Advertising is a form of communication used to
influence individuals to purchase products or services or support
political candidates or ideas. Frequently it communicates a message
that includes the name of the product or service and how that
product or service could potentially benefit the consumer.
Advertising often attempts to persuade potential customers to
purchase or to consume a particular
brand of
product or service. Modern advertising developed with the rise of
mass production in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Commercial advertisers often seek to generate increased consumption
of their products or services through branding, which involves the
repetition of an image or product name in an effort to associate
related qualities with the
brand in the minds
of consumers. Different types of media can be used to deliver these
messages, including traditional media such as newspapers,
magazines, television, radio, billboards or direct mail.
Advertising may be placed by an
advertising agency on behalf of a company
or other organization.
Organizations that spend money on advertising promoting items other
than a consumer product or service include political parties,
interest groups, religious organizations and governmental agencies.
Non-profit organizations may rely on free modes of persuasion, such
as a
public service
announcement.
Money spent on advertising has increased in recent years. In 2007,
spending on advertising was estimated at more than $150 billion in
the United States and $385 billion worldwide, and the latter to
exceed $450 billion by 2010.
Advertising is communication used to influence individuals to
purchase products or services or support political candidates or
ideas. Advertising can be displaced on billboards, newspapers,
T.V., websites, movies and more.
History
Egyptians used
papyrus to make sales
messages and wall posters.
Commercial
messages and political campaign displays have been found in the
ruins of Pompeii
and ancient
Arabia. Lost and found advertising on papyrus was
common in
Ancient Greece and
Ancient Rome. Wall or rock painting for
commercial advertising is another manifestation of an ancient
advertising form, which is present to this day in many parts of
Asia, Africa, and South America. The tradition of wall painting can
be traced back to Indian
rock art paintings
that date back to 4000 BC. History tells us that
Out-of-Home advertising and
Billboards are the oldest forms of
advertising.
As the towns and cities of the
Middle
Ages began to grow, and the general populace was unable to
read, signs that today would say cobbler, miller, tailor or
blacksmith would use an image associated with their trade such as a
boot, a suit, a hat, a clock, a diamond, a horse shoe, a candle or
even a bag of flour. Fruits and vegetables were sold in the city
square from the backs of carts and wagons and their proprietors
used street callers (
town criers) to
announce their whereabouts for the convenience of the
customers.
As education became an apparent need and reading, as well as
printing, developed advertising expanded to include handbills. In
the 17th century advertisements started to appear in weekly
newspapers in England. These early print advertisements were used
mainly to promote books and newspapers, which became increasingly
affordable with advances in the
printing
press; and medicines, which were increasingly sought after as
disease ravaged Europe. However,
false
advertising and so-called "
quack"
advertisements became a problem, which ushered in the regulation of
advertising content.
As the economy expanded during the 19th century, advertising grew
alongside. In the United States, the success of this advertising
format eventually led to the growth of mail-order
advertising.
In June 1836, French newspaper
La
Presse was the first to include paid advertising in its
pages, allowing it to lower its price, extend its readership and
increase its
profitability and
the formula was soon copied by all titles.
Around 1840, Volney Palmer established a predecessor to
advertising agencies in Boston
.
Around the same time, in France,
Charles-Louis Havas extended the
services of his news agency,
Havas to include
advertisement brokerage, making it the first French group to
organize. At first, agencies were brokers for advertisement space
in newspapers.
N. W. Ayer
& Son was the first full-service agency to assume
responsibility for advertising content. N.W. Ayer opened in 1869,
and was located in Philadelphia.
An 1895 advertisement for a weight gain product.
At the turn of the century, there were few career choices for women
in business; however, advertising was one of the few. Since women
were responsible for most of the purchasing done in their
household, advertisers and agencies recognized the
value of women's insight during the
creative
process. In fact, the first American advertising to use a
sexual sell was created by a
woman – for a soap product. Although tame by today's standards, the
advertisement featured a couple with the message "The skin you love
to touch".
In the early 1920s, the first radio stations were established by
radio equipment manufacturers and retailers who offered programs in
order to sell more radios to consumers. As time passed, many
non-profit organizations followed suit in setting up their own
radio stations, and included: schools, clubs and civic groups. When
the practice of
sponsoring
programs was popularised, each individual radio program was usually
sponsored by a single business in exchange for a brief mention of
the business' name at the beginning and end of the sponsored shows.
However, radio station owners soon realised they could earn more
money by selling sponsorship rights in small time allocations to
multiple businesses throughout their radio station's broadcasts,
rather than selling the sponsorship rights to single businesses per
show.
This practice was carried over to television in the late 1940s and
early 1950s.
A fierce battle was fought between those seeking to commercialise
the radio and people who argued that the radio spectrum should be
considered a part of the commons – to be used only non-commercially
and for the public good. The United Kingdom pursued a public
funding model for the
BBC, originally a private
company, the
British
Broadcasting Company, but incorporated as a public body by
Royal Charter in 1927. In Canada,
advocates like
Graham Spry were likewise
able to persuade the federal government to adopt a public funding
model, creating the
Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation. However, in the United States, the capitalist
model prevailed with the passage of the
Communications Act of 1934 which
created the
Federal
Communications Commission. To placate the socialists, the U.S.
Congress did require commercial broadcasters to operate in the
"public interest, convenience, and necessity".
Public broadcasting now exists in the
United States due to the 1967
Public Broadcasting Act
which led to the
Public
Broadcasting Service and
National Public Radio.
In the early 1950s, the
DuMont
Television Network began the modern trend of selling
advertisement time to multiple sponsors. Previously, DuMont had
trouble finding sponsors for many of their programs and compensated
by selling smaller blocks of advertising time to several
businesses. This eventually became the standard for the commercial
television industry in the United States. However, it was still a
common practice to have single sponsor shows, such as
The United States Steel Hour.
In some instances the sponsors exercised great control over the
content of the show - up to and including having one's advertising
agency actually writing the show. The single sponsor model is much
less prevalent now, a notable exception being the
Hallmark Hall of Fame.
The 1960s saw advertising transform into a modern approach in which
creativity was allowed to shine, producing unexpected messages that
made advertisements more tempting to consumers' eyes. The
Volkswagen ad campaign—featuring such headlines
as "Think Small" and "Lemon" (which were used to describe the
appearance of the car)—ushered in the era of modern advertising by
promoting a "position" or "unique selling proposition" designed to
associate each brand with a specific idea in the reader or viewer's
mind. This period of American advertising is called the Creative
Revolution and its
archetype was
William Bernbach who helped create the
revolutionary Volkswagen ads among others. Some of the most
creative and long-standing American advertising dates to this
period.
The late 1980s and early 1990s saw the introduction of
cable television and particularly
MTV. Pioneering the concept of the
music video, MTV ushered in a new type of
advertising: the consumer tunes in
for the advertising
message, rather than it being a
by-product or afterthought. As cable and
satellite television became
increasingly prevalent,
specialty
channels emerged, including channels entirely
devoted to advertising, such as
QVC,
Home Shopping
Network, and
ShopTV Canada.
Marketing through the
Internet opened new
frontiers for advertisers and contributed to the "
dot-com" boom of the 1990s. Entire
corporations operated solely on advertising revenue, offering
everything from
coupons to free Internet
access. At the turn of the 21st century, a number of websites
including the
search engine
Google, started a change in
online advertising by emphasizing
contextually relevant, unobtrusive ads intended to help, rather
than inundate, users. This has led to a plethora of similar efforts
and an increasing trend of
interactive advertising.
The share of advertising spending relative to
GDP has changed little across large
changes in
media. For example, in the
U.S. in 1925, the main advertising media were newspapers,
magazines, signs on
streetcars, and outdoor
posters. Advertising spending as a share of
GDP was about 2.9 percent. By 1998, television and radio had become
major advertising media. Nonetheless, advertising spending as a
share of GDP was slightly lower—about 2.4 percent.
A recent advertising innovation is "
guerrilla marketing", which involve
unusual approaches such as staged encounters in public places,
giveaways of products such as cars that are covered with brand
messages, and interactive advertising where the viewer can respond
to become part of the advertising message.Guerrilla advertising is
becoming increasing more popular with a lot of companies. This type
of advertising is unpredictable and innovative, which causes
consumers to buy the product or idea. This reflects an increasing
trend of interactive and "embedded" ads, such as via
product placement, having consumers vote
through
text messages, and various
innovations utilizing
social
network services such as
MySpace.
Public service advertising
The same advertising techniques used to promote commercial goods
and services can be used to inform, educate and motivate the public
about non-commercial issues, such as HIV/AIDS, political ideology,
energy conservation and deforestation.
Advertising, in its non-commercial guise, is a powerful educational
tool capable of reaching and motivating large audiences.
"Advertising justifies its existence when used in the public
interest - it is much too powerful a tool to use solely for
commercial purposes." - Attributed to Howard Gossage by
David Ogilvy.
