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ADVERTISING AND SALES PROMOTION UNIT – III DESIGN AND EXECUTION OF ADVERTISEMENTS Message development – Different types of advertisements – Layout – Design appeal – Copy structure – Advertisement production – Print – Radio. T.V. and Web advertisements – Media Research – Testing validity and Reliability of ads – Measuring impact of advertisements – case studies. Table of Contents 3.1 Advertisement message ....................................................................................................................................................... 2 3.1.2 Creating the Advertising Message ............................................................................................................................... 2 3.2.3 Message development .............................................................................................................................................. 5 3.2.4 Message-appeal ........................................................................................................................................................ 6 3.3.1 Advertising Copy ........................................................................................................................................................... 10 3.3.2 Objectives of Advertising Copy ................................................................................................................................. 10 3.3.3 Characteristics of Copy : ....................................................................................................................................... 11 3.4 Layout ............................................................................................................................................................................... 20 3.4.2 Types of Layout : ...................................................................................................................................................... 21 3.4.3 Process of Layout : ................................................................................................................................................. 22 3.5.1 Copywriting Advertisements......................................................................................................................................... 27 3.5.2 Copywriting for Print Advertisements ....................................................................................................................... 27 3.5.3 Copywriting for Cyberspace .................................................................................................................................. 28 3.6.1 DESIGN & LAYOUT OF ADVERTISEMENT ........................................................................................................... 34 3.6.2 Components of Advertisement Layout....................................................................................................................... 37 3.7.1 ADVERTISEMENT PRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 41 3.8.1 Testing validity and reliability of advertisements .......................................................................................................... 55 3.8.2 Need of Evaluating Advertising Effectiveness : ....................................................................................................... 58 1 3.8.3 Approaches of Evaluating Advertising Effectiveness ............................................................................................ 65 3.1 Advertisement message The effectiveness of marketing communication largely depends upon message. Ideally, the message should get attention, hold interest, arouse desire, and obtain action. Message consists of facts, opinion, appeal, idea, symbols, pictures or convincing arguments about the product. Main purpose of ad-copy is to communicate with the largest audience. Advertiser wants to send some information, facts, and appeals, in a convincing way so that the attention of audience can be attracted and their interest can be aroused and they can be persuaded to buy the advertiser’s product. The effectiveness of advertisement depends on how message is designed and framed. The decision regarding message-content, message-format, and message-source depends upon factors likecompetition, consumer-characteristic, buyer-behavior, product features, legal factors, amount of ad-budget, etc. Message consists of facts, opinion, appeal, idea, symbols, pictures or convincing arguments about the product. Main purpose of ad-copy is to communicate with the target audience. Advertiser wants to send some information, facts, and appeals, in a convincing way so that the attention of audience can be attracted and their interest can be aroused and they can be persuaded to buy the advertiser’s product. The effectiveness of advertisement depends on how message is designed and framed. Kotler points-out that formulating message require solving following problems: 1) What to say? (Message-content), 2) How to say? (Message-format), 3) Who should say it? (Message-source) The decision regarding message-content, message-format, and message-source depends upon factors likecompetition, consumer-characteristics, buyer-behavior, product features, legal factors, amount of ad-budget, etc. 3.1.2 Creating the Advertising Message Advertisements need to break through the clutter: • Gain attention • Communicate well Advertisements need to be better planned, more imaginative, more entertaining, and more rewarding to consumers • Madison & Vine—the intersection of Madison Avenue and Hollywood—represents the merging of advertising and entertainment Creating the Advertising Message o Message strategy o Creative concept o Message execution Message strategy is the general message that will be communicated to consumers • Identifies consumer benefits Creative concept is the idea that will bring the message strategy to life and guide specific appeals to be used in an advertising campaign Characteristics of the appeals include: • Meaningful • Believable 2 • Distinctive Message execution is when the advertiser turns the big idea into an actual ad execution that will capture the target market’s attention and interest. • The creative team must find the best approach, style, tone, words, and format for executing the message. Message execution also includes: • Tone – Positive or negative • Attention-getting words • Format – Illustration – Headline – Copy Advertising manager must concentrate not only on the content of message but also on how the message should be structured for presentation and who should be the message-source. Message-design and development is different for different types of media like the message will be different for radio, T.V, magazine, etc. Message attributes Messages that perception Messages that drive cognition Messages that touch emotions Messages that persuade Messages that transform a product into a brand Messages that drive action Messages that drive perception To be effective, advertisements need to get exposure through the media buy. The message, however, needs to get attention and build awareness. It also needs to get consumers interests, which it tries to do by being relevant. Then advertisers hope consumers will remember the message. Here are some suggestions on how to do that: i) Attention and awareness Getting consumers attention requires stopping power. Ads that stop the scanning and break through the clutter are usually high in originality. ii) Interest Getting attention is the stopping power of an advertisement; keeping attention is the pulling power of an ad-it keeps pulling the reader or viewer through to the end of the message. Advertisers stimulate interest by speaking to the personal interests of their target audience. iii) Memory Not only does advertising have to stop (get attention) and pull (create interest), it also has to stick (in memory). One technique to ensure memorability is repetition. Psychologists maintain that people need to hear or see something a minimum of three times before it crosses the threshold of perception and enters into memory. Jingles are valuable memorability devices because the music allows the advertiser to repeat a phrase or product name without boring the audience. Messages that drive cognition In general, informational strategies are focused on a product’s features. To have a practical effect on customers, managers must identify the product characteristics or features that are most important to the target audience. In addition to importance to the customer, the advertising might also point to the product’s point of differentiation relative to the competition, which reflects its position. Messages that touch emotions 3 Emotional strategies highlight the psychological attraction of the product to the target audience through such responses as love, fear, sexual attraction. These are all soft-sell strategies because they are not using a rational approach to present information or reasons. A soft-sell strategy can be used for hard products. Creating a feeling of involvement is another good way to connect with people on a personal level. Events, such as fairs, contests, grand openings, and exhibits are particularly good at doing this. A general emotional goal is to deliver a message that people like in order to create liking for the product. That is a product justification for the use of entertainment as a message strategy. Entertainment uses drama, humour, and song-and-dance messages to reward the audience with an engaging message. Advertisers have found that commercials that look like T.V. shows and provide high entertainment value seem to be better liked by audiences than ads with high levels of information. Messages that persuade Persuasive advertising is designed to affect attitudes and create belief. Strategies that are particularly good are testimonials and messages that generate word of mouth about the product. A referral from someone who is not affiliated with the product will have more persuasiveness than an ad that everyone knows is paid for by its sponsor. i) Appeals: Persuasion sometimes uses the psychological appeal of the product to the consumer as the focus of a message strategy. An appeal connects with some emotion that makes the product particularly attractive or interesting, such as security, esteem, fears, sex and sensory pleasure. Although emotion is at the base of most appeals, in some situations appeals can also be logical, such as saving money for retirement. Appeals generally pinpoint the anticipated response of the audience to the product and the message. ii) Selling premises: advertising has developed a number of approaches that speak to the head with a sales message. A selling premise states the logic behind the sales offer. A premise is a proposition on which an argument is based or a conclusion is drawn. It is usually a rational approach – an appeal to the head. A rational, appeal to prospectus and motivate them to respond. Here is a summary of these rational customer-focused selling premises a) Benefit: The benefit emphasizes what the product can do for the user by translating the product feature or attribute into something that benefits the consumer. b) Promise: A promise is a benefit statement that looks to the future and predicts that something good will happen if use the product. c) Reason why: A type of a benefit statement that gives the reason why it should buy something, although the reason sometimes is implied or assumed. The word ‘because’ is the key to a reason-why statement. d) Unique selling proposition: A USP is a benefit statement that is both unique to the product and important to the user. The USP is a promise that consumers will get this unique benefit by using this product only. iii) Conviction: The end result of persuasion is conviction, which means the consumer is committed to something, prefers it, and probably intends to buy it or respond in some way. Conviction is often built on strong, rational arguments that use such techniques in their creative strategies as test results, before-and-after visuals, testimonials by users and experts, and demonstrations to prove something. Publicity that generates news stories in the media is more believable than ads and thus rates higher in credibility. Celebrity endorsements are also used to intensify conviction in the target audience Messages that transform a product into a brand The transformative power of branding, where the brand takes on character and meaning, is one of advertising’s most important functions. Image advertising is used to create a representation in a consumer’s mind. The image takes on a particular meaning based on the ideas, feelings, and attitudes that a consumer has about a product, as well as the consumer’s past experiences with the product and its advertising. Advertising’s role is to provide the cues that make these meanings and experiences come together as a coherent image of the brand. 