The message
designing
4. Problem Solution
5. SLICE OF LIFE
6. SPOKESPERSON
- Testimonial
- Nature of the product
- The target group
- Special characteristics of the product
- The competitors
- Promises
- The different one
- Brand position
- With consumer
- Passing on information
- Create brand awareness
- Incite them to act i. e. purchase
- Confirm the legitimacy of their choice after purchase
- With trade
- To induce them to stock the product
- To push the product on the counter
- To provide strategic shelf-space
- With manufacturers
- To make them raw materials
- To convince them about rational product benefits
- To convince them about cost aspects
- LAW OF UNITY-
- LAW OF VARIETY
- LAW OF BALANCE
- LAW OF RHYTHM
- Appeal
- Message presentation
- Ad message structure
- Message format
- Headline
- Sub head
- Body copy
- Price
- Name and address
- Coupon- if any
- Signature slogan- Where ever you are.
- Clichés - Buzzwords like Now! New! At last! Today!
- Action words- Buy! Try! Watch! Enjoy! Call! Look! Taste!
Ask!
- Emotive or exciting words- Wonderful! Beautiful! Amazing! Economical!
- Adverse publicity – Reports printed and published in media
- Refusal of further advertising space
- Removal of Trade Incentives – Council of Membership
- Legal Proceedings – Refer to Office of Fair Trading (OFT)
THE EIGHT LAWS OF DESIGNING
Layout
Developing
layouts
Design Principles
Organization
Direction
Dominance
Visual Path
Utility
Consistency
Continuity
White space
Margins
Contrast
Balance
Simplicity
Color
LAW AND ETHICS OF
ADVERTISING
LEGAL VS
VOLUNTARY CONTROLS
Law of Contract
Contract of
Advertising
Sanctions
Criticism
Hard and soft sell
Ads are designed
to touch either the head or the heart. These two approaches are also called
HARD SELL and SOFT SELL. A hard sell is a rational, informational message that
designed to touch the mind and create a response based on logic.
But soft sell
uses an emotional message and is designed around an image intended to touch the
heart and create a response based on feelings and attitudes.
FORMATS AND FORMULAS
1.
STRAIGHT FORWARD FACTUAL
These ads usually convey information without using
any gimmicks. They are rational rather than emotional. Business-to-business
advertising also is generally factual tone.
2. DEMONSTRATIONS AND
COMPARISONS
The demonstrations focus
on how to use the product or what it can do to you. The product's strengths
take center stage. The objective of demonstration's conviction is 'seeing is
believing.' It can be a very persuasive technique.
A comparison contrasts two
or more products and usually finds the advertising brand to be superior. The
comparison can be direct, his which the competitor is mentioned, or indirect,
with just a reference to 'other leading brands.'
3. HUMOR
The copy strategy behind
making people laugh is the hope they will transfer the warm feelings they have
as they have being entertained to the product. Humor is hard to handle,
however. Although, everyone appreciates a good joke, not everyone finds the
same joke funny. The danger of humor is people will remember the punch line and
forget the product name. But some humor, if deftly (skillfully, cleverly)
handled, is acceptable. (David Ogilvy)
It is also known as the
product-as- hero technique. The message begins with problem, and the product is
precluded as the solution. This is a common technique used with cleansers and
additives that make things run smoother.
A variation on this technique is the
problem-avoidance message where the problem is avoided because of product use.
It is really just as an
elaborate version of a problem-solution message presented in the form of a play
let. It uses common place situation with 'typical people' talking about the
problem. It puts the audience in the position of overhearing a discussion
wherein the problem is stated and resolved.
Using a person to speak on
behalf of the product is another popular message technique. Spokespersons and
endorsers are thought to build credibility. They are either celebrities we
admire or the experts we respect or someone 'just like us' whose advice we
might seek out one of the problems of spokesperson strategy is that the person
may be so glamorous or so a attractive that the message gets lasts. AMITHAV
BACHCHAN
It is a variation of the spokesperson message format. The difference is
that people who give testimonials are talking about their own personal
experiences with the product.
Message designing and
positioning
Objectives
1. Law of UNITY
2. Law of VARIETY
3. Law of BALANCE
4. Law of RHYTHM
5. Law of HARMONY
6. Law of PROPORTION
7. Law of SCALE
8. Law of EMPHASIS
UNITY can be disturbed by
·
an irritating border
·
too many different and conflicting type faces
·
badly distributed color
·
disproportionate elements
·
'busy' layouts containing a confusion of parts
There should be change and
contrast as with bold and medium weight of type, or good use of white space.
·
The ad should not be monotonous
·
Variety can also be introduced by the use of pictures
OPTICAL BALANCE- It is one third down a space, not
half way.