Public service
advertising,
non-commercial advertising,
public interest advertising,
cause
marketing, and
social marketing
are different terms for (or aspects of) the use of sophisticated
advertising and marketing communications techniques (generally
associated with commercial enterprise) on behalf of non-commercial,
public interest issues and initiatives.
In the United States, the granting of television and radio licenses
by the FCC is contingent upon the station broadcasting a certain
amount of public service advertising. To meet these requirements,
many broadcast stations in America air the bulk of their required
public service
announcements during the late night or early morning when the
smallest percentage of viewers are watching, leaving more day and
prime time commercial slots available for high-paying
advertisers.
Public service advertising reached its height during
World Wars I and
II
under the direction of several governments.
Types of advertising
Virtually any medium can be used for advertising. Commercial
advertising media can include
wall paintings,
billboards,
street furniture components, printed flyers
and
rack cards, radio, cinema and
television adverts,
web banners, mobile
telephone screens, shopping carts, web
popups,
skywriting, bus
stop benches,
human billboards,
magazines, newspapers, town criers, sides of buses, banners
attached to or sides of airplanes ("
logojets"),
in-flight advertisements on
seatback tray tables or overhead storage bins,
taxicab doors, roof mounts and
passenger
screens, musical stage shows, subway platforms and trains,
elastic bands on disposable diapers,doors of bathroom
stalls,stickers on apples in supermarkets,
shopping cart handles (grabertising), the
opening section of
streaming audio
and video, posters, and the backs of event tickets and supermarket
receipts. Any place an "identified" sponsor pays to deliver their
message through a medium is advertising.
Television
The TV commercial is generally considered the most effective
mass-market advertising format, as is reflected by the high prices
TV networks charge for commercial
airtime during popular TV events. The annual
Super Bowl football game in the United States is
known as the most prominent advertising event on television. The
average cost of a single thirty-second TV spot during this game has
reached US$3 million (as of 2009).
The majority of television commercials feature a song or
jingle that listeners soon relate to the
product.
Virtual advertisements may be inserted into regular television
programming through computer graphics. It is typically inserted
into otherwise blank backdrops or used to replace local billboards
that are not relevant to the remote broadcast audience. More
controversially, virtual billboards may be inserted into the
background where none exist in real-life. Virtual product placement
is also possible.
Infomercials
An
infomercial is a long-format
television commercial, typically five minutes or longer. The word
"infomercial" is a portmanteau of the words "information" and
"commercial". The main objective in an infomercial is to create an
impulse purchase, so that the
consumer sees the presentation and then immediately buys the
product through the advertised
toll-free telephone number or
website. Infomercials describe, display, and
often demonstrate products and their features, and commonly have
testimonials from consumers and industry professionals.
Radio advertising
Radio advertising is a form of advertising via the medium of
radio.
Radio advertisements are broadcasted as radio waves to the air from
a transmitter to an antenna and a thus to a receiving device.
Airtime is purchased from a
station or
network in exchange for airing the
commercials. While radio has the obvious limitation of being
restricted to sound, proponents of radio advertising often cite
this as an advantage.
Print advertising
Print advertising describes advertising in a printed medium such as
a
newspaper,
magazine, or trade
journal.
This encompasses everything from media with a very broad readership
base, such as a major national newspaper or magazine, to more
narrowly targeted media such as local newspapers and trade journals
on very specialized topics. A form of print advertising is
classified advertising, which allows
private individuals or companies to purchase a small, narrowly
targeted ad for a low fee advertising a product or service.
Online advertising
Online advertising is a form of
promotion that uses the
Internet and
World Wide Web for the expressed purpose of
delivering
marketing messages to attract
customers. Examples of online advertising include contextual ads
that appear on
search engine
results pages,
banner ads,
in text ads,
Rich
Media Ads,
Social network
advertising,
online
classified advertising,
advertising networks and
e-mail marketing, including
e-mail spam.
Billboard advertising
Billboards are large structures located in
public places which display advertisements to passing pedestrians
and motorists. Most often, they are located on main roads with a
large amount of passing motor and pedestrian traffic; however, they
can be placed in any location with large amounts of viewers, such
as on mass transit vehicles and in stations, in shopping malls or
office buildings, and in stadiums.
Mobile billboard advertising
Mobile billboards are truck- or
blimp-mounted
billboards or digital
screens. These can be dedicated vehicles built solely for carrying
advertisements along routes preselected by clients, or they can be
specially-equipped cargo trucks. The billboards are often lighted;
some being
backlit, and others employing
spotlights. Some billboard displays are static, while others
change; for example, continuously or periodically rotating among a
set of advertisements.
Mobile displays are used for various situations in metropolitan
areas throughout the world, including:
- Target advertising
- One-day, and long-term campaigns
- Conventions
- Sporting events
- Store openings and similar promotional events
- Big advertisements from smaller companies
- Others
In-store advertising
In-store advertising is any advertisement placed in a retail store.
It includes placement of a product in visible locations in a store,
such as at eye level, at the ends of aisles and near checkout
counters, eye-catching displays promoting a specific product, and
advertisements in such places as shopping carts and in-store video
displays.
Covert advertising
Covert advertising, also known as guerrilla advertising, is when a
product or brand is embedded in entertainment and media. For
example, in a film, the main character can use an item or other of
a definite brand, as in the movie
Minority Report, where
Tom Cruise's character John Anderton owns a phone
with the
Nokia logo clearly written
in the top corner, or his watch engraved with the
Bulgari logo. Another example of advertising in
film is in
I, Robot, where
main character played by
Will Smith
mentions his
Converse shoes several times,
calling them "classics," because the film is set far in the future.
I, Robot and
Spaceballs
also showcase futuristic cars with the
Audi and
Mercedes-Benz logos clearly displayed on
the front of the vehicles.
Cadillac chose
to advertise in the movie
The
Matrix Reloaded, which as a result contained many scenes
in which Cadillac cars were used. Similarly, product placement for
Omega Watches,
Ford,
VAIO,
BMW and
Aston Martin cars
are featured in recent
James Bond films,
most notably
Casino
Royale. In "
Fantastic Four 2:
Rise of the Silver Surfer", the main transport vehiche shows a
large
Dodge logo on the front.
Blade Runner includes some of the most
obvious product placement; the whole film stops to show a
Coca-Cola billboard.
Celebrities
This type of advertising focuses upon using celebrity power, fame,
money, popularity to gain recognition for their products and
promote specific stores or products. Advertisers often advertise
their products, for example, when celebrities share their favorite
products or wear clothes by specific brands or designers.
Celebrities are often involved in advertising campaigns such as
television or print adverts to advertise specific or general
products.
The use of celebrities to endorse a brand can have its downsides,
however. One mistake by a celebrity can be detrimental to the
public relations of a brand. For example, following his performance
of eight gold medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China,
swimmer Michael Phelps' contract with Kellog was terminated, as
Kellog did not want to associate with him after he was photographed
smoking marijuana.
Media and advertising approaches
Increasingly, other media are overtaking many of the "traditional"
media such as television, radio and newspaper because of a shift
toward consumer's usage of the Internet for news and music as well
as devices like
digital video
recorders (DVR's) such as
TiVo.
Advertising on the
World Wide Web is
a recent phenomenon. Prices of Web-based advertising space are
dependent on the "relevance" of the surrounding web content and the
traffic that the website receives.
Digital signage is poised to become
a major mass media because of its ability to reach larger audiences
for less money. Digital signage also offer the unique ability to
see the target audience where they are reached by the medium.
Technology advances has also made it possible to control the
message on digital signage with much precision, enabling the
messages to be relevant to the target audience at any given time
and location which in turn, gets more response from the
advertising. Digital signage is being successfully employed in
supermarkets. Another successful use of digital signage is in
hospitality locations such as restaurants. and malls.
E-mail advertising is another recent phenomenon. Unsolicited bulk
E-mail advertising is known as "
e-mail
spam". Spam has been a problem for email users for many years.
But more efficient filters are now available making it relatively
easy to control what email you get.
Some companies have proposed placing messages or corporate
logos on the side of booster
rockets and the
International Space Station.
Controversy exists on the effectiveness of
subliminal advertising (see
mind control), and the pervasiveness of mass
messages (see
propaganda).
Unpaid advertising (also called "publicity advertising"), can
provide good exposure at minimal cost. Personal recommendations
("bring a friend", "sell it"), spreading buzz, or achieving the
feat of equating a brand with a common noun (in the United States,
"
Xerox" = "
photocopier", "
Kleenex" =
tissue, "
Vaseline" =
petroleum
jelly, "
Hoover" =
vacuum cleaner, "
Nintendo" (often used by those exposed to many
video games) =
video games, and "
Band-Aid" =
adhesive
bandage) — these can be seen as the pinnacle of any advertising
campaign. However, some companies oppose the use of their brand
name to label an object. Equating a brand with a common noun also
risks turning that brand into a
genericized trademark - turning it
into a generic term which means that its legal protection as a
trademark is lost.