4 An association message strategy delivers information symbolically by connecting a brand with a certain type of person, lifestyle or other characteristics. This link is often created through visuals. A car in front of a mansion says luxury without having to state that message in words. Messages that drive action Even harder to accomplish than conviction is a change is behavior. Sometimes an advertising message can drive people to act by offering something free or at a discounted sales price, as in retail advertising. Many of the strategies advertisers use to encourage behavior come from other marketing communication areas, such as direct marketing and sales promotion. Sales promotion, e.g, works in tandem with advertising to stimulate immediate action using sampling, coupons, and free gifts as incentives for action. Advertising plays a role in delivering information about these promotions. Most ads end with a signature of some kind that serves to identify the company or brand, but it can also serve as a call to action if it gives direction to the consumer about how to respond. Most ads have response information, such as a toll-free phone number, e-mail address to make it easier for people to respond. Another challenge is to find interesting and original ways to generate word of mouth and get people talking about the product. Trade shows can do this. This is sometimes called viral marketing, or buzz, and it takes advantage of the fact that personal communication is generally seen as more persuasive than mass-media advertising and more likely to motivate action. Viral marketing, which refers to messages being passed through an online network, is another way to create buzz. 3.2.3 Message development It is the process of creating the advertising message. Advertisers must first determine the desired audience response and then develop the advertising message to achieve that response The advertising message is very important to the success of the advertising campaign. It must attract audience attention and communicate effectively. Message designing and development includes creative aspects of advertising. It is the process which starts with the designing of message and results into the development of a finished ad-copy. Message development process is different for different types of media, like designing ad-copy for print media is different from designing adcopy broad cost media. Message development should increase the impact and memorability of the message. By including creative ideas, innovative styles, and by improving production quality, advertiser can increase the effectiveness of advertisement. Effective message development helps to overcome the problem of media clutter. Clutter here refers to increasing number of advertisements in media. Nowadays, newspapers, magazines are full of advertisements. So, advertiser wants that his advertisement must be eye-catching so as to attract attention of readers/viewers. Effective message development helps to overcome the problem of media clutter. Message development includes creative process of advertising and copywriting. Advertising managers must consider not only the content of message but also how the information will be structured for presentation, and what type of message-appeal will be used. Many options are available with respect to design of message. Message design includes following decisions Message structure Message appeal Message format Message source Message structure Message structure includes decisions regarding order or presentation, drawing conclusion, message-sidedness, etc. These decisions are as follows: 1) Order of presentation 5 In the order of presentation, it is decided that what type of arguments should be given in the beginning, in the middle and at the end of message. By presenting the strongest arguments in the beginning, the audience attention can be attracted towards the message. Presenting strong points at the end enhances recall and retention of the target audience. An ideal message presentation is that where strong points are given both at the end and in the beginning. While weak arguments can be given in the middle of message. If target audience are not interested in the topic, or advertiser’s position is weak in the market then strong arguments should be presented in the beginning. 2) Drawing conclusion Another important question regarding message structure is whether definite conclusion should be drawn for the audience or allows the audience to draw their own conclusion. A message in which conclusion is not drawn is called open-ended message. Educated people prefer to draw their own conclusion. If conclusion is drawn in the message, then message becomes easy to understand. But some consumers feel that message which draws conclusion is over aggressive and it is an attempt to influence their choice forcefully. If message is complex, target audiences are less educated, they are less involved in advertiser’s product, then message should draw a firm conclusion. If immediate action from target audience is desired, then conclusion should be drawn in the message. 3) One-sided or two-sided message Another important question regarding message-structure is whether message should be one-sided or two-sided. One-sided message mentions only positive aspects of the product, i.e., only benefits, uses, good qualities are shown. In two-sided message both positive and negative aspects of the product are mentioned. Most of the advertising messages are one-sided, as advertisers do not want to disclose shortcomings of their product. But two-sided message enhances the credibility of the message and in this case, message seems to be more objective and less biased. Highly educated target audience can be impressed with two-sided message. Some advertisers feel that if message given negative aspects of the product also, then it is more difficult to persuade the target audience to buy the product. Moreover, two-sided message, conclude their message with favorable remarks. They mention the weaknesses of their product, but later they make it clear that most of these weaknesses can be overcome and are irrelevant and ultimately the message draws a favorable conclusion. 4) Refutational – message In refutation, advertising message is designed to make counter claims, to nullify the competitor’s claims or to overcome dissonance of public, caused by negative publicity against advertiser’s product. In refutational message, advertiser tries to build positive attitude towards its products and defend against attacks or criticism of his product. Such messages are used to refute the opposing viewpoints, i.e., if competitors are making tall claims of their products and are criticizing the product, then people will design refutational message to defend against attacks or criticism, e.g., when a report about cold drinks was published that these contain pesticides above the authorized limit, then people stopped using cold drinks, then cold drink manufactures designed refutational messages to defend against such criticism and to overcome to dissonance of public 5) Verbal versus non-verbal message In message-structure, a decision is taken that how much verbal and how much of non-verbal message should be used in the advertisement. In case of broadcast ads, verbal message includes spoken words and in case of print ads, verbal message means information given in the form of words. Non-verbal message includes visual elements of the ad like illustration / photo in the ad or the scenes in the television commercial. Both verbal and non-verbal messages communicate with the target audience. In some print ads, visual part of the ad dominates. Visual part of the message makes the advertisement more attractive and eye-catching 3.2.4 Message-appeal Message appeal refers to what advertiser wants to communicate to target audience through advertising copy. It refers to the approach used in attracting the attention of audience or influencing their feeling/behavior 6 towards advertiser’s product or service. Appeal helps to arouse interest of audience towards advertiser’s product. Ad appeal can be many types. In message appeal advertiser may give the message regarding high quality of the product, low price, good after sale services, durability of product, good performance of the product, main benefits of product, superiority of advertisers product over other brands, information about exchange offer, discount offer, festival offer, place of availability of product, modifications made in products, etc. The message may include sense of security, safety, pride, achievement, recognition, satisfaction, etc., after buying advertiser’s product. Message is communicated to target audience by making different types of appeals in the ad-copy. Main advertising appeals are discussed below: 1) Rational appeal: Rational appeal as the name suggests aims to focus on the individual’s functional, utilitarian, or practical needs for particular products and services. Such appeals emphasize the characteristics and features of the product and the service and how it would be beneficial to own or use the particular brand. Print media is particularly wellsuited for rational appeals and is often used with good success. It is also suited for business-to-business advertisers and for products that are complex and that need high degree of attention and involvement. The main rational appeal are: i) Feature appeal It highlights main features of the product, uses of the product, easy availability after sales services, guarantee/warranty on product, etc., and high performance of the product ii) Favorable price appeal If price of the product is low then it is highlighted in the ad appeal. iii) High performance appeal It stresses on high quality and good performance of the product. Such appeal is generally used for washing powder, kitchen appliances, engine oil, writing pens, etc. iv) Long-life appeal It lays emphasis on durability and long-life of the product. Such appeal is generally used for durable goods like furniture, refrigerator, car tyres, etc. v) Economy appeal It highlights on low operating cost, low fuel consumption, low electricity consumption, more mileage, low maintenance cost, etc. Such appeal is generally given for vehicles, tubes, electric equipments etc. vi) Easiness-in-use It stresses on the fact that it to operate the product and involves no complexities. It is commonly given for nongear scooters, automatic washing machines, food processors other kitchen appliances, etc. vii) Re-sale value It highlights on the high re-sale value of the product in comparison to other brands even after the economic life of the product. viii) New product appeal It lays stress on the fact that the product has been improved, has some additional features and is a modified form of its own previous product. The words like ‘improved’, ‘new’, ‘modified’ are used in this appeal. When the business unit adopts improved technology, it often uses this type of appeal. ix) Comparative Advantage Appeal In this appeal, advertiser’s product superiority is shown by comparing it with competitive products. It is common among ads of detergents. x) 7 Announcement Appeal If some new feature is added or some modification/improvement is done in the product or new distributionoutlets are opened, etc., then target audience are informed about these changes. Similarly, if company has achieved leading position in the industry, then it is highlighted in the announcement ad appeal. 