A picture or headline may occupy one-third and the
text copy two-third.
SYMMETRICAL BALANCE falls midway so that a design
can be divided in to equal halves, quarters and so on, but should not divide
into two halves so that it looks like separate ads.
Though print ad is static,
but it is still possible to obtain a sense of movement so that the eye is
carried down and through the ad. The eye should lead from Para to Para.
The general from of
overall design should be pleasantly rhythmic.
5. LAW OF HARMONY
There should be no sharp, annoying and jerky
contrast.
All the elements should
harmonize, helping to create unity
6. LAW OF PROPORTION
This applies particularly to the type sizes used
for different widths of the copy, the wider the column the larger the type size,
and vice versa.
7. LAW OF SCALE
It is the use of the color, black looks closer to
the eye than grey and red is the most dominant color. Black on either yellow or
orange is very bold where as white on yellow is weak.
8. LAW OF EMPHASIS
All emphasis is no
emphasis. Do not use
·
all capital letters
·
Too many bold letters
Anatomy of a
Typeface
Serif Ascender
Cap height Expel x
-HEIGHT
Descender
Copy writing
q
Create a bridge to the target audience by being persuasion
q
Arouse the audience, why to read/listen
q
Use familiar words and build up points of interest
q
Use specific and concrete word
q
Repeat key points
q
Convince the audience by sticking the fact
q
Use rhyme and rhythm
q
Make use of ......... effects i. e. leave the message incomplete
q Ask the audience to draw
the conclusion
A. Central
a.
The central message
b.
Compare advantage and disadvantages
c.
Provoke active information
B. Peripheral
a.
Pleasant association
b.
Scenic background
c.
Favorable conclusion
a.
Drawing conclusion
b.
Repetition
c.
One vs. two sided communication
d.
Comparative advantage
e.
Order of presentation
a.
Organization
b.
Plan
c.
Style
d.
Type of ad message
AIDCA model of Ad
A-
Attracting attention
I-
Rousing interest
D- Building desire
C-
Conviction
A- Obtain action
Seven elements of Copy
Writing
·
Association of ideas- Deuba like it!
·
Alliterative- Rhythm
·
Bargain- Now only Rs. 99.
·
Commanding- buy it now!
·
Challenging- Why put up with higher price?
·
Curiosity- Even Robert plays football.
·
Declaration- No. 1
·
Emotional- Sexy juice
·
Interrogative- Do you have more interest?
·
Identification- The German beer
·
Humorous- Open seven days a week
·
Gimmick- sss.......sss.....sss
·
Sense of movement so that the eye is carried progressively through the
copy
·
Typographical contrast
·
Emphasis selling points
·
Different ideas
·
Absorb the interest at a glances
·
Make more interesting
·
Emotive
·
Factual- hard selling/educational
·
Narrative- description, story
·
Picture and captions
·
Monologue or dialogue
·
Gimmick
·
Quotation
Copy device
It
is a drawing that shows all the elements in the ad where are to be positioned.
The most common layout format is one with a single dominant visual that
occupies about 60 – 70 % of the area. Underneath it is a headline and a copy
block. The logo or signature signs of the message are at the bottom.
Thumbnail sketches – These
are quick miniature version of the ad, preliminary sketch that are used for
developing the concept and finding the positioning of the elements. These are
small preliminary sketches of various layout ideas. The second step is a rough
layout. Rough are done to size but not with any great attention to how they
look.
Semi Comp (Comprehensive):
A
semi comp is done to the exact size of the ad and all the elements are exactly
signed and positioned. Color is added where appropriate. Shading for black and
white is done with various gray markers to indicate tonal variation.
Comprehensive:
A
layout that looks as much like the final printed ad as possible. On special
occasions, a full-blow comprehensive may be developed. This is an impression
presentation piece.
Mechanical or Key lines:
A
finished paste up, with every element perfectly positioned that is photographed
to make printing plates for offset printing.
The
functional side of layouts makes the message easy to perceive. The aesthetic
side makes it attractive and pleasing to the eye.
Organized
visual images are easier to recognize, perceive and remember than are visual
images without any order.
-
Gerald Murch
The
path determined by the ordering of the elements is direction.
Guttenberg Diagonal is the motion from upper left
to lower right. Graphics expert Edmund Arnold coins it. Most layouts try to
work with natural eye movements.
It
is focal point; the first element is a layout that the eyes see. Normally the
dominant element is a visual, but it can be a headline the big and bold face.
The
direction is which the reader’s eyes moves while scanning a layout, Guttenberg
diagonal is one model.
Keep
things together that go together.
It
is important to unity. Using one typeface rather than several is a good
technique for unity.
Neighboring
elements that touch and align are another important aspect of unity. Captions
need to adjoin the pictures to which they refer. Headline lead into the text.