As the mobile phone became a new mass media in 1998 when the first
paid downloadable content appeared on mobile phones in Finland, it
was only a matter of time until
mobile advertising followed, also first
launched in Finland in 2000. By 2007 the value of mobile
advertising had reached $2.2 billion and providers such as
Admob delivered billions of mobile ads.
More advanced mobile ads include banner ads, coupons,
Multimedia Messaging Service
picture and video messages, advergames and various engagement
marketing campaigns. A particular feature driving mobile ads is the
2D Barcode, which replaces the
need to do any typing of web addresses, and uses the camera feature
of modern phones to gain immediate access to web content. 83
percent of Japanese mobile phone users already are active users of
2D barcodes.
A new form of advertising that is growing rapidly is
social network advertising. It is
online advertising with a focus on social networking sites. This is
a relatively immature market, but it has shown a lot of promise as
advertisers are able to take advantage of the demographic
information the user has provided to the social networking site.
Friendertising is a more precise advertising term in which people
are able to direct advertisements toward others directly using
social network service.
From time to time,
The CW
Television Network airs short programming breaks called
"Content Wraps," to advertise one company's product during an
entire commercial break. The CW pioneered "content wraps" and some
products featured were
Herbal
Essences,
Crest,
Guitar Hero II,
CoverGirl, and recently
Toyota.
Recently, there appeared a new promotion concept, "
ARvertising"; its supported on
Augmented Reality technology.
Criticism of advertising
While advertising can be seen as necessary for economic growth, it
is not without social costs.
Unsolicited
Commercial Email and other forms of
spam have become so prevalent as to have
become a major nuisance to users of these services, as well as
being a financial burden on
internet service providers.
Advertising is increasingly invading public spaces, such as
schools, which some critics argue is a form of child exploitation.
In addition, advertising frequently uses psychological pressure
(for example, appealing to feelings of inadequacy) on the intended
consumer, which may be harmful.
Hyper-commercialism and the commercial tidal wave
Criticism of advertising is closely linked with criticism of media
and often interchangeable. They can refer to its audio-visual
aspects (e. g. cluttering of public spaces and airwaves),
environmental aspects (e. g. pollution, oversize packaging,
increasing consumption), political aspects (e. g. media dependency,
free speech, censorship), financial aspects (costs),
ethical/moral/social aspects (e. g. sub-conscious influencing,
invasion of privacy, increasing consumption and waste, target
groups, certain products, honesty) and, of course, a mix thereof.
Some aspects can be subdivided further and some can cover more than
one category.
As advertising has become increasingly prevalent in modern Western
societies, it is also increasingly being criticized. A person can
hardly move in the public sphere or use a medium without being
subject to advertising. Advertising occupies public space and more
and more invades the private sphere of people, many of which
consider it a nuisance. “It is becoming harder to escape from
advertising and the media. … Public space is increasingly turning
into a gigantic billboard for products of all kind. The aesthetical
and political consequences cannot yet be foreseen.” Hanno
Rauterberg in the German newspaper ‘Die Zeit’ calls advertising a
new kind of dictatorship that cannot be escaped.
Ad creep: "There are ads in schools,
airport lounges, doctors offices, movie theaters, hospitals, gas
stations, elevators, convenience stores, on the Internet, on fruit,
on ATMs, on garbage cans and countless other places. There are ads
on beach sand and restroom walls.” “One of the ironies of
advertising in our times is that as commercialism increases, it
makes it that much more difficult for any particular advertiser to
succeed, hence pushing the advertiser to even greater efforts.”
Within a decade advertising in radios climbed to nearly 18 or 19
minutes per hour; on prime-time television the standard until 1982
was no more than 9.5 minutes of advertising per hour, today it’s
between 14 and 17 minutes. With the introduction of the shorter
15-second-spot the total amount of ads increased even more
dramatically. Ads are not only placed in breaks but e. g. also into
baseball telecasts during the game itself. They flood the internet,
a market growing in leaps and bounds.
Other growing markets are ‘’
product
placements’’ in entertainment programming and in movies where
it has become standard practice and ‘’virtual advertising’’ where
products get placed retroactively into rerun shows. Product
billboards are virtually inserted into Major League Baseball
broadcasts and in the same manner, virtual street banners or logos
are projected on an entry canopy or sidewalks, for example during
the arrival of celebrities at the 2001
Grammy Awards. Advertising precedes the
showing of films at cinemas including lavish ‘film shorts’ produced
by companies such as Microsoft or DaimlerChrysler. “The largest
advertising agencies have begun working aggressively to co-produce
programming in conjunction with the largest media firms” creating
Infomercials resembling entertainment programming.
Opponents equate the growing amount of advertising with a “tidal
wave” and restrictions with “damming” the flood.
Kalle Lasn, one of the most outspoken critics of
advertising on the international stage, considers advertising “the
most prevalent and toxic of the mental pollutants. From the moment
your radio alarm sounds in the morning to the wee hours of
late-night TV microjolts of commercial pollution flood into your
brain at the rate of around 3,000 marketing messages per day. Every
day an estimated twelve billion display ads, 3 million radio
commercials and more than 200,000 television commercials are dumped
into North America’s collective unconscious”. In the course of his
life the average American watches three years of advertising on
television.
More recent developments are video games incorporating products
into their content, special commercial patient channels in
hospitals and public figures sporting temporary tattoos. A method
unrecognisable as advertising is so-called ‘’guerrilla marketing’’
which is spreading ‘buzz’ about a new product in target audiences.
Cash-strapped U.S. cities do not shrink back from offering police
cars for advertising.A trend, especially in Germany, is companies
buying the names of sports stadiums.
The Hamburg soccer
Volkspark stadium first became the AOL Arena and then the HSH Nordbank
Arena
. The Stuttgart Neckarstadion became the
Mercedes-Benz
Arena
, the Dortmund Westfalenstadion now is the Signal Iduna
Park
. The former SkyDome in Toronto was renamed
Rogers
Centre
.Other recent developments are, for example,
that whole subway stations in Berlin are redesigned into product
halls and exclusively leased to a company. Düsseldorf even has
‘multi-sensorial’ adventure transit stops equipped with
loudspeakers and systems that spread the smell of a detergent.
Swatch used beamers to project messages on the Berlin TV-tower and
Victory column, which was fined because it was done without a
permit. The illegality was part of the scheme and added
promotion.
It’s standard business management knowledge that advertising is a
pillar, if not “the” pillar of the growth-orientated free
capitalist economy. “Advertising is part of the bone marrow of
corporate capitalism.” “Contemporary capitalism could not function
and global production networks could not exist as they do without
advertising.”
For communication scientist and media economist Manfred Knoche at
the University of Salzburg, Austria, advertising isn’t just simply
a ‘necessary evil’ but a ‘necessary elixir of life’ for the media
business, the economy and capitalism as a whole. Advertising and
mass media economic interests create ideology. Knoche describes
advertising for products and brands as ‘the producer’s weapons in
the competition for customers’ and trade advertising, e. g. by the
automotive industry, as a means to collectively represent their
interests against other groups, such as the train companies. In his
view editorial articles and programmes in the media, promoting
consumption in general, provide a ‘cost free’ service to producers
and sponsoring for a ‘much used means of payment’ in
advertising.
Christopher Lasch
argues that advertising leads to an overall increase in
consumption in society; "Advertising
serves not so much to advertise products as to promote
consumption as a way of life."
Advertising and constitutional rights
Advertising is equated with constitutionally guaranteed freedom of
opinion and speech. Therefore criticizing advertising or any
attempt to restrict or ban advertising is almost always considered
to be an attack on fundamental rights (
First
Amendment in the USA) and meets the combined and concentrated
resistance of the business and especially the advertising
community. “Currently or in the near future, any number of cases
are and will be working their way through the court system that
would seek to prohibit any government regulation of ... commercial
speech (e. g. advertising or food labelling) on the grounds that
such regulation would violate citizens’ and corporations’ First
Amendment rights to free speech or free press.”An example for this
debate is advertising for tobacco or alcohol but also advertising
by mail or fliers (clogged mail boxes), advertising on the phone,
in the internet and advertising for children. Various legal
restrictions concerning spamming, advertising on mobile phones,
addressing children, tobacco, alcohol have been introduced by the
US, the EU and various other countries.Not only the business
community resists restrictions of advertising. Advertising as a
means of free expression has firmly established itself in western
society.McChesney argues, that the government deserves constant
vigilance when it comes to such regulations, but that it is
certainly not “the only antidemocratic force in our society.
...corporations and the wealthy enjoy a power every bit as immense
as that enjoyed by the lords and royalty of feudal times” and
“markets are not value-free or neutral; they not only tend to work
to the advantage of those with the most money, but they also by
their very nature emphasize profit over all else….Hence, today the
debate is over whether advertising or food labelling, or campaign
contributions are speech...if the rights to be protected by the
First Amendment can only be effectively employed by a fraction of
the citizenry, and their exercise of these rights gives them undue
political power and undermines the ability of the balance of the
citizenry to exercise the same rights and/or constitutional rights,
then it is not necessarily legitimately protected by the First
Amendment.” In addition, “those with the capacity to engage in free
press are in a position to determine who can speak to the great
mass of citizens and who cannot”.Critics in turn argue, that
advertising invades privacy which is a constitutional right. For,
on the one hand, advertising physically invades privacy, on the
other, it increasingly uses relevant, information-based
communication with private data assembled without the knowledge or
consent of consumers or target groups.