1) Emotional Appeal: An emotional appeal is related to an individual’s psychological and social needs for purchasing certain products and services. Many consumers are emotionally motivated or driven to make certain purchases. Advertisers aim to cash-in on the emotional appeal and this works particularly well where there is not much difference between multiple product brands and its offerings. The main emotional appeals are as follows: i) Pride appeal: In this appeal, product users are shown feeling pride in using advertiser’s product. They feel status and recognition in the society by using such products. Expensive / luxurious products are advertised by this ad appeal. ii) Affection appeal: in this appeal, love and affection is the main advertising theme. Products of baby care are advertised on this ad appeal in which mother’s love / affection is depicted. iii) Comfort appeal: In this appeal comfort, happiness, joy, pleasure of person using the advertiser’s product is shown. Such ads are common for fans, coolers, air conditioners, cars, etc. iv) Safety appeal: in this appeal, the audience are made to feel that they will be safe and secure by using advertiser’s product. Advertisers of insurance policies, helmet, pressure cookers, electric bulbs, etc. make such appeal. v) Product popularity appeal: it spells out that the product is very widely used and has large market share. Such appeal is given by business units which are market leaders; e.g., Johnson and Johnson, a common brand for baby care products and Activa scooter which is very popular give product popularity appeal in their advertisement. 1) Combining rational and emotional appeals: Both rational and emotional ad appeals are used in developing effective advertisement copy. Both appeals influence the customer’s buying decisions / buying motives. Purpose of both appeals is same, i.e., to attract attention, create interest, arouse desire, and persuade the prospective buyers to purchase the product. Generally kids, children and young persons are more influenced by emotional appeal; while mature, aged persons are more influenced by rational appeal. If target customers are young ones, then more of emotional appeal can be used; and if target customers are aged, then more of rational appeal can be used. If buying-decision of product is taken by family members collectively then both appeals are equally important in influencing the buying decision. 2) Sex appeal: Sex in advertising or sex sells in the use of sexual or erotic imagery in advertising to draw interest to a particular product, for purpose of sale. A feature of sex in advertising is that the imagery used, such as that of a pretty woman, typically has no connection to the product being advertised. The purpose of the imagery is to attract the attention of the potential customer or user. Appeals utilizing overt sexual information are common in mainstream consumer advertising. Sex appeal is pervasive in advertising and is used with increasing frequency. As advertisers seek out ways to break through clutter and draw attention to their messages, the use of sexually oriented appeals have been used as a communication technique. 3) Moral appeal Moral appeals are based on morality. These appeals are generally used in social advertising; like ad for polio education, eye donation, environment protection, protection to girl child, protection against exploitation of child labor, tree plantation etc. these appeals draw attention of audience on what is right. Considerations in selecting advertising appeal Selection of advertising appeal is important in designing of ad-copy. All appeals do not suit all products / all types of customers. Effective ad appeals are unique, catchy and different. It should match with the target audience. Following points should be kept in mind while selecting the ad appeal / ad theme: 8 1) Ad appeal should be believable, convincing interesting and attracting. 2) It should be simple so that it can be understood even by an average target audience. 3) It must match with the characteristics of target audience. For example, if the target audience is middle income group, then rational appeal emphasizing on low price will work. If target audience consist of high income group then emotional appeal with pride / prestige appeal will be more effective. 4) Ad appeal must match with the product features. The main / unique product feature should be highlighted in the appeal. 5) Ad theme must be original, unique, and not just copy of competitors 6) Ad theme should be changed with change in market conditions. 7) Ad theme should be strong enough to affect change in attitude and action of target audience. Message-format Message format is the way a message is presented. Message format should be such as attracts the attention of audience. Message format should be simple, logical and attractive. Presenting the strongest argument first from the various message contents has the advantage of creating attention and interest in the message. It is even more important in newspapers and other print media where audience often do not attend the whole message. The headlines of message should be attractive, e.g; using the words ‘Dhamaka! Dhamaka!, ‘Festival discount offer’, ‘Exchange offer’, ‘Sale! Sale! Sale!’, ‘50% off’, ‘Buy one get one free’, ‘0% interest’, as headlines usually capture audience attention. In a printed communication, the communicator should decide on headlines, illustrations and color. For a T.V communication body language, gestures, dress, hairstyles, etc. are to be planned. Message format is also called ‘layout of advertising copy’. Message-Source Message source as a component in the communications process can have an influence on receivers. Some communicators are more persuasive than others, and the degree to which they are more successful depends on how credible or believable the audience perceives them to be. For example, If the audience believes a communicator has underlying motives like personal gain, the source will be less persuasive than one they perceive as having nothing to gain. ‘Overheard conversation’ has a similar effect as the receiver believes they were not the intended target of the message, so believes the communicator has no direct intent to manipulate which increases the source’s credibility. In advertising, the consumer is wary of the intentions of the advertiser. It is difficult to eliminate intent to persuade. Same television advertisements attempt to increase credibility by using ‘candid’ interviews with homemakers. The homemaker is asked to explain why they purchase a particular brand or asked to ‘trade’ their usual brand for another, e.g., one box of their regular detergent for two boxes of another detergent (and the answer is always ‘no’,). Another approach is to ask ‘consumers’ to compare their brand of product with another, both in disguised form. The ‘consumer’ acts surprised when they learn that the sponsor’s brand performs better than their regular brand. In these commercials advertisers are attempting to imply a degree of objectivity to establish credibility for their message. If the audience perceives the source to be an ‘expert’ speaker, perhaps one who has appropriate education, information, or knowledge on a given subject the source will be more successful in changing audience opinions pertaining to this area of expertise. Specialized sources of information, particularly the media, are quite often perceived as expert sources. For example, in the advertisement of Oral-B toothbrush, a dentist gives the ad message. In case of health-drink Complain, a dietician is shown as message source person to increase the reliability of message. Perceived status or prestige of the source affects its credibility. This can relate to a class concept, but also to the ‘role’ of the source in the particular situation. Everyone has several roles to play. One individual may be a 9 corporate executive, a husband, a father, a. member of the local Masonic lodge and secretary of the local Chamber of Commerce. Each role carries with it a status or level of prestige. A person usually separates these roles, adopting the one appropriate to a given situation. Generally, the higher the perceived status of a source, the more persuasive it will be. This is particularly true when the source is communicating on a topic related to role position. 3.3.1 Advertising Copy Advertising copy Text of a print, radio, or television advertising message that aims at catching and holding the interest of the prospective buyer, and at persuading him or her to make a purchase all within a few short seconds. The headline of an advertising copy is said to be the most important part, and quite often a small change in its wording brings disproportionate results. Although a short advertising copy is more common in consumer-product advertising, according to the UK advertising guru David Ogilvy (1911-1999) people do read (and listen or attend to) lengthy advertisements if they are skillfully written. Most advertising copy is based on advertising/consumer research and is composed by professional copywriters hired by advertising agencies. Also called advertisement copy, ad copy, or just copy. A „Copy‟ means a written matter in any advertisement. It may consist only one word or many words. A copy consist of headlines, subheads, captions etc. The copy supports the illustration and contains description of the products merits, demerits, uses, services etc. A copy is the heart of an advertisement. It shoulders the responsibility for influencing the buyers. The word ‘copy’ has specific meaning in the world of advertising. The wording use in advertising and promotion is called copy. Ad-copy is the written or spoken message which the advertiser wants to communicate to its target audience through any type of advertisement. Written or spoken material in ad-copy mainly includes headlines, message, illustrations, claims, logo, closing idea, etc. Ad-copy is defined as “written or spoken material in it, including headlines, main body, sub-heads, pictures, caption, slogans, information about brand name, trademarks, prices, coupons, claims, advertiser’s name. address, logo, phone numbers, website, etc.” Advertisement copy is the product of collective efforts of copywriters, artists, layout designers, models, choreographers, directors, market-researchers, etc. Effectiveness of advertising-campaign depends on effective ad-copy. Ad-copy should attract attention, create interest of readers/viewers, induce or persuade the readers to purchase the product or take them near to purchase. The advertising copy should be capable of turning potential and prospective buyers into actual buyers. 