White
space is not simply an area where nothing happens. It works in one of two ways:
it either frames and element in the sea of white, which gives the importance,
or it separates elements that do not belong together.
It
is simply a white space designed to frame the ad and separate it from
everything surrounding it. Ina a magazine, you can use bleed, an ad in which
the printed area runs to the trim edge of the page.
Contrast
indicates the importance of various elements. Contrast makes one element stand
out because it is different. Contrast also used to separate an ad from its
surroundings.
Optical
1/3 headline + 2/3 body, symmetrical ½ +
½
Less
is more, so when in doubt leave it out (delete)
Color
is used in advertising to
-
Attract attention
-
Provide Real son – exactly what it is.
-
Establish moods – red, yellow, orange, are bright and happy.
-
Build brand identity – Pepsi (Red + Blue)
Three phases
The pre
marketing era:
Buyers and
sellers communicated each other. In 300 BC Babylonian clay tablet is the
earliest form of advertisement.
Mass
communication era: (After the mid 1700s till the early 1900s)
Newspaper ad
started with the printing press i. e. 1438 when Johann Guttenberg invented
movable printing press. First ad in English newspaper was printed about 40
years after the printing press.
The research
era:
Since 1950s ad
entered in the sophisticated era. Advertisers have developed new techniques to
understand and segment audiences, and target them with specific messages.
Newspaper
advertisement
1477- British
advertisement (But not known, where it was published)
1665- Oxford gazette (Later renamed London gazette)
In England,
there were 25 newspapers in 1700s and 258 in 1800s.
Ad in
Nepalese context
1919 BS- Ad in
Mokshasiddhi, for the first time in Nepal. The ad was about the notice
of next publication of the Nepal Manoranjan press.
Ethical Criteria (3A)
Advocacy: Advertising by its very
nature, tries to persuade the audience to do something. Thus it is not
objective or neutral. This fact disturbs critics who think that advertising
should be objective information and neutral.
Accuracy: YOU MUST NOT LIE. WHAT
YOU PROMISE, YOU MUST PROVIDE.
Acquisitiveness: Advertising gives us
choices and incentives for which we continue to strive (great efforts).
British Code of Ad.
The
codes require that advertisements and sales promotions should be
-
Legal, decent, honest, and truthful.
-
Prepared with the sense of responsibility to consumers and society.
-
In line with the principles of fair competition generally accepted in
business.
The CAP – Committee of
Advertiser Practice devises the codes.
Characteristics of Legislation
i)
Advertiser should obey in the public interest, under penalty of fine or
punishment.
ii)
The law can be preventive in make known what is illegal.
iii)
Some laws depend on interpretations by the courts and may not be
effective until the test case has occurred to set precedents.
iv)
The law has to be invoked (power of the law) either by the plaintiff (a
person who brings an action at law), swing (make a legal claim against))
according to whether it is common or statute law.
Characteristics of Voluntary Controls
i)
Advertiser should obey in the public interest. An offending advertising
agent risks losing his/her recognition status and right to commission, while
the client risks damaging his/her reputation if a complaint are made.
ii)
There are no penalties other than above and necessity to amend or
withdraw an offending ad.
iii)
Voluntary controls are self-regulating and are likely to prevent
unethical advertising from appearing.
iv)
Advertising is competitive but there are limits. No ‘knocking copy’ is
allowed. You cannot say your rival product is bad.
v)
Voluntary self-regulatory control can be more effective than
legislation.
To
be legally binding a contract must have four elements, namely, an offer, an
unconditional acceptance of the offer and consideration in the form of some
exchange or sacrifice while consent must be genuine and not wrongfully
obtained.
Simple Contract: it is one that is not under seal
and it can be made orally.
Expressed Contract: This is one in which the terms
are set out in words, either orally or in writing, by the partners.
Implied Contract: It is the contract depends on the
circumstances.
Executed contract: one or both parties perform the
contract. Usually dates are agreed for the performance of the work and payment
for it.
1.
The purchase of ad space/airtime.
2.
The hiring of out door ad sites and exhibition stand space
3.
Service agreements with advertising agents, public relation consultants
and other professional consultants
4.
The purchase of print, display on arterial, photography and artwork.
Advertising
is an immoral and parasitical force, which exalts (make higher in rank) false
values and induces people to buy things they either do not need or cannot
afford. It is said to create expectations that cannot be satisfied.
In Indonesia TV
commercials were banned because they were thought to increase the expectation
of poorer people.
Critics
of advertising have made one fundamental mistake: they blame the TOOL and not
the USER. There is mother wrong with advertising, but there are advertisers who
abuses or misuse advertising deliberately or unintentionally.
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