|
# Advertising, collective term for public
announcements designed to promote the
sale of specific commodities or
services. Advertising is a form of mass
selling, employed when the use of
direct, person-to-person selling is
impractical, impossible, or simply
inefficient. It is to be distinguished
from other activities intended to
persuade the public, such as propaganda,
publicity, and public relations.
Advertising techniques range in
complexity from the publishing of
simple, straightforward notices in the
classified-advertising columns of
newspapers to the concerted use of
newspapers, magazines, television,
radio, direct mail, and other
communications media in the course of a
single advertising campaign. From its
unsophisticated beginnings in ancient
times, advertising has burgeoned into a
worldwide industry. In the U.S. alone in
the late 1980s, approximately $120
billion was spent in a single year on
advertising to influence the purchase of
commodities and services.
# American advertising leads the world
not only in volume of business but in
the complexity of its organization and
of its procedures
# A relatively minor, but important, form
of advertising is institutional
advertising, which is designed solely to
build prestige and public respect for
particular business concerns as
# Another minor, but increasingly
popular, form of advertising is
cooperative advertising, in which the
manufacturer shares the expense of local
radio or newspaper advertising with the
retailer who signs the advertisement.
# Newspapers have traditionally led all
other media in the U.S. in terms of
dollars invested in advertising; despite
the popularity of radio and television,
the daily papers have maintained a
comfortable lead. Thus, in 1987
newspapers received about 27 percent of
the advertising investment in the
nation, totaling more than $29.4 billion
from local and national advertisers. In
second place was television, with about
21 percent or approximately $23.5
billion. More than $19 billion was
invested in direct mail. Radio received
approximately $7.2 billion, and
magazines got about $6 billion.
TECHNIQUES OF PERSUASION
# While experts argue about new methods,
they still rely mainly on basic appeals
that have proved successful over the
years. These appeals offer the hope of
more money and better jobs, security
against the hazards of old age and
illness, popularity and personal
prestige, praise from others, more
comfort, increased enjoyment, social
advancement, improved appearance, and
better health. The modern advertiser
stresses not the product but the
benefits that may be enjoyed by
purchasers. Thus, the advertiser purveys
not cosmetics but the expectation of new
beauty, allure, and hope. To attract the
prospective buyer of automobiles, the
manufacturer may stress not only the
mechanical attributes of the car but
also the excitement, comfort, and
prestige it may bring the buyer.
# The many techniques of persuasion are
circumscribed only by the ingenuity of
the creative mind, by the limits of the
various channels of communications, by
certain legal restrictions, and by
standards self-imposed by the
advertising industry. One fundamental
technique, apparent in the earliest
applications of advertising and still
basic in the most modern procedures, is
repetition. A typical national
advertiser captures the attention of
prospective customers by repeated
appeals to buy. It is not unusual for a
person to hear sales talks on radio and
television, see advertisements for the
same product in a local newspaper,
receive additional reminders in various
national magazines, and be confronted
with a poster, counter card, or display
on entering a store.
Another basic persuader is the
trademark. Manufacturers have spent
millions to establish their trademarks
as symbols of reliability and value. A
trademark is useless unless the
manufacturer sets and maintains high
standards of quality, but once consumers
gain confidence in it, the owner can use
it as a persuader, that is, as a device
to reassure customers that all products
bearing this symbol are reliable. The
trademark is especially useful when the
manufacturer introduces a new item to an
existing line of goods.
Price appeal probably motivates more
decisions to buy than any other appeal,
and the magic words sale and bargain are
directed at consumers with great
frequency. Closely allied to these plain
and simple discount offers are the
“something for nothing” lures, such as
“buy one package and get a second one
free,” ”send for free sample,” and
“trial offer at half price” and the
big-money contest, for example, “finish
this sentence and win $10,000 in cash,
an automobile, or a trip to Bermuda for
two.” “No money down” is also a
successful inducement.
Modern advertising employs an
astonishing variety of persuaders. Among
these are humorous and entertaining
television and radio commercials,
appeals to the sense of smell by the use
of perfumed ink on paper, endorsements
of products by celebrities, appeals to
parents to give their children a better
life and future, appeals to children to
“ask mommy” to buy certain breakfast
cereals, and the controversial use of
“scare copy.” Because fear is a
principal human frailty, this
last-mentioned motivation is applied to
the advertising of thousands of
commodities, sometimes boldly, sometimes
subtly. Fear of poverty, sickness, and
loss of social standing, and the specter
of possible disasters, great and small,
sometimes move previously unexcitable
consumers to buy anything from insurance
and fire extinguishers to cosmetics and
vitamin capsules.