3.3.2 Objectives of Advertising Copy Advertising objectives must be set to guide the creation of advertisements. Without such set of objectives, advertisements become ‘hit or miss’ propositions. It can be direct action objective or indirect action objective: I) Direct Action Objective: Direct action objective of a copy is to cause immediate direct action on the part of the consumer i.e., as soon as the advertisement is read by the prospect; he responds to it and decides to buy the advertised product or service. Majority of the retail advertisements and direct advertising aim at direct action. 2) Indirect Action Objective: Indirect action objective of a copy is to create indirect action on the part of prospects. Such a copy hopes to establish favorable attitude towards the company and such favorable response may be delayed. 10 3.3.3 Characteristics of Copy : (a) Brevity : A copy should be brief because readers have no time to go through the lengthy text and they must be able to, read within a short time. So a copy should use simple language and small and easy words. The message should be concise and precise. (b) Clarity : A copy should be self-explanatory. The message to be delivered must be clear at first reading. (c) Aptness : The message should be pointed towards the prospects. It must have a tone agreeable to the respects. The viewers‟ attention should be led to the product and the message should be coached in such a way that it would create interest inn the readers to read the message. (d) Interesting : A copy should be interesting-provoking. It must stimulate the readers‟ curiosity to read the message. The reader should himself decide to read „0 the message in detail. (e) Sincerity : Sincerity can be achieved by using acts and quoting figures. Vague generalisations or stray opinions must be avoided. Sincerity can be achieved if the copy contains one or two illustrations so that the message will have an instantaneous appeal. (f) Personal : The message should be directly addressed to the readers so that every reader forms the opinion that it is directed to him only. This kind of direct personal attitude catches and retains the reader‟s or listener‟s attention. (g) Convincing : A copy provides information with a view to create in the mind of a reader first a desire and then a conviction to possess the product. This means that the copy should be persuasive enough to lead the readers towards buying the product. 11 3.3.4 Types of Copy : 1. Scientific Copy : A Scientific copy is prepared for technical products describing about the features, advantages, uses, contents and all the technical details about it. It is prepared for machineries, computers etc. Scientific copy is directed, towards well versed customers who know about the product. For instance, a medicine may be advertised to appeal to doctors. Thus, it explains the ordinary people in general and professional men in particular about the technicalities of the product. 2. Descriptive Copy : It is a non-technical copy presented in such a manner that any layman can easily understand. It does not require a professional expert to an the copy. It is just an ordinary, announcement of a new items. 3. Narrative Copy : It is in the form of a fictitious story which narrates the uses advantages, after effect etc., of the product. The story narrated is humurous to make it interesting. 4. Topical Copy : This copy establish a connection between the product and a particular happening e.g., A watch company may advertise that those who were successful in climbing Mount Everest had with them the watches of the company thus proving their excellent quality. 5. Personality Copy : This copy takes advantages of the opinion of an important personality. The statements are made by leading personalities like sportsman, film actors, politicians etc. Their statements act as certificates about the superior quality to increase the sales. 6. Colloquial Copy : In this type, informal language may be used to convey the message. The terms which are used in daily conversation are in the copy. 7. Reasoning Copy : It is one which reasons to the customer as to why he should buy a product. This copy explains to the customer in detail all the particular product must be purchased. 8. Questioning Copy : In this type, the text asks one or more questions to readers not for any answer but only for the sake of response to it. For e.g. Do you want quient holiday in Summer? (Then stay at Hotel ABC at the XYZ hill station). 9. Prestige Copy : In this type, the position and prestige of the customer is emphasised. It creates a favourable atmosphere by changing the position of the customer for the sale of product. Normally luxury items are advertised by such copies. 12 3.3.5 Elements of Copy : A copy normally includes the following elements or parts : 1. Main Headline : Headlines is the starting or the top line of an advertisement, usually printed in bold and of larger type size. The prime function of the headline is to gain immediate attention. 2. Sub-Headlines : At times, some ads have more than one headline. Of these, one is usually the main headline, and the others are sub-headlines. There may be overlines - that precede the main headline and there can underlines - that follow the main headline. The subheadlines are used to support or to complete the meaning of the main headline. 3. Body Copy : It refers to the text of the advertising message. Favourable information about the product and its features is provided in the copy text. It is through effective copy writing the audience can be converted into prospects and the prospects into customers. 4. Captions : Captions do form part of copy text. Captions are small sentences that seem to come out the mouth of the people shown in the ads. Comic strip type of copy make use of captions. For example, you must have come across such captions in the print ads of Tortoise Mosquito Coil. 5. Sloeans : Most ads do make use of slogan. It is a small catchy phrase used to sum up the advertising message. Ideally the slogan should be short, preferably 3 to 6 words. Many a times the slogan says it all. For instance, „The best tobacco money can buy‟ Rothmans. 6. Logo : Logos or signature cuts are special designs of the advertiser or its products which are used to facilitate identification. There is no rule as to where a logo should be placed. However, in most of the cases, the logo is placed at bottom right. A headline is a word or phrase printed in large letters above the advertising message. Headline gives in brief a fair, idea of the contents of the copy. A good headline attracts attention and arouses interest. So that the reader would be induced to read the advertisement. Normally, the headline finds 10010 of the entire copy. Some advertising men believe that 50% to 75% of the performance of an advertisement must be credited to the headline. As people go through a newspaper or a magazine the headline is the only thing that attracts its attention. Thus the headline carriages the heaviest burden of attracting readers to the advertisement. Role of Headline: A headline plays a significant role in advertise by performing the following important functions : 13 a. to attract attention of readers to the ad; b. to attract attention of the target consumers easily and quickly and to persuade them to read the whole of the ad; c. to create curiosity and interest in the ad; d. to make the illustration and the copy more meaningful; e. to introduce a unique selling proposition; f. to sort out useful ads from useless ads; g. to serve as the essence of the whole ad copy. In the words of David Ogilvy, the advertising guru, “The headline is the most important element in most advertising. It is the telegram, which decides for the reader whether to read the copy”. 14 Essentials of a Good Headline : 1. Original : A good headline should be unique and should not be an immitation of any other headline. Originality of headline creates a separate interest in the minds of readers. 2. Concise : A good headline must be brief i.e. it should not have more than 8 to 10 words and should form a maximum of two lines. 3. Specific : The headline should be relevant and appropriate to the copy and illustration. It should convey the advertising message specifically and not vaguely. 4. Provocative : A good headline should be forceful enough to induce the readers to go through the copy and the entire advertisement. Classification of Headlines 1. Benefits Headline : Such headlines indicates the benefits of the product or the service advertised. 2. News Style Headline : It emphasises on the quality, performances, services, advantages of the product list this types, words like „Now‟. „Atleast‟ etc. are added to the headline. 3. Advice Headline : It advices the customers to purchase a product or avail of a service which will be beneficial to them. e.g. “How to bake better cakes”. 4. Challenging Type of Headline : This type of headline challenges the customer about the quality service, price, performance etc. Such headlines emphasis on the superiority of the advertisers product.. 5. Selective Headline : A selective headline is directly appealed to a selected group of customers. It may be specially directed towards children, students, housewives to be used by those selected customers. 6. Situation Headline : It puts the customer in a situation and enquires whether the prefers to be in such a situation. Such headlines supports the illustration. 7. Label Headline : A label headline announces not only about the lable of the product but also the selling points. Such headlines are „introducing type‟ or „warning type‟. 3.3.6 SLOGAN Meaning : 15 A slogan is phrase or sentence used repeatedly by a company or an organisation or an advertiser to aid in the formulation of his message. A slogan is repeatedly used to create certain kind of effect on the minds of people. Slogan is an important part of advertising copy. Like headlines and illustrations, slogans are communication devices which are used to present an idea rapidly and concisely. It may be used throughout an advertising campaign or over a period of many years. Some advertisers develop and use new slogans for each new advertising campaign. A slogan suggests the thing and he advertises. It suggests the use of product again and again or several times so that readers know it by heart. Generally, slogans are used for headlines in advertisements. They are similar in structure to the summarizing headlines and try to summarise some advertising idea just as a headline does. Slogans are mainly used in outdoor advertising. In such outdoor advertising, a slogan becomes headline and the sales message. Slogans are generally developed from incidents in the life of a product; such incident that optimise the use or value of a product when the incident is happily expressed in a pleasing phrase and is used in advertising. The right frame having appeal becomes a good slogan. A slogan sentence used repeatedly by a company of any organisation to create an impression in the minds of the customers. A slogan should suggest the thing it advertises. Slogans be used fur headlines in advertisements because of the limitation on the length of a copy in this medium. The slogan then becomes headline and sales message all in one. Good slogans are not invented monthly by the advertiser. But they develop from incidents in the life of a product of clause of a product etc. Then a incident is happily expressed in a pleasing phrase and used in advertising, it becomes a good slogan e.g. 1. “Any surface that needs ainting needs Asian Paints”. 