For Georg Franck at Vienna University of Technology advertising is
part of what he calls “mental capitalism”, taking up a term
(mental) which has been used by groups concerned with the mental
environment, such as
Adbusters. Franck
blends the “Economy of Attention” with Christopher Lasch’s
culture of narcissm into the
mental capitalism: In his essay „Advertising at the Edge of the
Apocalypse“,
Sut Jhally writes: “20.
century advertising is the most powerful and sustained system of
propaganda in human history and its cumulative cultural effects,
unless quickly checked, will be responsible for destroying the
world as we know it.
The price of attention and hidden costs
Advertising has developed into a billion-dollar business on which
many depend. In 2006 391 billion US dollars were spent worldwide
for advertising. In Germany, for example, the advertising industry
contributes 1.5% of the gross national income; the figures for
other developed countries are similar.Thus, advertising and growth
are directly and causally linked. As far as a growth based economy
can be blamed for the harmful human lifestyle (affluent society)
advertising has to be considered in this aspect concerning its
negative impact, because its main purpose is to raise consumption.
“The industry is accused of being one of the engines powering a
convoluted economic mass production system which promotes
consumption.”
Attention and attentiveness have become a new commodity for which a
market developed. “The amount of attention that is absorbed by the
media and redistributed in the competition for quotas and reach is
not identical with the amount of attention, that is available in
society. The total amount circulating in society is made up of the
attention exchanged among the people themselves and the attention
given to media information. Only the latter is homogenised by
quantitative measuring and only the latter takes on the character
of an anonymous currency.”According to Franck, any surface of
presentation that can guarantee a certain degree of attentiveness
works as magnet for attention, e. g. media which are actually meant
for information and entertainment, culture and the arts, public
space etc. It is this attraction which is sold to the advertising
business.The German Advertising Association stated that in 2007
30.78 billion Euros were spent on advertising in Germany, 26% in
newspapers, 21% on television, 15% by mail and 15% in magazines. In
2002 there were 360.000 people employed in the advertising
business. The internet revenues for advertising doubled to almost 1
billion Euros from 2006 to 2007, giving it the highest growth
rates.
Spiegel-Online reported that in the USA in 2008 for the first time
more money was spent for advertising on internet (105.3 billion US
dollars) than on television (98.5 billion US dollars). The largest
amount in 2008 was still spent in the print media (147 billion US
dollars).For that same year, Welt-Online reported that the US
pharmaceutical industry spent almost double the amount on
advertising (57.7 billion dollars) than it did on research (31.5
billion dollars). But Marc-André Gagnon und Joel Lexchin of York
University, Toronto, estimate that the actual expenses for
advertising are higher yet, because not all entries are recorded by
the research institutions. Not included are indirect advertising
campaigns such as sales, rebates and price reductions.Few consumers
are aware of the fact that they are the ones paying for every cent
spent for public relations, advertisements, rebates, packaging etc.
since they ordinarily get included in the price calculation.
Influencing and conditioning
Advertising for McDonald's on the Via di Propaganda, Rome,
Italy
The most important element of advertising is not information but
suggestion more or less making use of associations, emotions
(
appeal to emotion) and drives
dormant in the sub-conscience of people, such as sex drive, herd
instinct, of desires, such as happiness, health, fitness,
appearance, self-esteem, reputation, belonging, social status,
identity, adventure, distraction, reward, of fears (
appeal to fear), such as illness, weaknesses,
loneliness, need, uncertainty, security or of prejudices, learned
opinions and comforts. “All human needs, relationships, and fears –
the deepest recesses of the human psyche – become mere means for
the expansion of the commodity universe under the force of modern
marketing. With the rise to prominence of modern marketing,
commercialism – the translation of
human relations into commodity relations – although a phenomenon
intrinsic to capitalism, has expanded exponentially.”
’Cause-related marketing’ in which advertisers link their product
to some worthy social cause has boomed over the past decade.
Advertising exploits the model role of celebrities or popular
figures and makes deliberate use of humour as well as of
associations with colour, tunes, certain names and terms.
Altogether, these are factors of how one perceives himself and
one’s self-worth. In his description of ‘mental capitalism’ Franck
says, “the promise of consumption making someone irresistible is
the ideal way of objects and symbols into a person’s subjective
experience. Evidently, in a society in which revenue of attention
moves to the fore, consumption is drawn by one’s self-esteem. As a
result, consumption becomes ‘work’ on a person’s attraction. From
the subjective point of view, this ‘work’ opens fields of
unexpected dimensions for advertising. Advertising takes on the
role of a life councillor in matters of attraction. (…) The cult
around one’s own attraction is what Christopher Lasch described as
‘Culture of Narcissism’.”
For advertising critics another serious problem is that “the long
standing notion of separation between advertising and
editorial/creative sides of media is rapidly crumbling” and
advertising is increasingly hard to tell apart from news,
information or entertainment. The boundaries between advertising
and programming are becoming blurred. According to the media firms
all this commercial involvement has no influence over actual media
content, but, as McChesney puts it, “this claim fails to pass even
the most basic giggle test, it is so preposterous.”
Advertising draws “heavily on psychological theories about how to
create subjects, enabling advertising and marketing to take on a
‘more clearly psychological tinge’ (Miller and Rose, 1997, cited in
Thrift, 1999, p. 67). Increasingly, the emphasis in
advertising has switched from providing ‘factual’ information to
the symbolic connotations of commodities, since the crucial
cultural premise of advertising is that the material object being
sold is never in itself enough. Even those commodities providing
for the most mundane necessities of daily life must be imbued with
symbolic qualities and culturally endowed meanings via the ‘magic
system (Williams, 1980) of advertising. In this way and by altering
the context in which advertisements appear, things ‘can be made to
mean "just about anything"’ (McFall, 2002, p. 162) and the ‘same’
things can be endowed with different intended meanings for
different individuals and groups of people, thereby offering mass
produced visions of individualism.”
Before advertising is done,
market
research institutions need to know and describe the target
group to exactly plan and implement the advertising campaign and to
achieve the best possible results. A whole array of sciences
directly deal with advertising and marketing or is used to improve
its effects. Focus groups, psychologists and cultural
anthropologists are ‘’’de rigueur’’’ in marketing research”. Vast
amounts of data on persons and their shopping habits are collected,
accumulated, aggregated and analysed with the aid of credit cards,
bonus cards, raffles and internet surveying. With increasing
accuracy this supplies a picture of behaviour, wishes and
weaknesses of certain sections of a population with which
advertisement can be employed more selectively and effectively.The
efficiency of advertising is improved through
advertising research. Universities, of
course supported by business and in co-operation with other
disciplines (s. above), mainly
Psychiatry,
Anthropology,
Neurology and behavioural sciences, are constantly
in search for ever more refined, sophisticated, subtle and crafty
methods to make advertising more effective. “
Neuromarketing is a controversial new field
of marketing which uses medical technologies such as functional
Magnetic Resonance
Imaging (fMRI) -- not to heal, but to sell products.
Advertising and marketing firms have long used the insights and
research methods of psychology in order to sell products, of
course. But today these practices are reaching epidemic levels, and
with a complicity on the part of the psychological profession that
exceeds that of the past. The result is an enormous advertising and
marketing onslaught that comprises, arguably, the largest single
psychological project ever undertaken. Yet, this great undertaking
remains largely ignored by the American Psychological Association.”
Robert McChesney calls it "the greatest concerted attempt at
psychological manipulation in all of human history."
Dependency of the media and corporate censorship
Almost all mass media are advertising media and many of them are
exclusively advertising media and, with the exception of
public service broadcasting are
privately owned. Their income is predominantly generated through
advertising; in the case of newspapers and magazines from 50 to
80%. Public service broadcasting in some countries can also heavily
depend on advertising as a source of income (up to 40%). In the
view of critics no media that spreads advertisements can be
independent and the higher the proportion of advertising, the
higher the dependency. This dependency has “distinct implications
for the nature of media content…. In the business press, the media
are often referred to in exactly the way they present themselves in
their candid moments: as a branch of the advertising
industry.”
In addition, the private media are increasingly subject to mergers
and concentration with property situations often becoming entangled
and opaque. This development, which Henry A. Giroux calls an
“ongoing threat to democratic culture”, by itself should suffice to
sound all alarms in a democracy. Five or six advertising agencies
dominate this 400 billion U.S. dollar global industry.