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL EFFECTS
With about 3 million business
enterprises using one or more forms of
advertising, almost every American
citizen hears or sees advertising every
day. In the U.S. the money invested in
advertising equaled approximately $370
per capita in the mid-1980s. The high
per capita cost of U.S. advertising has
led many critics to attack it as a
wasteful, unnecessary, unreliable, and
annoying institution. Such critics
usually argue that the industry adds
unnecessarily to the cost of goods and
services promoted by it. The proponents
of advertising recognize some validity
in these criticisms, but in rebuttal
argue that by interesting consumers in
purchasing commodities, advertising
enables manufacturers and others to sell
their products in larger quantities than
they would otherwise; the increased
volume of sales in turn enables
companies to sell individual units at
lower cost than if they were produced in
small quantities.
In the opinion of most top business
executives and of many economists,
modern advertising plays an integral
role in the development of markets for
the low-cost goods made possible by the
high productivity of American industry.
At least one worldwide study of national
investment in advertising, which showed
a direct correlation with living
standards, supported this thesis.
Advertising also supplies most of the
operating funds of the principal
communications media. According to an
authoritative survey, the radio and
television industry depends on
advertising for all its revenue.
Metropolitan newspapers derive about 70
percent of their income from
advertising, and national magazines,
some 60 percent.
The Mirror Makers
Many advertisements focused on Jordan’s
determination to succeed and encouraged
kids to “be like Mike.” Subliminal
perception aroused considerable public
interest after it was reported that in
1957 a motion picture theater in New
Jersey had flashed subliminal
advertising messages on its movie
screen. These messages, urging the
audience to “Eat popcorn” and “Drink
Coca-Cola,” were alleged to have been
flashed on the screen so quickly that
the viewers were not aware of having
seen them. Nevertheless, the theater
reported that its sales of popcorn and
Coca-Cola noticeably increased after the
messages were presented. There was
considerable public outcry against this
form of so-called hidden advertising,
and major radio and television networks
banned all forms of subliminal
advertising. However, later
investigators suggested these findings
were fabricated as a publicity stunt.
Advertisers spend more of their money
advertising in newspapers than in any
other medium. Newspapers offer two
different types of advertisements:
display ads and classified ads. Display
ads share page space with news and
features. They generally feature
illustrations, photographs, or catchy
phrases in large print to attract the
attention of readers. Teams of
specialists sell newspaper display ads
to local and national businesses.
Advertisers pay based on how much space
their ad requires on the page. They can
purchase full-page display ads, which
fill an entire page of the newspaper, or
fractions of pages. The price of an
advertisement depends on the size of the
newspaper’s circulation. A full-page
display ad in the Wall Street Journal,
for example, cost nearly $150,000 in
1999. Newspapers with smaller
circulations charge less for display ad
space because companies assume that
fewer people will see their
advertisements. A full-page display ad
in a weekday edition of the Seattle
Times, which had a circulation of about
230,000 in 1999, cost up to $23,800.
During the 1960s, McDonald’s began to
mount aggressive advertising and
marketing campaigns. In 1962 the company
adopted the golden arches as its
trademark. Ronald McDonald, the familiar
clown that serves as McDonald’s mascot,
was introduced in 1963. That year, signs
at McDonald’s restaurants announced that
the company had sold more than 1 billion
hamburgers. In 1968 McDonald’s
restaurants began serving the Big Mac, a
two-patty burger that became the
company’s flagship product. The company
launched it’s highly successful “You
deserve a break today” advertising
campaign in 1970. By 1972McDonald’s had
2000 restaurants and $1 billion in
annual sales.
|
|
The
magazine “Working Woman” once defined a
feminist as someone who pipes up “So
what if Columbus discovered America?
Queen Isabella gave him the money”,
whenever within earshot of a male. Today
we understand feminism as the advocacy
of women’s rights and equality, a word
that has always stood as a woman’s
weapon of choice in the eternal battle
of the sexes.