2. “A filter so true that the taste comes through”. (Bristol Cigarette). Characteristics of a Good Slogan : A good slogan should : 1. Contain a definite sales idea : 2. Be compact in their construction : 3. Be hardly more than 7 words long : An ideal slogan is short, simple, easily remembered and filled with pleasing suggestion of the product. The simplest slogans are the hardest to create. To create a good slogan is to define what you want to say in as many words as necessary. 3.3.7 Logo 16 The word „logo‟ comes from the Greek word „logos‟ meaning „simply the world‟. The noun „logos‟ also appears in the Bible signifying „the word of God‟. Today the world logo is used in marketing and in advertising parlance. From the coveted double „R‟ of Rolis Royce to the immediately recongrusable script that Coca-Cola uses, logos are quickly identified by everyone. Apart from large corporations in every country even the small businessman and one-man enterprises have adopted the corporate logo as a means for creating brand recognition and corporate image. Need for Logo : The need for a logo arises from the need to be different, followed closely by the need to be recognised. Your own given name could be a good example of a logo. In your childhood days, the name is a device to attract your attention and to differentiate you from others. Over time as one grow up, the name takes on newer meanings to yourself and finally becomes a matter of great pride when you dash off a signature on a letter, cheques or some other document. It is your expression (difference, distinction and recognition) saying “this is me”. The company‟s logo is the corporate signature. It reposes in itself the collective pride of the company and is designed with great care to represent the personality of the company and product. Diversified Corporation use a variety of symbols as part of their logos. ITC uses the upwards steeply, which also conveys the sense of growth as well as excellence. Welcome group uses unique folded hands symbols to denote hospitality in the inimitable Indian style. Others too use Indian leitmotifs like LIC which uses two supped hands to denote security is care. Logos today go beyond just being mere symbols. They represent the spirit, the belief, the raison„d‟ ere of companies and brands. Logos the world over have their own logic which is distinguishable, easily recognised and identifiable. 3.3.8 Illustration An illustration is a picture, photograph or drawing that is used in the advertisement to convey visually the idea or message of the advertisement. An illustration, therefore, means a picture used in an advertisement to tell the prospects the message of an advertisement. The presence or absence of a picture in an advertisement can cause marked difference in its effectiveness. With the help of illustration over-emphasis in the subject matter can be avoided and display appeal can be made clear and direct. The inadequacy of language is compensated for the use of an illustration. Essentials of a good illustration : (a) It must support and compliment the copy theme and not detract from it. (b) It must be “faithful reproduction” of the advertised product, if the illustration is that of the product. The use of colour combination in an illustration must be in harmony with fundamental human nature, as it influences the emotional behaviour of individuals. (c) It must be simple enough to convey the ad message clearly, easily and quickly. (d) It must be suggestive in design and construction. Though simple, it must be attractive, appealing and beautiful to look at. 17 (e) It must create a lasting impression on the mind of the reader. (f) It must match with the lifestyle of the target consumer. (g) It must occupy the proper place in the total layout of an ad. (h) It must be capable of reproduction in the various advertising media. (i) It must match with the headline of an ad and convey the same message to the reader. (j) It must be original, unusual, and unique in design and presentation in an ad. (k) Multiple illustrations must be used with a purpose in an orderly manner. (l) Finally, illustrations must occupy and enjoy a dominant place in outdoor ads like posters, or, billboards. Functions of Illustration : 1. Quick Attention : Without illustration an advertisement may look dull and unattractive. Illustration helps consumers to quickly understand the message and motivates them to buy the product. Therefore, illustration must capture the attention of the readers. 2. Demonstrate the Product : Illustration shows the product and its features at a glance. Illustration indicates use of the product and how it works. Demonstration is usually visual and it passes on the message immediately. 3. Creates Right Atmosphere : Illustration creates the right atmosphere by using rainfall, river and forest with the picture of the product. Such illustration has soothing effect on the consumers. 4. Communicate Message : Illustration can carry the advertising message quickly e.g., a bottle of perfume conveys quickly the idea that the perfume is being advertised. 5. Support to Copy : Illustration is an important part of copy. Pictures carry message instantly and support the message given in the copy. 6. Symbolize the Quality : The visuals used in the advertisement indicates power, speed, value, strength, etc. e.g. MRF Tyres „Myscled Man‟, symbolizes strength and quickly of tyres. 7. Dramatise the Advertisement : Illustration dramatizes - story of the product. Illustration supports the headline of the advertisement by pointing out the details of the product. 8. Provides Technical Details : Many consumers buying consumer durable products are interested to know the technical details of the product. Advertisements of computers, washing machines, refrigerators and cell phones gives many technical details of the product through picture of the product. 9. Lasting Impact : Illustration can make lasting impact on the mind of the consumers. Seeing is more 18 convincing than being told. Pictures represent reality. 10. Fights Illiteracy : In a country like our where a large number of people are illiterate, picture of a soap immediately communicates to all what the advertisement is about. Types of Illustrations There are various methods by which an illustration can be prepared. They are : 1. Product Alone : In this type, major portion of illustration is covered by the product for e.g. advertisement that show Colgate tooth paste. The purpose is to give more importance to the product and to create image in the minds of prospects. 2. Product in a Setting : In this type, the product is presented along with a background which is favourable to it i.e. it is presented in an atmosphere wherein it is used. 3. Product in Use or Action : In this type, model may not be shown using the product or the product may be shown in movement for e.g. A Cigarette company does not show merely a cigarette or packet but it shows a person smoking a cigarette of a particular brand. 4. Result of a Products Use : In this type, the after effect of the product may be shown. The attention is to emphasis advantages or benefits more dearly. For e.g. an advertisement of a cupboard of a cupboard will show the space available, various as shelves etc. 5. Dramatisation of a Headline : In this type, the illustration supports the head line i.e. whatever is given in the headlines is shown in action in the illustrations are combined, the effect is that the interest and attention of the reader is attracted. 6. Dramatisation of a Situation : In this type, the illustration presents a situation in which a customer will be if he uses the product or if he does not use a product. 7. Comparison : In this type, the illustration compares two superior products of the same or different type. The basic idea is to relate the product to a concept which is established and familiar to consumer. 8. Contrast : While shows the similarity between two ideas, contrast emphasis the difference between two products of the same type e.g. A modem appliance may be contrasted with an old fashioned model. 9. Magnifying Details : In this type, the important features or minute features are explained in details. It is used to embassies specific advantages. 10. Symbolic Illustrations : This illustration shows a reorganised symbol along with an idea, and the advertiser using a symbol may hope to identify this product with what the symbol stands for in the mind of the reader. 19 3.4 Layout A layout is a sketched plan of a proposed advertisement. It includes the headline, rough illustration and copy which serves as plan for the advertisement. Layout is a working sketched plan showing the size, positions and colour weight values of the different elements that make up the complete advertisement. Layout, thus refers to the total exposure of an advertisement. Layout is important in an advertising plan. It enables the advertiser to visualize how the complete advertisement will look when published. It also gives the printer the location of each unit in the advertisement. Layout is usually prepared to seek approval of the client and to see approval of the client and to see the overall impact. Features of a Good Layout : Following are the main features of good layout: 1. Balance : Balance in layout means achieving a proper distribution of weight through the arrangement of the elements. Balance should be maintained in size, colour shape and density of elements. There are two kinds of balance; formal and informal. Formal balancing means placing of identical or similar items on both the sides of optical centre. Informal balancing means spreading of elements at different places in the advertisement or have large illustration which cover a major portion from the optical centre. 2. Movement : There should be mobility in the advertisement. It provides a visual type of flow and sequence. It is more used in case of items which are mobile in nature e.g. An advertisement of an automobile should have illustration which shows mobility in it. Movement guides the render‟s eye from one element to another and makes sure that he does not miss anything. Movement should start from the left hand top corner of the advertisement to the right hand bottom corner. 3. Gaze Motion : It is the direction of movements of the reader‟s eye. The element of advertisement should be placed in such a manner that there is an easy flow in the movement of eyes of the reader. An illustration showing a person walking in a particular direction on will cause the render to look in that direction. 