“Journalists have long faced pressure to shape stories to suit
advertisers and owners …. the vast majority of TV station
executives found their news departments ‘cooperative’ in shaping
the news to assist in ‘non-traditional revenue
development.”Negative and undesired reporting can be prevented or
influenced when advertisers threaten to cancel orders or simply
when there is a danger of such a cancellation. Media dependency and
such a threat becomes very real when there is only one dominant or
very few large advertisers. The influence of advertisers is not
only in regard to news or information on their own products or
services but expands to articles or shows not directly linked to
them. In order to secure their advertising revenues the media has
to create the best possible ‘advertising environment’.Another
problem considered censorship by critics is the refusal of media to
accept advertisements that are not in their interest. A striking
example of this is the refusal of TV stations to broadcast ads by
Adbusters. Groups try to place
advertisements and are refused by networks.
It is principally the viewing rates which decide upon the programme
in the private radio and television business. “Their business is to
absorb as much attention as possible. The viewing rate measures the
attention the media trades for the information offered. The service
of this attraction is sold to the advertising business” and the
viewing rates determine the price that can be demanded for
advertising.
“Advertising companies determining the contents of shows has been
part of daily life in the USA since 1933. Procter & Gamble
(P&G) …. offered a radio station a history-making trade (today
know as “bartering”): the company would produce an own show for
“free” and save the radio station the high expenses for producing
contents. Therefore the company would want its commercials spread
and, of course, its products placed in the show. Thus, the series
‘
Ma Perkins’ was created, which P&G
skilfully used to promote Oxydol, the leading detergent brand in
those years and the
Soap opera was born
…”
While critics basically worry about the subtle influence of the
economy on the media, there are also examples of blunt exertion of
influence. The US company
Chrysler, before
it merged with
Daimler Benz had its
agency, PentaCom, send out a letter to numerous magazines,
demanding them to send, an overview of all the topics before the
next issue is published to “avoid potential conflict”. Chrysler
most of all wanted to know, if there would be articles with
“sexual, political or social” content or which could be seen as
“provocative or offensive”. PentaCom executive David Martin said:
“Our reasoning is, that anyone looking at a 22.000 $ product would
want it surrounded by positive things. There is nothing positive
about an article on child pornography.” In another example, the
„USA Network held top-level ‚off-the-record’ meetings with
advertisers in 2000 to let them tell the network what type of
programming content they wanted in order for USA to get their
advertising.”Television shows are created to accommodate the needs
for advertising, e. g. splitting them up in suitable sections.
Their dramaturgy is typically designed to end in suspense or leave
an unanswered question in order to keep the viewer attached.
The movie system, at one time outside the direct influence of the
broader marketing system, is now fully integrated into it through
the strategies of licensing, tie-ins and product placements. The
prime function of many Hollywood films today is to aid in the
selling of the immense collection of commodities.The press called
the 2002 Bond film ‘Die Another Day’ featuring 24 major promotional
partners an ‘ad-venture’ and noted that
James
Bond “now has been ‘licensed to sell’” As it has become
standard practise to place products in motion pictures, it “has
self-evident implications for what types of films will attract
product placements and what types of films will therefore be more
likely to get made”.
Advertising and information are increasingly hard to distinguish
from each other. “The borders between advertising and media ….
become more and more blurred…. What August Fischer, chairman of the
board of
Axel Springer publishing
company considers to be a ‘proven partnership between the media and
advertising business’ critics regard as nothing but the
infiltration of journalistic duties and freedoms”. According to
RTL-executive Helmut Thoma “private stations
shall not and cannot serve any mission but only the goal of the
company which is the ‘acceptance by the advertising business and
the viewer’. The setting of priorities in this order actually says
everything about the ‘design of the programmes’ by private
television.”Patrick Le Lay, former managing director of TF1, a
private French television channel with a market share of 25 to 35%,
said: "There are many ways to talk about television. But from the
business point of view, let’s be realistic: basically, the job of
TF1 is, e. g. to help Coca Cola sell its product. (…) For an
advertising message to be perceived the brain of the viewer must be
at our disposal. The job of our programmes is to make it available,
that is to say, to distract it, to relax it and get it ready
between two messages. It is disposable human brain time that we
sell to Coca Cola.”
Because of these dependencies a widespread and fundamental public
debate about advertising and its influence on information and
freedom of speech is difficult to obtain, at least through the
usual media channels; otherwise these would saw off the branch they
are sitting on. “The notion that the commercial basis of media,
journalism, and communication could have troubling implications for
democracy is excluded from the range of legitimate debate” just as
“capitalism is off-limits as a topic of legitimate debate in U.S.
political culture”.
An early critic of the structural basis of U.S. journalism was
Upton Sinclair with his novel
The Brass Check in which he stresses
the influence of owners, advertisers, public relations, and
economic interests on the media. In his book “Our Master's Voice –
Advertising” the social ecologist
James
Rorty (1890–1973) wrote:"The gargoyle’s mouth is a loudspeaker,
powered by the vested interest of a two-billion dollar industry,
and back of that the vested interests of business as a whole, of
industry, of finance. It is never silent, it drowns out all other
voices, and it suffers no rebuke, for it is not the voice of
America? That is its claim and to some extent it is a just
claim...”
It has taught us how to live, what to be afraid of, what to be
proud of, how to be beautiful, how to be loved, how to be envied,
how to be successful.. Is it any wonder that the American
population tends increasingly to speak, think, feel in terms of
this jabberwocky? That the stimuli of art, science, religion are
progressively expelled to the periphery of American life to become
marginal values, cultivated by marginal people on marginal
time?"
The commercialisation of culture and sports
Performances, exhibitions, shows, concerts, conventions and most
other events can hardly take place without sponsoring. The
increasing lack arts and culture they buy the service of
attraction. Artists are graded and paid according to their art’s
value for commercial purposes.Corporations promote renown artists,
therefore getting exclusive rights in global advertising campaigns.
Broadway shows, like ‘La Bohème’ featured commercial props in its
set.
Advertising itself is extensively considered to be a contribution
to culture. Advertising is integrated into fashion. On many pieces
of clothing the company
logo is the only design
or is an important part of it. There is only little room left
outside the consumption economy, in which culture and art can
develop independently and where alternative values can be
expressed. A last important sphere, the universities, is under
strong pressure to open up for business and its interests.

Inflatable billboard in front of a
sports stadium
Competitive sports have become unthinkable without sponsoring and
there is a mutual dependency. High income with advertising is only
possible with a comparable number of spectators or viewers. On the
other hand, the poor performance of a team or a sportsman results
in less advertising revenues. Jürgen Hüther and Hans-Jörg Stiehler
talk about a ‘Sports/Media Complex which is a complicated mix of
media, agencies, managers, sports promoters, advertising etc. with
partially common and partially diverging interests but in any case
with common commercial interests. The media presumably is at centre
stage because it can supply the other parties involved with a rare
commodity, namely (potential) public attention. In sports “the
media are able to generate enormous sales in both circulation and
advertising.”
“Sports sponsorship is acknowledged by the tobacco industry to be
valuable advertising. A Tobacco Industry journal in 1994 described
the Formula One car as ‘The most powerful advertising space in the
world’. …. In a cohort study carried out in 22 secondary schools in
England in 1994 and 1995 boys whose favourite television sport was
motor racing had a 12.8% risk of becoming regular smokers compared
to 7.0% of boys who did not follow motor racing.”
Not the
sale of tickets but transmission rights, sponsoring and
merchandising in the meantime make up the largest part of sports
association’s and sports club’s revenues with the IOC (International
Olympic Committee
) taking the lead. The influence of the media
brought many changes in sports including the admittance of new
‘trend sports’ into the
Olympic Games,
the alteration of competition distances, changes of rules,
animation of spectators, changes of sports facilities, the cult of
sports heroes who quickly establish themselves in the advertising
and entertaining business because of their media value and last but
not least, the naming and renaming of sport stadiums after big
companies.“In sports adjustment into the logic of the media can
contribute to the erosion of values such as equal chances or
fairness, to excessive demands on athletes through public pressure
and multiple exploitation or to deceit (
doping, manipulation of results …). It is in the very
interest of the media and sports to counter this danger because
media sports can only work as long as sport exists.
Occupation and commercialisation of public space
Every visually perceptible place has potential for advertising.
Especially urban areas with their structures but also landscapes in
sight of through fares are more and more turning into media for
advertisements. Signs, posters, billboards, flags have become
decisive factors in the urban appearance and their numbers are
still on the increase. “Outdoor advertising has become unavoidable.
Traditional billboards and transit shelters have cleared the way
for more pervasive methods such as wrapped vehicles, sides of
buildings, electronic signs, kiosks, taxis, posters, sides of
buses, and more. Digital technologies are used on buildings to
sport ‘urban wall displays’. In urban areas commercial content is
placed in our sight and into our consciousness every moment we are
in public space. The German Newspaper ‘Zeit’ called it a new kind
of ‘dictatorship that one cannot escape’.Over time, this domination
of the surroundings has become the “natural” state. Through
long-term commercial saturation, it has become implicitly
understood by the public that advertising has the right to own,
occupy and control every inch of available space. The steady
normalization of invasive advertising dulls the public’s perception
of their surroundings, re-enforcing a general attitude of
powerlessness toward creativity and change, thus a cycle develops
enabling advertisers to slowly and consistently increase the
saturation of advertising with little or no public outcry.”