Feminism, similar to other –isms like
capitalism, consumerism and communism
that defined and shaped the 20th century
has undergone constant scrutiny,
analysis, criticism and subsequently
evolution as it passed through different
eras since its humble beginnings. The
struggle for women’s rights began during
the 18th century during a period of
intense intellectual activity, known as
the Age of Enlightenment. But even until
the 19th century, the denial of equal
rights to women met with only occasional
protest and drew little attention from
most people. Because most women lacked
the educational and economic resources
that would enable them to challenge the
prevailing social order, women generally
accepted their inferior status as their
only option. World wide organized
feminist efforts towards equal rights
and sexual equality occurred in two
major waves. The first began around the
mid 19th century when in the US and
elsewhere campaigned to gain suffrage-
i.e. right to vote. The wave lasted
until the 1920s when several countries
granted women suffrage. The second wave
gained momentum during the civil rights
movement
of the 1960s when the struggle by the
Afro-Americans to achieve racial
equality inspired women to renew their
own struggle for equality.
And today, as the world heads towards
the 21st century feminism faces a
question mark over its relevance. Today,
the prospects for a young lady are
undoubtedly brighter than it was when
the first suffrage campaigners took to
the streets. Also, the world today has
more pressing issues at hand that makes
the concern over feminism appear petty
and insignificant. And most of these
involve women and children too, but far
from receiving the “rights” and
“equality” which the feminists in their
cozy offices and seminar halls lobby
for, these women and children on the
other side of the globe are dying of
unnecessary violence, malnutrition civil
wars. What is the relevance of having a
conference dominated by lesbian
abortionists in Washington DC when women
were being raped and tortured in Darfur
by the Hundreds? The millions of Dalit
women in SE Asia whose pride and dignity
are systematically stripped everyday by
higher class townspeople don’t need
feminists but a better Government policy
and intervention. Also, is it really a
sound idea for feminists to suggest that
women
be sent into the struggle for existence
exactly as men?
The world has changed since the first
women’s rights campaigns, but women
still remain at disadvantage, whether it
is in politics, education, legal rights
or economic status. In 1994 Governments
of 10 countries were headed by women,
but more than 100 countries had no
female members in legislative bodies.
Women constitute approximately 9 percent
of the parliamentary representatives in
industrialized countries while the
percentage was 12 in developing
countries. Women who make up about 32
percentage of the worlds labor force ,
hold 8 percentage top managerial
positions in US corporations, while in
the 1000 largest corporations outside
US, women comprised only 1 percentage of
the executive positions. While feminists
get worked up over abortion bills, in
fundamentalist Islamic countries like
Iran, means of contraception are still
illegal. In Canada where there is no
overpopulation problem, abortion is
illegal unless the life of the mother is
illegal while China which encourages
families to have only one child, places
no restriction on when a woman can have
an abortion.
Thus the status of women varies
dramatically in different countries, and
in some cases, groups within the same
country, such as ethnic groups or
economic classes. Therefore
generalization on anything regarding
women is impossible. For the work
hardened mother of eight in rural Nepal,
who has no other option but to work from
dawn to dusk in order to make ends meet,
Feminism doesn’t mean a thing. In the
third world countries of Latin America,
Africa and Asia,
the
fundamental principals of feminism that
feminists claim to practice, is anything
but relevant, as trying to push feminism
there is a case of trying to run before
you can walk. What good is feminism
there when even the basic rights have
not been safe guarded for the women
there?
The problem with feminism is that it
generalizes too much. It assumes and
tries to force the assumption upon the
world that all women are victims of men,
but unknown to them, while they try to
uplift and help women they are actually
undermining the ability of those they
try to help to help themselves. Also,
the third world needs a completely
different approach towards feminism as
opposed to western feminism. Therefore,
feminism is relevant only as long as
headstrong feminists don’t use feminism
as an excuse to slug it out with their
arch enemies, the men, forgetting that
there are things going on out there that
are bigger than the world they live in.
Complete and absolute equality between
men and women will probably never turn
into a reality, as some one had pointed
out, “Nobody will win the battle of the
sexes. There is too much of fraternizing
with the enemy.” But in the meantime we
can try to bring out the real feminists
within ourselves; someone who knows for
a fact that men and women are equal and
wants society to wake up to the fact, so
the world can stop operating at
half-strength and so that half the
brain, half the inspiration, half the
human resources in the world will no
longer be wasted.
|