20 4. Structural Motion : A good layout should. Utilize lines, arrows, signs which will indicate or point out to the important elements of the advertisement. 5. Proportion : It involves appropriate division of the space between the various elements like the headline, illustration, subheads, copy etc. In a headline oriented advertisement, headline should be given major space and in an illustration oriented advertisement, illustration will dominate the space. 6. Whide Space : Whide space is the area not occupied by copy. Effective use of whide space helps to establish a sense of proportion. Whide space helps in reducing a crowdy appearance and brings prestige and luxury in an advertisement. 7. Unity : There should be unity between the elements i.e. there should be proper correlation between the headline and copy or illustration and copy. Unity is also achieved when the elements appears as component part or a single unit. 8. Clarity : It implies that the various elements should be arranged in such a manner that the message is understood clearly. The layout should not be too complicated and tricky but must be easy to read and understand. The type, size, design should be selected for easy reading. 9. Simplicity : It implies that too many elements in an advertisement should be avoided. Those elements. Which can be dropped without destroying the message should be dropped. The simplier the Layout, the clearer the message. 10. Emphasis : It implies that the important elements should be given much emphasis. Emphasis must be brought about by placing the most important feature at or near the optical centre. There should be emphasis on the various selling points and the purpose of advertising depending upon the requirements. Layout should emphasis on education, information and persuasion. 3.4.2 Types of Layout : 1. Standard Layout : It consists of a dominant illustration, headline, body copy and signature, generally in that order. It is highly popular in the field of advertising. 2. Editorial Layout : The advertisement resembles editorial matter or press reports in a publication. Main emphasis is on body copy. Words dominate the advertisement and illustration may be missing or given less importance. 3. Poster Layout : Total stress is on the visual. Copy is very short and illustration provides details e.g., advertisements of soft drinks and chocolates. 4. Cartoon Layout : Cartoon type illustrations and matching copy is used to attract attention e.g., advertisement of Amul butter and Tortoise coil. 5. Comic-Strip Layout : The layout follows the pattern of the comic strip by telling a story with the use of sequence of drawings. 21 6. Picture Caption Layout : Pictures and captions are used to explain different aspects of the product or services e.g., advertisement of automobile or mixer grander. It is suitable to advertise costly consumer durable products. 7. Picture-Cluster Layout : The layout performs the same function as in the case of picture-caption layout. Captions are not used. Cluster of several vertical and horizontal rectangles are used. 3.4.3 Process of Layout : The final layout is the outcome of several stages. The various stages are as follows: 1. Thought Sketch or Thumbnail Sketch : The first stage is the thought sketch or thumbnail sketch. Many-atimes, artist begins with small, rough sketches of possible layouts. These sketches provide a quick and convenient way to get different design ideas. At first the headline and illustration are roughly prepared. The location of logo and body copy is indicated. The artist may prepare several thumbnail sketches before arriving at one that holds promise for further development. 2. Roughs Layout : The second stage is the rough layout, which is a refinement of the thought sketch. Some artists prefer the start with a rough layout, bypassing the thumbnail sketch stage. One or more rough layouts may be prepared. In this case headlines, slogan and illustrations are roughly drawn. 3. Finished Layout : When a final rough layout is selected, then it is transformed into a finished layout. This layout is much more detailed and carefully drawn than the rough layout. The illustration is more or less finalised. Headlines are carefully executed, and body copy is neatly ruled in the lines and blocks of copy of varying lengths to indicate intention and paragraphs. This layout is normally shown to the client for approval. 4. Comprehensive Layout : Sometimes, the artist may prepare a comprehensive layout. It is more complete in respect of art work, headline and slogan. Some times such layout look more beautiful than the final ad. If it is photograph, the artist will paste the photograph on the layout. Comprehensive layouts may be prepared to give the client a clear idea about the final ad. 5. Working or Mechanical Layout : Really speaking these are not actually layouts. These are blueprints for production. The working layouts indicate the exact placement of all the elements in the ad specifies typeface and size and includes relevant instruction for the typographer and engraver. The final ad is prepared from the working layout. 22 23 24 Conversational copy The colloquial copy presents the message in the form of conversation. It uses informal language and conversation takes place in terms of I and ‘You’ with personal reference to reader and the advertiser. For example, two persons converse about the advantages of Insurance or Buying a Particular Book. Suggesting Copy: A suggestive copy tries to--suggest the readers directly or indirectly to pursue them to purchase a particular product. It is useful where the reader is confused about the quality of a product brand and is not in a position to take necessary decision about the purchase of the product or brand; Narrative Copy: Under narrative copy, an appeal is made to prospects with the help of a fictitious story which is narrated to bring home to the public, the advantages of purchasing the product. The story is humorous and carries the message in an appealing manner which will be remembered easily by the public. 3.4.4 Requisites of Effective Advertisement Copy A good advertisement copy should have following features: 1) Attractive: It should be attractive to catch the attention of target audience. If ad-copy is not able to attract attention of target audience then the whole money spent on advertising will go waste. By including pictures, illustrations, slogans, headlines, glamorous faces, attractive borders, coupons, proper color scheme, the advertisement can be made attractive. 2) Interesting: Ad-copy should create interest of target audience to read/view the advertisement. If the ad-copy is not interesting, then the target audience may not go through the whole of ad-copy and may have only casual look on the advertisement and the purpose of advertising to induce action will be defeated. Only interesting 25 advertisements can arouse desire of target audience towards advertiser’s product or service. To make the ad-copy interesting, it should have good layout, lyrics, music, testimonies, claims, appropriate appeal, etc. 3) Retention Value: It means message given in the advertisement should be easy to memorize. If ad-copy is attractive and interesting but not easy to memorize, then the audience may forget the advertisement at the time of making actual purchase and they may purchase the product of competitor. By including slogans, phrases, lyrics, music, retentive value of advertisement can be increased. Almost all ads include brief, musical, easy to remember slogans for increasing retention value of advertisement. 4) Suggestive: Suggestive value means suggesting target audience that how advertiser’s product will help them to solve their problem. It highlights the main features, qualities, strengths of the product. For example, advertisement issued by insurance companies suggests the target audience to secure their future by taking insurance policy. Such adcopies leave the final conclusion with target audience. 5) Educative: The ad-copy should educate the target audience regarding uses of new products, improvements in existing products, place of availability of product, methods of using the product, possible risks/dangers by not using the product, etc. 6) Believable: The ad-copy should be believable, trustworthy. It should not exaggerate the features/qualities of the product otherwise the consumers will feel deceived at the time of actual use of the product. For making the advertisement believable, advertisers can include testimonies, laboratory reports, reports from satisfied customers, endorsement by well known experts, certification received from quality accreditation institutions like ISI, ISO, etc. For example, ads of toothpastes, toothbrush, health drinks, show the favorable remarks given by dentists, dental associations, dieticians, regarding advertiser’s product. These remarks make the advertisement believable. Similarly, some ads give money back guarantee, warranty to make the advertisement more believable. 7) Appropriate Appeal: Effective advertisement should include appropriate advertising appeal to influence the feelings/emotions of target customers. Appeal can be rational, emotional, humorous, etc. Rational appeal includes appeal regarding quality, dependability, durability, efficiency, performance, economy, superiority, or any other special benefit of the product. Emotional appeal includes feeling towards safety, security, affection, happiness, pride, achievement, comfort, status, belongingness, etc. Appropriate advertising appeal should be made depending upon nature of product, nature of customers, their income level, age, educational background, etc. 8) Miscellaneous Characteristics i) Brief: In an effective ad-copy, ad message should be brief and to the point. If ad message is lengthy, it will involve more cost and lose interest of audience. ii) Language: The advertisement should be presented in a language that is understood by majority of target audience. For this, the same advertisement can be dubbed in different regional languages for presenting it in different parts of country. iii) Confirm to Rules: Advertisement copy should confirm to rules, regulations, enactments and standards. It should not use national emblem, national flag in advertisement. The products requiring statutory warning like cigarette should include such warnings in its advertisement copy. Advertisement should not be deceptive and should not use unfair means which are prohibited under Unfair Trade Practices of MRTP Act. iv) Avoid Obscenity: Ad-copy should avoid obscenity, vulgarity, nudity. Research has shown that vulgar advertisements have very short life span and do not create favorable image of the product or advertiser. 26 v) Simple and Easy to Understand: Advertising-appeal, ad-theme should be simple and easy to understand for the average target audience. i) Match with Consumer’s Requirements: Ad-copy is made for target customers, so it must match with target customer’s age, income level, educational level, needs, tastes, preferences, etc. For this purpose before designing ad-copy, required information regarding target-customers, product-features, competition, economic conditions must be collected. ii) Entertaining: In case of TV-ad-copy, it should entertain the audience along with conveying the admessage and persuading the target audience to buy the product. Entertaining-ad can easily hold the attention of audience toward the advertisement and audience does not feel bored even in repeat telecast of such ads. For this, some advertisements use humor-appeal in their advertising. 