The massive optical orientation toward advertising changes the
function of public spaces which are utilised by brands. Urban
landmarks are turned into trademarks. The highest pressure is
exerted on renown and highly frequented public spaces which are
also important for the identity of a city (e. g.
Piccadilly
Circus
, Times Square, Alexanderplatz
).Urban spaces are public commodities and in
this capacity they are subject to “aesthetical environment
protection”, mainly through building regulations, heritage
protection and landscape protection. “It is in this capacity that
these spaces are now being privatised. They are peppered with
billboards and signs, they are remodelled into media for
advertising.”
Socio-cultural aspects: sexism, discrimination and
stereotyping
“Advertising has an “agenda setting function” which is the ability,
with huge sums of money, to put consumption as the only item on the
agenda. In the battle for a share of the public conscience this
amounts to non-treatment (ignorance) of whatever is not commercial
and whatever is not advertised for. Advertising should be
reflection of society norms and give clear picture of target
market. Spheres without commerce and advertising serving the muses
and relaxation remain without respect. With increasing force
advertising makes itself comfortable in the private sphere so that
the voice of commerce becomes the dominant way of expression in
society.”Advertising critics see advertising as the leading light
in our culture. Sut Jhally and James Twitchell go beyond
considering advertising as kind of religion and that advertising
even replaces religion as a key institution."Corporate advertising
(or is it commercial media?) is the largest single psychological
project ever undertaken by the human race. Yet for all of that, its
impact on us remains unknown and largely ignored. When I think of
the media’s influence over years, over decades, I think of those
brainwashing experiments conducted by Dr. Ewen Cameron in a
Montreal psychiatric hospital in the 1950s (see
MKULTRA). The idea of the CIA-sponsored
"depatterning" experiments was to outfit conscious, unconscious or
semiconscious subjects with headphones, and flood their brains with
thousands of repetitive "driving" messages that would alter their
behaviour over time….Advertising aims to do the same
thing."Advertising is especially aimed at young people and children
and it increasingly reduces young people to consumers.For Sut
Jhally it is not “surprising that something this central and with
so much being expended on it should become an important presence in
social life. Indeed, commercial interests intent on maximizing the
consumption of the immense collection of commodities have colonized
more and more of the spaces of our culture. For instance, almost
the entire media system (television and print) has been developed
as a delivery system for marketers its prime function is to produce
audiences for sale to advertisers. Both the advertisements it
carries, as well as the editorial matter that acts as a support for
it, celebrate the consumer society. The movie system, at one time
outside the direct influence of the broader marketing system, is
now fully integrated into it through the strategies of licensing,
tie-ins and product placements. The prime function of many
Hollywood films today is to aid in the selling of the immense
collection of commodities. As public funds are drained from the
non-commercial cultural sector, art galleries, museums and
symphonies bid for corporate sponsorship.” In the same way effected
is the education system and advertising is increasingly penetrating
schools and universities. Cities, such as New York, accept sponsors
for public playgrounds. “Even the pope has been commercialized …
The pope’s 4-day visit to Mexico in …1999 was sponsored by
Frito-Lay and PepsiCo.The industry is accused of being one of the
engines powering a convoluted economic mass production system which
promotes consumption.As far as social effects are concerned it does
not matter whether advertising fuels consumption but which values,
patterns of behaviour and assignments of meaning it
propagates.Advertising is accused of hijacking the language and
means of pop culture, of protest movements and even of subversive
criticism and does not shy away from scandalizing and breaking
taboos (e. g. Benneton). This in turn incites counter action, what
Kalle Lasn in 2001 called ‘’Jamming the Jam of the Jammers’’.
Anything goes. “It is a central social-scientific question what
people can be made to do by suitable design of conditions and of
great practical importance. For example, from a great number of
experimental psychological experiments it can be assumed, that
people can be made to do anything they are capable of, when the
according social condition can be created.”
Advertising often uses stereotype gender specific roles of men and
women reinforcing existing
clichés and
it has been criticized as “inadvertently or even intentionally
promoting sexism, racism, and ageism… At very least, advertising
often reinforces stereotypes by drawing on recognizable "types" in
order to tell stories in a single image or 30 second time
frame.”Activities are depicted as typical male or female
(stereotyping). In addition people are reduced to their sexuality
or equated with commodities and gender specific qualities are
exaggerated. Sexualized female bodies, but increasingly also males,
serve as eye-catchers. In advertising it is usually a woman being
depicted as
- servants of men and children that react to the demands and
complaints of their loved ones with a bad conscience and the
promise for immediate improvement (wash, food)
- a sexual or emotional play toy for the self-affirmation of
men
- a technically totally clueless being that can only manage a
childproof operation
- female expert, but stereotype from the fields of fashion,
cosmetics, food or at the most, medicine
- as ultra thin, slim, and very skinny.
- doing ground-work for others, e. g. serving coffee while a
journalist interviews a politician
A large portion of advertising deals with promotion of products
that pertain to the "ideal body image." This is mainly targeted
toward women, and, in the past, this type of advertising was aimed
nearly exclusively at women. Women in advertisements are generally
portrayed as good-looking women who are in good health. This,
however, is not the case of the average woman. Consequently, they
give a negative message of body image to the average woman. Because
of the media, girls and women who are overweight, and otherwise
"normal" feel almost obligated to take care of themselves and stay
fit. They feel under high pressure to maintain an acceptable
bodyweight and take care of their health. Consequences of this are
low self-esteem,eating disorders, self mutilations, and beauty
operations for those women that just cannot bring themselves eat
right or get the motivation to go to the gym. The EU parliament
passed a resolution in 2008 that advertising may not be
discriminating and degrading. This shows that politicians are
increasingly concerned about the negative impacts of advertising.
However, the benefits of promoting overall health and fitness are
often overlooked.
Children and adolescents as target groups
The children’s market, where resistance to advertising is weakest,
is the “pioneer for ad creep”.“Kids are among the most
sophisticated observers of ads. They can sing the jingles and
identify the logos, and they often have strong feelings about
products. What they generally don't understand, however, are the
issues that underlie how advertising works. Mass media are used not
only to sell goods but also ideas: how we should behave, what rules
are important, who we should respect and what we should
value.”Youth is increasingly reduced to the role of a consumer. Not
only the makers of toys, sweets, ice cream, breakfast food and
sport articles prefer to aim their promotion at children and
adolescents. For example, an ad for a breakfast cereal on a channel
aimed at adults will have music that is a soft ballad, whereas on a
channel aimed at children, the same ad will use a catchy rock
jingle of the same song to aim at kids. Advertising for other
products preferably uses media with which they can also reach the
next generation of consumers. “Key advertising messages exploit the
emerging independence of young people”. Cigarettes, for example,
“are used as a fashion accessory and appeal to young women. Other
influences on young people include the linking of sporting heroes
and smoking through sports sponsorship, the use of cigarettes by
popular characters in television programmes and cigarette
promotions. Research suggests that young people are aware of the
most heavily advertised cigarette brands.”
“
Product placements show up
everywhere, and children aren't exempt. Far from it. The animated
film, Foodfight, had ‘thousands of products and character icons
from the familiar (items) in a grocery store.’ Children's books
also feature branded items and characters, and millions of them
have snack foods as lead characters.“ Business is interested in
children and adolescents because of their buying power and because
of their influence on the shopping habits of their parents. As they
are easier to influence they are especially targeted by the
advertising business.“The marketing industry is facing increased
pressure over claimed links between exposure to food advertising
and a range of social problems, especially growing obesity
levels.”In 2001, children’s programming accounted for over 20% of
all U.S. television watching.The global market for children’s
licensed products was some 132 billion U.S. dollars in 2002.
Advertisers target children because, e. g. in Canada, they
“represent three distinct markets:
- Primary Purchasers ($2.9 billion annually)
- Future Consumers (Brand-loyal adults)
- Purchase Influencers ($20 billion annually)
Kids will carry forward brand expectations, whether positive,
negative, or indifferent.Kids are already accustomed to being
catered to as consumers. The long term prize: Loyalty of the kid
translates into a brand loyal adult customer”
The average Canadian child sees 350,000 TV commercials before
graduating from high school, spends nearly as much time watching TV
as attending classes. In 1980 the Canadian province of Québec
banned advertising for children under age 13. “In upholding the
consititutional validity of the
Quebec Consumer Protection
Act restrictions on advertising to children under age 13 (in
the case of a challenge by a toy company) the Court held:
‘...advertising directed at young children is per se manipulative.
Such advertising aims to promote products by convincing those who
will always believe.’”Norway (ads directed at children under age
12), and Sweden (television ads aimed at children under age 12)
also have legislated broad bans on advertising to children, during
child programmes any kind of advertising is forbidden in Sweden,
Denmark, Austria and Flemish Belgium. In Greece there is no
advertising for kids products from 7 to 22 h. An attempt to
restrict advertising directed at children in the USA failed with
reference to the First Amendment. In Spain bans are also considered
undemocratic.
