicity product exposure
- TV commercials
- Coupons
- Sales letters
- Event sponsorships
- Telemarketing calls
- E-mails
• these various tools is marketing
communications
• Advertising is a tool
• Advertising is defined as any form of paid
communication by an identified sponsor
aimed to inform and/or persuade target
audiences about an organization, product,
service or idea (Belch & Belch, 2004).
McCann Worldgroup, the ad agency for MasterCard, claims that advertising is “truth well told”.
Sou
odi ssa nne odi eiv
rce Feedback
ng ge l ng
Noise
Exhibit 1 – 1 er
•The process begins when one party, called the source,
formulates an idea, encodes it as a message, and sends it
via some channel to another party, called the receiver.
• The receiver must decode the message in order to
understand it. To respond, the receiver formulates
new idea, encodes it, and then sends the new
message back through some channel.
• A message that acknowledges or responds to the
original message constitutes feedback, which also
affects the encoding of a new message.
• All this takes place in an environment characterized
by noise – the distracting cacophony of many other
messages being sent at the same time by other
sources.
• Applying this model to advertising, we could say that
the source is the sponsor, the message is the ad, the
channel is the medium, the receiver is the consumer
or prospect, and the noise is the din of competing
ads and commercials.
• But this model oversimplifies the process that occurs
in advertising or other sponsored marketing
communications. It doesn’t take into account either
the structure or the creativity inherent in composing
the advertising message.
• We need to consider some of the many
complexities involves, especially with the
advent of interactive media, which let
consumers participate in the communication
by extracting the information they need,
manipulating what they see, and responding
in real time.
Applying the Communication Process to Advertising
WEEK TOPIC
1 Introduction and overview
2 Consumer Behaviour and Advertising
3 Advertising’s Role in Marketing
4 Advertising and Society
5 Special Advertising
6 How Advertising Works
7 Emotions in Advertising
8 Information Processes
9 Exposure, Attention and Perception
10 Advertising and Media
11 Culture, Communications, and Media
12 Ethics, Social Responsibility in Advertising
13 Advertising Research
14 Advertising and Strategic Planning
Assessment Methods and Types:
The assessment will be based on the following:
Component Weight
Theory 60%
Practical 40%
Individual Assignment 15% Journal Review
Group Assignment (inclusive presentation) 25% Advertisement
Total 100%
*All components of the above assessment are compulsory and must be completed before the
stipulated dateline.
Text books and references:
Arens, W.F., Weigold, M.F., & Arens, C. (2009). Contemporary Advertising (12 th ed.)
Boston: McGraw-Hill.
Hoyer, W.D., & Maclnnis D.J. (2008). Consumer Behaviour ( 5 th ed.) China: Centgage
Learning.
Mooij, M.D. (2011). Consumer Behaviour and Culture (2 nd ed.) Los Angeles: Sage
Publications, Inc.
Journal of Communication
Behaviour (http://www.ingentaconnect.com/)