3.5.1 Copywriting Advertisements Introduction Copywriting is “the process of writing the words that promote a person, business, opinion, or idea. It may be used as plain text, as a radio or television advertisement, or in a variety of other media. The main purpose of writing this marketing copy, or promotional text, is to persuade the listener or reader to act — e.g., to buy a product or subscribe to a certain viewpoint. Alternatively, copy might also be intended to dissuade a reader from a particular belief or action”. Copywriting refers to preparing advertising-copy. Before writing ad-copy, copywriter must have information about the clients’ product/services, target-market, competition, general trends, legal restrictions, advertising objectives, timing when the product is purchased and used etc. Thus,, copywriting is translating the information provided by advertiser to copywriter, into advertisement in such a way that will help the advertiser in achieving his advertising objectives. Copywriting can include body copy, slogans, headlines, direct mail pieces, taglines, jingle lyrics, World Wide Web and Internet content, television or radio commercial scripts, press releases, white papers, and other written material incorporated into advertising media. Copywriters can contribute words and ideas to print ads, mail-order catalogs, billboards, commercials, brochures, postcards, online sites, e-mail, letters and other advertising media. 3.5.2 Copywriting for Print Advertisements Ad-Copy for print media includes headlines, sub-heads, illustrations, slogans, text or body copy, blurbs, boxes or panels, identification mark, closing idea. A print advertisement is created in two pieces — a copy sheet and a lay-out The two categories of copy that print advertising uses are display copy and body copy (or text) Display copy includes all elements that readers see in their initial scanning These elements — headlines sub-heads call outs, taglines and slogans — usually are set in larger type sizes than body copy and are designed to get attention and to stop the viewer s scanning Body copy includes the elements that are designed to be read and absorbed such as the text of the ad message and captions 27 3.5.3 Copywriting for Cyberspace The Web is more interactive than any other mass medium — not only does the viewer initiate the contact, viewers can send an e mail on many if not most websites This makes web advertising more like two-way communication, and that is a major point of difference from other advertising forms So not only is the web copywriter challenged to attract people to the site but also to manage a dialogue based communication experience Web advertisers have to listen and respond as well as target messages to audiences That is a major shift in how web marketing communicators think about advertising In this complicated, fast-changing medium there are not a lot of rules For banners and other formats that look like advertising and seek to attract someone to a company’s website, verbosity is a killer In that situation, no one wants to read a lot of type online However the web is an information medium and users come to it in some cases, for extensive reference information formats look a lot like catalog or even encyclopedias The challenge for Web advertisers, then, is to understand the user’s situation and to design messages that fit the user’s needs That means web copywriters have to be able to write everything from catchy phrases for banners to copy that works like traditional advertisements, or brochures or catalog A basic principle, however, is that good writing is good writing, whether it be for traditional advertising media or for the web 3.5.4 Copywriting for Broadcast Advertisements Broadcast advertising is radio and television commercials Broadcast media reaches a broad audience Radio and television broadcast advertising is known as mass market g since national or even worldwide audiences can be reached Advertising is one of the components of marketing. Marketing promotes services products and ideas through specific channels. Broadcast advertising persuades consumers of the benefits of advertisers’ brands Broadcast advertisements feature sounds and images that are active and dynamic. They move and make sounds, thus challenging the advertising copywriter to make effective use of the communication potential of radio, TV, and digital media Most of the guidelines for broadcast news-writing also apply to commercials. Strategies for Preparing Broadcast Advertising The most basic broadcast ad is a straight-out sales pitch, voiced by an announcer But one can do better than that Add some sound effects, some music Have the announcer introduce a testimonial from a typical consumer, or an endorsement from a celebrity spokesperson Here are some creative strategies for preparing broadcast advertising copy. 1) Testimonials: These are advertising pitches by people who use the product or service Ethically and legally, these should be actual consumers and not paid actors pretending to be consumers. 2) Celebrity Endorsements: 28 It uses famous people to pitch the product, service or cause. The premise is that, because audiences like the celebrities, they therefore will be inclined to trust them when they endorse a product or organization. 3) Demonstrations: It puts the product or service to the test. Particularly useful in television, audiences can see the product in use. Advertisers should clearly indicate if the presentation is actual footage or a re-enactment. 4) Drama: It is perhaps one of the most effective approaches to advertising. In just 30 seconds, creative writers, and producers can create memorable and persuasive vignettes to sell products and services or to promote causes: This format has several categories: i) Problem-Solution: These ads confront the audience with a problem and quickly resolve it, often by a hero figure. ii) Fantasy: These ads rely on make-believe characters or real persons (perhaps historical figures) in unreal situations. iii) Animation: It can be used for children and adults. iv) Humor: It is another effective type of advertising, though it has a shorter run time than other types of advertising because humor quickly becomes old humor, which tends to be ineffective. 5) Reflective or Mood Pieces: It provides another approach to advertising. These can be similar to the dramatic approach, but they rely less on action and more on an emotional mood setter, music, visuals, and imagery. 6) Symbolization: It has shown to be a powerful approach to advertising. In the hands of creative writers and producers, highimpact verbal or non-verbal symbols can carry a concept. 7) Sound: It can also enhance advertising. Jingles and snippets of songs can be powerful ways to connect a product with a brand. 3.5.5 Writing Copy for Radio Ads that are broadcast on either radio or television are usually 15, 30, or 60 seconds in length, although 10- and 15-second spots may be used for brand reminders or station identification. This short length means the 29 commercials must be simple enough for consumers to grasp, yet intriguing enough to prevent viewers from switching the station. That is why creativity is important to create clutter-busting ads that break through the surrounding noise and catch the listener’s attention. Because radio is a transitory medium, the ability of the listener to remember facts (such as the name of the advertiser, addresses, and phone numbers) is difficult. That is why copywriters repeat the key points of brand name and identification information, such as a phone\ number or web address. Radio is pervasive in that it surrounds many of the activities but it is seldom the listener’s center of attention and usually in the background. Radio urges the copywriter to reach into the depths of imagination to create a clutter- busting idea that grabs the listener’s attention. Radio’s special advantage, referred to as theater of the mind, is that the story is visualized in the listener’s imagination. Radio copywriters imagine they are writing a musical play that will be performed before an audience whose eyes are closed. The copywriter has all the theatrical tools of voices, sound effects, and music, but no visuals. How the characters look and where the scene is set come from their listener’s imagination. Radio Advertisement Format There are four basic formats for radio advertisements, and these formats provide the structure within which copy is prepared. These are as follows: 1) Music: Since radio provides audio opportunities, music is often used in radio ads. One use of music is to write a song or jingle in an attempt to communicate in an attention-getting and memorable fashion. Songs and jingles are generally written specifically to accommodate unique brand copy. On occasion, an existing tune can be used, and the copy is fit to its meter and rhythm. This is especially true if the music is being used to capture the attention of a particular target segment. Tunes popular with certain target segments can be licensed for use by advertisers. Advertisements using popular tunes by Garbage and Barry Manilow would presumably attract two very different audiences. Another use of music in radio commercials is to open the ad with a musical score and/or have music playing in the background while the copy is being read. The role of music here is generally to attract attention. This application of music, as well as music used in a song or jingle, is subject to an ongoing debate. 2) Dialogue: The dialogue technique, is commonly used in radio. There are difficulties in making narrative copy work in the short periods of time afforded by the radio medium (typically 15 to 60 seconds). The threat is that dialogue will result in a dull drone of two or more people having a conversation. 3) Announcement: Radio copy delivered by an announcer is similar to narrative copy in print advertising. The announcer reads important product information as it has been prepared by the copywriter. Announcement is the 30 prevalent technique for live radio spots delivered by disc jockeys or news commentators. The live setting leaves little opportunity for much else. If the ad is pre-recorded, sound effects or music may be added to enhance the transmission. 4) Celebrity Announcer: Having a famous person deliver the copy is alleged to increase the attention paid to a radio ad. Most radio ads that use celebrities do not fall into the testimonial category. The celebrity is not expressing his or her satisfaction with the product, but merely acting as an announcer. Some celebrities have distinctive voice qualities or are expert at the emphatic delivery of copy. It is argued that these qualities, as well as listener recognition of the celebrity, increase attention to the ad. Tools of Radio Copywriting Print copywriters use a variety of tools — headlines, body copy, slogans, and so forth — to write their copy. In radio advertising, the tools are the audio elements that the copywriter uses to craft a commercial are as follows: 1) Voice: The most important element in radio advertising are voices, which are heard in jingles, spoken dialogue, and announcements. Most commercials have an announcer, if not as the central voice, atleast at the closing to wrap-up the producer identification. The copywriter understands that we imagine people and what they are like based on their voices. Copywriters specify voices for commercials based on the evocative qualities they contribute to the message. Radio announcer Ken Nordine’s voice was once described as sounding like warm chocolate; Ray Charles was described as having a charcoal voice. Radio advertising relies on conversational style and vernacular language. A good radio copywriter also has an ear for the distinctive patterns of speech for the target audience. Spoken language is different from written language. People talk in short sentences, often in sentence fragments and run-ons People seldom use complex sentences in speech. People use contractions that would drive an English teacher crazy. Slang can be hard to handle and sound phony, but copy that picks-up the nuances of people’s speech sounds natural. 