Opposition and campaigns against advertising

According to critics, the total commercialization of all fields of
society, the privatization of public space, the acceleration of
consumption and waste of resources including the negative influence
on lifestyles and on the environment has not been noticed to the
necessary extent. The “hyper-commercialization of the culture is
recognized and roundly detested by the citizenry, although the
topic scarcely receives a whiff of attention in the media or
political culture”. “The greatest damage done by advertising is
precisely that it incessantly demonstrates the prostitution of men
and women who lend their intellects, their voices, their artistic
skills to purposes in which they themselves do not believe, and ….
that it helps to shatter and ultimately destroy our most precious
non-material possessions: the confidence in the existence of
meaningful purposes of human activity and respect for the integrity
of man.” “The struggle against advertising is therefore essential
if we are to overcome the pervasive alienation from all genuine
human needs that currently plays such a corrosive role in our
society. But in resisting this type of hyper-commercialism we
should not be under any illusions. Advertising may seem at times to
be an almost trivial of omnipresent aspect of our economic system.
Yet, as economist A. C. Pigou pointed out, it could only be
‘removed altogether’ if ‘conditions of monopolistic competition’
inherent to corporate capitalism were removed. To resist it is to
resist the inner logic of capitalism itself, of which it is the
pure expression.”
“Visual pollution, much of it in the form of advertising, is an
issue in all the world's large cities. But what is pollution to
some is a vibrant part of a city's fabric to others. New York City
without Times Square's huge digital billboards or Tokyo without the
Ginza's commercial panorama is unthinkable. Piccadilly Circus would
be just a London roundabout without its signage. Still, other
cities, like Moscow, have reached their limit and have begun to
crack down on over-the-top outdoor advertising.”“Many communities
have chosen to regulate billboards to protect and enhance their
scenic character. The following is by no means a complete list of
such communities, but it does give a good idea of the geographic
diversity of cities, counties and states that prohibit new
construction of billboards. Scenic America estimates the nationwide
total of cities and communities prohibiting the construction of new
billboards to be at least 1500.A number of States in the USA
prohibit all billboards:
- Vermont - Removed all billboards in 1970s
- Hawaii - Removed all billboards in 1920s
- Maine - Removed all billboards in 1970s and early 80s
- Alaska - State referendum passed in 1998 prohibits
billboards
- Almost two years ago the city of São Paulo, Brazil, ordered the
downsizing or removal of all billboards and most other forms of
commercial advertising in the city.”
Technical appliances, such as Spam filters, TV-Zappers, Ad-Blockers
for TV’s and stickers on mail boxes: “No Advertising” and an
increasing number of court cases indicate a growing interest of
people to restrict or rid themselves of unwelcome
advertising.
Consumer protection associations, environment protection groups,
globalization opponents, consumption critics, sociologists, media
critics, scientists and many others deal with the negative aspects
of advertising. “Antipub” in France, “
subvertising”,
culture jamming and
adbusting have become established terms in the
anti-advertising community. On the international level
globalization critics such as
Naomi Klein and
Noam
Chomsky are also renown media and advertising critics.These
groups criticize the complete occupation of public spaces,
surfaces, the airwaves, the media, schools etc. and the constant
exposure of almost all senses to advertising messages, the invasion
of privacy, and that only few consumers are aware that they
themselves are bearing the costs for this to the very last penny.
Some of
these groups, such as the ‘The Billboard Liberation Front Creative
Group’ in San
Francisco
or Adbusters in Vancouver
, Canada, have manifestos. Grassroots
organizations campaign against advertising or certain aspects of it
in various forms and strategies and quite often have different
roots. Adbusters, for example contests and challenges the intended
meanings of advertising by subverting them and creating unintended
meanings instead. Other groups, like ‘Illegal Signs Canada’ try to
stem the flood of billboards by detecting and reporting ones that
have been put up without permit.Examples for various groups and
organizations in different countries are‘L'association Résistance à
l'Agression Publicitaire’ in France, where also media critic
Jean Baudrillard is a renown
author.
The ‘Anti Advertising Agency’ works with parody and humour to raise awareness about advertising. and ‘Commercial Alert’ campaigns for the protection of children, family values, community, environmental integrity and democracy.
Media literacy organisations aim at
training people, especially children in the workings of the media
and advertising in their programmes. In the U. S., for example, the
‘Media Education Foundation’ produces and distributes documentary
films and other educational resources.‘MediaWatch’, a Canadian
non-profit women's organization works to educate consumers about
how they can register their concerns with advertisers and
regulators. The Canadian ‘Media Awareness Network/Réseau éducation
médias’ offers one of the world’s most comprehensive collections of
media education and Internet literacy resources. Its member
organizations represent the public, non-profit but also private
sectors. Although it stresses its independence it accepts financial
support from Bell Canada, CTVGlobeMedia, CanWest, TELUS and
S-VOX.
To counter the increasing criticism of advertising aiming at
children media literacy organizations are also initiated and funded
by corporations and the advertising business themselves. In the U.
S. the ‘The Advertising Educational Foundation’ was created in 1983
supported by ad agencies, advertisers and media companies. It is
the “advertising industry's provider and distributor of educational
content to enrich the understanding of advertising and its role in
culture, society and the economy” sponsored for example by American
Airlines, Anheuser-Busch, Campbell Soup, Coca-Cola,
Colgate-Palmolive, Walt Disney, Ford, General Foods, General Mills,
Gillette, Heinz, Johnson & Johnson, Kellogg, Kraft, Nestle,
Philip Morris, Quaker Oats, Nabisco, Schering, Sterling, Unilever,
Warner Lambert, advertising agencies like Saatchi & Saatchi
Compton and media companies like American Broadcasting Companies,
CBS, Capital Cities Communications, Cox Enterprises, Forbes,
Hearst, Meredith, The New York Times, RCA/NBC, Reader’s Digest,
Time, Washington Post, just to mention a few.Canadian businesses
established ‘Concerned Children's Advertisers’ in 1990 “to instill
confidence in all relevant publics by actively demonstrating our
commitment, concern, responsibility and respect for children”.
Members are CanWest, Corus, CTV, General Mills, Hasbro, Hershey’s,
Kellogg’s, Loblaw, Kraft, Mattel, MacDonald’s, Nestle, Pepsi, Walt
Disney, Weston as well as almost 50 private broadcast partners and
others. Concerned Children's Advertisers was example for similar
organizations in other countries like ‘Media smart’ in the United
Kingdom with offspring in Germany, France, the Netherlands and
Sweden. New Zealand has a similar business-funded programme called
‘Willie Munchright’. “While such interventions are claimed to be
designed to encourage children to be critical of commercial
messages in general, critics of the marketing industry suggest that
the motivation is simply to be seen to address a problem created by
the industry itself, that is, the negative social impacts to which
marketing activity has contributed…. By contributing media literacy
education resources, the marketing industry is positioning itself
as being part of the solution to these problems, thereby seeking to
avoid wide restrictions or outright bans on marketing
communication, particularly for food products deemed to have little
nutritional value directed at children…. The need to be seen to be
taking positive action primarily to avert potential restrictions on
advertising is openly acknowledged by some sectors of the industry
itself…. Furthermore, Hobbs (1998) suggests that such programs are
also in the interest of media organizations that support the
interventions to reduce criticism of the potential negative effects
of the media themselves.”
Taxation as revenue and control
Public interest groups suggest that “access to the mental space
targeted by advertisers should be taxed, in that at the present
moment that space is being freely taken advantage of by advertisers
with no compensation paid to the members of the public who are thus
being intruded upon. This kind of tax would be a
Pigovian tax in that it would act to reduce
what is now increasingly seen as a public nuisance. Efforts to that
end are gathering more momentum, with Arkansas and Maine
considering bills to implement such a taxation. Florida enacted
such a tax in 1987 but was forced to repeal it after six months, as
a result of a concerted effort by national commercial interests,
which withdrew planned conventions, causing major losses to the
tourism industry, and cancelled advertising, causing a loss of 12
million dollars to the broadcast industry alone”.
In the U. S., for example, advertising is tax deductible and
suggestions for possible limits to the advertising tax deduction
are met with fierce opposition from the business sector, not to
mention suggestions for a special taxation. In other countries,
advertising at least is taxed in the same manner services are taxed
and in some advertising is subject to special taxation although on
a very low level. In many cases the taxation refers especially to
media with advertising (e. g.
Austria, Italy, Greece
,
Netherlands, Turkey
, Estonia
). Tax
on advertising in European countries:
- Belgium
: Advertising or billboard tax (taxe d'affichage or
aanplakkingstaks) on public posters depending on size and kind of
paper as well as on neon signs
- France
: Tax on
television commercials (taxe sur la publicité télévisée) based on
the cost of the advertising unit
- Italy
: Municipal
tax on acoustic and visual kinds of advertisements within the
municipality (imposta communale sulla publicità) and municipal tax
on signs, posters and other kinds of advertisements (diritti sulle
pubbliche offisioni), the tariffs of which are under the
jurisdiction of the municipalities
- Netherlands
: Advertising tax (reclamebelastingen) with varying
tariffs on certain advertising measures (excluding ads in
newspapers and magazines) which can be levied by municipalities
depending on the kind of advertising (billboards, neon signs
etc.)
