Post on 31-Dec-2015
Advertising Spending (US)Advertising Spending (US)1. 1880: $104 million; 1919: $1.4
billion2. Ad share of newspaper-mag
revenue 1. 1880: 44% ; 1920: 66%
3. Number of US Daily Newspapers:1. 1854: 254 2. 1900: 2,226
4. How advertise in so many local papers?
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Advertising AgentsAdvertising Agents
George P. Rowell New England,
1865- 1. line rates2. wholesaler of white
space 1. “space jobber”2. bulk buy for
lowest price
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Space JobbersSpace Jobbers1. Lord & Thomas
1. religious publications
2. J. Walter Thompson
1. magazines
2. exclusive access deals
3. “closed” contracts
4. Aligned with newspapers
5. Rebates, etc., if sell space full price
6. Buy space only w/ affiliated papers
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A.J. Ayer (N.W. Ayer A.J. Ayer (N.W. Ayer && Son) Son)
1. modern agency2. “open” contract
(1875)3. advertiser-oriented
service 4. commission system
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Ad Agent FunctionsAd Agent Functions1. knowledge of newspaper/periodical market2. lowest prices (rate card cutting)3. Media Buying:
1. researchers2. space-buyers3. checkers
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Ad Agent FunctionsAd Agent Functions1. Copywriting: little in late 1880s
1. advertisers “knew best” 2. freelance ‘advertising specialists’
2. Illustration 1. print shops/commercial artists
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Full Service Agency Full Service Agency (Today)(Today)1. Media Buying (Media Research)2. Copywriting/Art Direction3. Market/Consumer Research4. (Public Relations, Govt
Relations, etc)
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Ayer & Son: Full Service Ayer & Son: Full Service AgencyAgency
1. American Newspaper Annual 1880
2. 1900: 160 employees/12 depts
3. Account executives 1. copywriters, art directors
4. Clients: Hires Root Beer, Procter & Gamble
5. Legitimacy
6. Remedial market research
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SummarySummary1. Patent Medicines & Problem of Body/Mind
1. Modern Advertising: Symbolism/Market Data
2. Endurance of Patent Medicine Tradition2. P.T. Barnum3. Corporate Advertisers (Consumer Goods)
Kellogg’s, 4. Socio-Economic Change
1. Second Industrial Revolution2. Retailer-Manufacturer Power Struggle
5. Advertising Agents6. Full-Service Ad Agency
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Ad Spending (US newspapers/mags)Ad Spending (US newspapers/mags)
1880: $39 mil1900: $95 mil1910: $202 mil1920: $528 mil(13-fold increase)
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Advertising –Chain of Advertising –Chain of CommandCommand
1. 1860s: Publisher>Agent>Advertiser>Consumer
2. ‘Modern’ (Today) Advertiser-
client>Agency> Media/Publisher>Consumer
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““Science” of AdvertisingScience” of Advertising
How demonstrate Ad’s effectiveness?
Tension: ◦ Science-Art◦ Research-Creative
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Copywriting: Reason Why Copywriting: Reason Why
1. John E. Powers (1890s) 2. Approach:
1. informative, rational, straightforward
3. Conscious deliberation and reason
4. “state firmly what the product does and how it will benefit the buyer.”
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Reason WhyReason Why
plain speech/direct reader
conversational styleemulate personal
rapport w/shopkeeperfrom focus on product
to userToday’s Examples?
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Psychology and AdvertisingPsychology and Advertising1. Outgrowth of
philosophy, late 1800s
2. mental processes, idea formation, behavior
3. empirical approach to know mind/brain
4. influence of science/medicine
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Order-of-Merit Order-of-Merit TechniqueTechniqueHarlow Gale,
(psychologist 1890s)
1. “what made ad noticeable?
2. Experiments: 1. Eye tracking2. buy fictional
brands 3. Subjects ‘order-of-
merit’ preference4. “Idealist” vs.
behaviorist
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Order-of-Merit Order-of-Merit (Behaviorist)(Behaviorist)1. H.L. Hollingworth
(1910s/20s)2. compare order-of-
merit rankings w/actual sales
3. “general laws” for copywriting
4. 1920s, dozens of studies
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Theory of SuggestionTheory of Suggestion
1. Walter Dill Scott2. The Theory of
Advertising (1904)3. consumer: non-
rational, suggestible to power of copywriter
4. persuasive techniques not information
5. ad aesthetics
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Scott/SuggestionScott/Suggestion
1. Women as more suggestible
2. 1920s: women --80% of consumption
3. Male advertisers & “emotional” women consumers
4. “irrational” women/ social prejudice
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John B. WatsonJohn B. Watson
1. J. Walter Thompson1. “University of Advertising”
2. Behavioral psychology to advertising◦ Blind-fold cigarette brand
recognition test
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Impressionistic Approach Impressionistic Approach (early 1900s)(early 1900s)1. Ernest Elmo Calkins2. appeal to reader imagination 3. beautiful ads penetrate “open
minds”4. colour, sensation, visual
splendor5. read magazines for diversion
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Pears Soap (1890s)Pears Soap (1890s)
1. Soap as Commodity2. Thomas J. Barratt3. ”Any fool can make
soap”4. Godliness,
cleanliness, Pears
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Pears and High ArtPears and High Art
1. John Everett Millais2. “A Child’s World”
(1887)3. “Bubbles”4. “incomplete angels”
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Pears/”Bubbles”Pears/”Bubbles”
1. Barratt buys painting2. blur art/advertising3. children-innocence-
cleanliness-Pears4. Controversy5. Associative Transfer6. Pears/Middle-brow
Culture
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Art, Art, Advertising/ConsumerismAdvertising/ConsumerismPop Art (1960s)
◦A. WarholLow CultureHigh Culture
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Advertising, 1920s/30s Advertising, 1920s/30s (Marchand)(Marchand)
1. Capitalist Realism1. Socialist
Realism2. Ads as Historical
Evidence3. Mirror or
Zerrspiegel
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Advertising, 1920s/30s Advertising, 1920s/30s (Marchand)(Marchand)Therapeutics of
AdvertisingApostles of
Modernity
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Advertiser as Wise CounselAdvertiser as Wise Counsel
Listerine:◦ 1920: general
antiseptic $100k profit
◦ 1927 Mouthwash $4 mil profit
◦ new social/medical affliction (“halitosis”)
◦ heavy ad spending
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ListerineListerine
mini social dramas
dramatic realismvindicates use of
psychologyemotional appeal
over reason
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Worry Appeal/Scare CopyWorry Appeal/Scare Copy
Great DepressionJob loss fearsExamplesAdvertising during
Recessions?
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