- Austria
: Municipal announcement levies on advertising
through writing, pictures or lights in public areas or publicly
accessible areas with varying tariffs depending on the fee, the
surface or the duration of the advertising measure as well as
advertising tariffs on paid ads in printed media of usually 10% of
the fee.
- Sweden
: Advertising
tax (reklamskatt) on ads and other kinds of advertising
(billboards, film, television, advertising at fairs and
exhibitions, flyers) in the range of 4% for ads in newspapers and
11% in all other cases. In the case of flyers the tariffs
are based on the production costs, else on the fee
- Spain
:
Municipalities can tax advertising measures in their territory with
a rather unimportant taxes and fees of various kinds.
In his book “
When
Corporations Rule the World” U.S. author and
globalization critic David Korten even advocates a 50% tax on
advertising to counter attack what he calls "an active propaganda
machinery controlled by the world's largest corporations” which
“constantly reassures us that
consumerism is the path to happiness,
governmental restraint of market excess is the cause of our
distress, and economic globalization is both a historical
inevitability and a boon to the human species."
Regulation
In the US many communities believe that many forms of outdoor
advertising blight the public realm. As long ago as the 1960s in
the US there were attempts to ban billboard advertising in the open
countryside.
Cities such as São Paulo
have introduced an outright ban with London
also having
specific legislation to control unlawful displays.
There have been increasing efforts to protect the public interest
by regulating the content and the influence of advertising. Some
examples are: the ban on television tobacco advertising imposed in
many countries, and the total ban of advertising to children under
12 imposed by the Swedish government in 1991. Though that
regulation continues in effect for broadcasts originating within
the country, it has been weakened by the
European Court of Justice, which
had found that Sweden was obliged to accept foreign programming,
including those from neighboring countries or via satellite.
In Europe and elsewhere, there is a vigorous debate on whether (or
how much) advertising to children should be regulated. This debate
was exacerbated by a report released by the
Kaiser Family Foundation in
February 2004 which suggested
fast
food advertising that targets children was an important factor
in the epidemic of
childhood
obesity in the United States.
In New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, and many European countries,
the advertising industry operates a system of self-regulation.
Advertisers, advertising agencies and the media agree on a code of
advertising standards that they attempt to uphold. The general aim
of such codes is to ensure that any advertising is 'legal, decent,
honest and truthful'. Some self-regulatory organizations are funded
by the industry, but remain independent, with the intent of
upholding the standards or codes like the
Advertising
Standards Authority in the UK.
In the UK most forms of outdoor advertising such as the display of
billboards is regulated by the UK Town and County Planning system.
Currently the display of an advertisement without consent from the
Planning Authority is a criminal offense liable to a fine of £2,500
per offence. All of the major outdoor billboard companies in the UK
have convictions of this nature.
Naturally, many advertisers view governmental regulation or even
self-regulation as intrusion of their freedom of speech or a
necessary evil. Therefore, they employ a wide-variety of linguistic
devices to bypass regulatory laws (e.g. printing English words in
bold and French translations in fine print to deal with the Article
120 of the 1994
Toubon Law limiting the
use of English in French advertising). The advertisement of
controversial products such as cigarettes and condoms is subject to
government regulation in many countries. For instance, the tobacco
industry is required by law in most countries to display warnings
cautioning consumers about the health hazards of their products.
Linguistic variation is often used by advertisers as a creative
device to reduce the impact of such requirements.
Future
Global advertising
Advertising has gone through five major stages of development:
domestic, export, international, multi-national, and global. For
global advertisers, there are four,
potentially competing, business objectives that must be balanced
when developing worldwide advertising: building a brand while
speaking with one voice, developing economies of scale in the
creative process, maximising local effectiveness of ads, and
increasing the company’s speed of implementation. Born from the
evolutionary stages of global marketing are the three primary and
fundamentally different approaches to the development of global
advertising executions: exporting executions, producing local
executions, and importing ideas that travel.
Advertising research is key to determining the success of an ad in
any country or region. The ability to identify which elements
and/or moments of an ad that contributes to its success is how
economies of scale are maximised. Once one knows what works in an
ad, that idea or ideas can be imported by any other market.
Market research measures, such as
Flow of Attention,
Flow of Emotion and
branding moments provide insight into
what is working in an ad in any country or region because the
measures are based on the visual, not verbal, elements of the
ad.
Trends
With the dawn of the Internet came many new advertising
opportunities. Popup,
Flash,
banner, Popunder,
advergaming, and email advertisements (the last
often being a form of spam) are now commonplace.
The ability to record shows on
digital video recorders (such as
TiVo) allow users to record the programs for later viewing,
enabling them to fast forward through commercials. Additionally, as
more seasons of pre-recorded
box sets are
offered for sale of
television
programs; fewer people watch the shows on TV. However, the fact
that these sets are
sold, means the company will
receive additional profits from the sales of these sets. To counter
this effect, many advertisers have opted for product placement on
TV shows like
Survivor.
Particularly since the rise of "entertaining" advertising, some
people may like an advertisement enough to wish to watch it later
or show a friend. In general, the advertising community has not yet
made this easy, although some have used the Internet to widely
distribute their ads to anyone willing to see or hear them.
Another significant trend regarding future of advertising is the
growing importance of the
niche market
using niche or targeted ads. Also brought about by the Internet and
the theory of
The Long Tail,
advertisers will have an increasing ability to reach specific
audiences. In the past, the most efficient way to deliver a message
was to blanket the largest
mass market
audience possible. However, usage tracking, customer profiles and
the growing popularity of niche content brought about by everything
from
blogs to social networking sites, provide
advertisers with audiences that are smaller but much better
defined, leading to ads that are more relevant to viewers and more
effective for companies' marketing products. Among others,
Comcast Spotlight is one such advertiser
employing this method in their
video on
demand menus. These advertisements are targeted to a specific
group and can be viewed by anyone wishing to find out more about a
particular business or practice at any time, right from their home.
This causes the viewer to become proactive and actually choose what
advertisements they want to view.
In the realm of
advertising
agencies, continued industry diversification has seen observers
note that “big global clients don't need big global agencies any
more”. This trend is reflected by the growth of non-traditional
agencies in various global markets, such as Canadian business
TAXI and
SMART in Australia and has been
referred to as "a revolution in the ad world".
In
freelance advertising, companies hold
public competitions to create ads for their product, the best one
of which is chosen for widespread distribution with a prize given
to the winner(s). During the 2007 Super Bowl,
PepsiCo held such a contest for the creation of a
30-second television ad for the
Doritos
brand of chips, offering a cash prize to the winner.
Chevrolet held a similar competition for their
Tahoe line of
SUVs. This type
of advertising, however, is still in its infancy. It may ultimately
decrease the importance of advertising agencies by creating a niche
for independent freelancers.
Advertising education has
become widely popular with bachelor, master and doctorate degrees
becoming available in the emphasis. A surge in advertising interest
is typically attributed to the strong relationship advertising
plays in cultural and technological changes, such as the advance of
online social networking. A unique model for teaching advertising
is the
student-run
advertising agency, where advertising students create campaigns
for real companies. Organizations such as
American Advertising
Federation and AdU Network partner established companies with
students to create these campaigns.
Advertising research
Advertising research is a specialized form of research that works
to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of advertising. It
entails numerous forms of research which employ different
methodologies. Advertising research includes pre-testing (also
known as
copy testing) and post-testing
of ads and/or campaigns—pre-testing is done before an ad airs to
gauge how well it will perform and post-testing is done after an ad
airs to determine the in-market impact of the ad or campaign on the
consumer. Continuous
ad tracking and the
Communicus System are competing examples
of post-testing advertising research types.
See also
Gallery
File:Ad Encyclopaedia-Britannica 05-1913.jpg|A print advertisement
for the 1913 issue of the
Encyclopædia
BritannicaFile:MuradTurksfull1918Life.jpg|Advertisement
for "Murad" Turkish cigarettes 1918
File:Dovelution.jpg|Dove Evolution in a 2006 Commercial
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9780465021550, ISBN 0465021557
- Williamson, Judith (1994): Decoding Advertisements (Ideas in
Progress), Marion Boyars Publishers Ltd (March 1, 1994),ISBN
0714526150, ISBN 978-0714526157
External links
- * Ad*Access, over 7,000 U.S. and Canadian
advertisements, dated 1911-1955, includes World War II
propaganda.
- * Emergence of Advertising in America, 9,000
advertising items and publications dating from 1850 to 1920,
illustrating the rise of consumer culture and the birth of a
professionalized advertising industry in the United States.
- * AdViews, vintage television commercials