2) Music: Similar to movie scriptwriters, radio copywriters have a sense of the imagery of music and the role it plays in creating dramatic effects. Music can be used behind the dialogue to create mood and establish the setting. Any mood, from that of a circus to that of a candle-lit dinner, can be conveyed through music. Advertisers can have a piece of music composed for a commercial or can borrow it from a previously recorded song. Numerous music libraries sell stock music that is not copyrighted. The primary use of music is in support of jingles, which are commercials in song. Radio copywriters understand the interplay of catchy phrases and “hummable” music that creates little songs that stick in our minds. Jingle houses are companies that specialize in writing and producing commercial music, catchy songs about a product that carry the theme and product identification. A custom-made jingle — one that is created for a single advertiser — can cost $10,000 or more. In contrast, many jingle houses create “syndicated” jingles made-up of a piece of music that can be applied to different lyrics and sold to several different advertisers in different markets around the country for s little as $1,000 or $2,000. 31 3)Sound Effects: The sound of seagulls, automobile horns honking, and the cheers of fans at a stadium all create images in our minds and cue the setting, as well as the action. Sound effects are described in a radio script, and are important in making a commercial attention-getting and memorable. Sound effects can be original, but more often they are purchased from sound effect libraries. 3.5.6 Writing Copy for Television T.V. is a unique and powerful advertising media. It includes the elements of sight, sound and motion which are combined to create an advertising copy. This ad-copy includes movements, facial expressions, demonstration of product, sound, etc. Thus, it has both audio and visual effects. Music is also included in such ad-copy to make it attractive, entertaining, and easy to remember. Nowadays, importance of T.V. ad-copy has increased because of rapid growth in viewership of television. There are various T.V. channels which run round the clock. T.V. is now the most popular media of advertising. With the increase in level of competition among T.V. channels, the charges for giving advertisement through T.V. have come down; it has promoted T.V. advertising. Further, with the growth in cable network, T.V. advertisements are now within the reach of small advertisers. Preparing T.V.-ad-copy is a very technical job and it requires the services of professionals like scriptwriters, directors, musicians, singers, models, choreographers, cameramen, graphic designers, dress designers, etc. Shooting of T.V. ad-copy is very similar to shooting of film. Usually, the task of preparing T.V. ad-copy is assigned to advertising agency. Television Advertisement Format Because of the broad creative capability of the television medium, there are several alternative formats for a television ad: demonstration, problem and solution, music and song, spokesperson, dialogue, vignette, and narrative. The formats provide the structure within which television copy is prepared. Which is as follows: 1) Problem and Solution: In this format, a brand is introduced as the savior in a difficult situation. This format often takes shape as a sliceof-life message, in which a consumer solves a problem with the advertised brand. Dishwashing liquids, drain openers, and numerous other household products are commonly promoted with this technique. A variation on the basic format is to promote a brand on the basis of problem prevention. A variety of auto maintenance items and even insurance products have used this approach. 2) Music and Song: Many television commercials use music and singing as a creative technique. The various beverage industries (soft drinks, beer, and wine) frequently use this format to create the desired mood for their brands. Additionally, the growth of image advertising has resulted in many ads that show a product in action accompanied by music and only visual overlays of the copy. This format for television advertising tends to restrict the amount of copy and presents the same difficulties for copywriting as the use of music and song in radio copywriting. 3) Spokesperson: 32 The delivery of a message by a spokesperson can place a heavy emphasis on the copy. The copy is given precedence over the visual and is supported by the visual, rather than vice versa. Expert, average-person, and celebrity testimonials fall into this formatting alternative. An example of the effective use of an expert spokesperson is Tiger Woods for Titleist. 4) Dialogue: As in a radio commercial, a television ad may feature a dialogue between two or more people. Dialogue-format ads pressure a copywriter to compose dialogue that is believable and keeps the ad moving forward. Most sliceof-life ads, in which a husband and wife or friends are depicted using a brand employ a dialogue format. 5) Narrative: A narrative is similar to a vignette but is not part of a series of related ads. Narrative is a distinct format in that it tells a story, but the mood of the ad is highly personal, emotional, and involving. A narrative ad often focuses on storytelling and only indirectly touches on the benefits of the brand. Many of the “heart-sell” ads by McDonald’s, Kodak, and Hallmark use the narrative technique to great effect. 3.5.7 Characteristics of Television Copy 1) Action: When people watch television they are watching a walking, talking, moving world that gives the illusion of being three-dimensional. Good television advertising uses the effect of action and motion to attract attention and sustain interest. Torture tests, steps, and procedures are all actions that are easier to present on T.V. than in print. 2) Demonstration: Seeing believes – Believability and credibility the essence of persuasion – are high because people believe what they see with out own eyes. If people have a strong sales message that lends itself to demonstration, such as “how-to” messages, then television is the ideal medium for that message. 3) Storytelling: Most of the programming on television is narrative so commercials use storytelling to take advantage of the medium’s strengths. T.V. is the society’s master storyteller because of its ability to present a plot and the action that leads to a conclusion in which the product plays a major role. T.V. can dramatize the situation in which a product is used and the type of people using it. Stories can be riveting if they are well told, but they must be imaginative to hold their own against the programming that surrounds them. 4) Emotion: The ability to touch the feelings of the viewer makes television commercials entertaining, diverting, amusing, and absorbing. Real-life situation with all their humor, anger, fear, pride, jealousy, and love come alive on the 33 screen. Humor, in particular, works well on television. Emotional appeals are found in natural situations that everyone can identify with. Hallmark has produced some tear-jerking commercials about the times of our lives that people remember by the cards they receive and save. Kodak and Polaroid have used a similar strategy for precious moments that are remembered in photographs. 3.6.1 DESIGN & LAYOUT OF ADVERTISEMENT Design of advertisements The word design means arrangement of the parts in one sense. The other meaning is the plan behind the arrangement providing a desired structure. It also means a human activity concerned with organizing or arranging. Design is “the structure itself and the plan behind that structure” for the aesthetic and stylistic aspects of an advertisement. Design represents the effort on the part of creative to physically arrange all the components of an advertisement in such a way that order and beauty are achieved – order in the sense that the illustration, headline, body copy, and special features of the ad are easy to read, view and listen, beauty in the sense that the ad is pleasing. Layout of advertisements A complete and finalized advertisement is the combination of a number of units such as headline, sub-headlines, text-matter, slogan, identification mark, the white space, decorations and the border including the illustration. Each element is so arranged or blended that the desired result is brought about. The layout, then, is a visual expression of the ideas of the creator of an advertisement. The visual composition of an advertisement is the layout. It is the working drawing or the blue-print for an advertisement. It is pencil sketched plan showing the sizes, positions and color weight values of the different units that make up a complete advertisement. A layout is the format in which the various elements of the advertisement are combined. Layout is a plan, arrangement, overall structure, blue print of advertising copy It arranges headlines sub headlines slogans illustrations, identification marks, boxes text body blurbs closing idea etc in a systematic manner Its main purpose is to secure higher attention by presentation of headlines, slogans, illustrations in most effective manner Attractive layout can help the advertisement to come out from media clutter (increased number of ads in media) and gain attention of readers/viewers. According to Otto Kleeper, ‘Layout means two things in one sense it means the total appearance of the advertisement — its design and the composition of its elements, in another sense it means physical rendering of the design for the advertisement — its blueprint for production purposes. According to Sandage and Fryburger, The plan of an advertisement detailing the arrangement of various parts and relative spatial importance of each is referred to as layout”. 34 The visual layout should have immediate impact on a potential applicant. The size and form of the advertisement may influence the extent of the reaction which it evokes. The layout serves several purposes 1) It helps both the agency and the client to develop and evaluate, in advance, how the ad will look and feel It gives the client (usually not an artist) a tangible item to correct change comment on and approve. 2) The layout helps the creative team to develop the ad’s psychological elements the non-verbal and symbolic components. Principles of Layout The principles of layout can be represented in form of 5C’s which are as follows: 1) Concentration: Attention getting ability is proportional to the size of the largest single element not to the total size of the ad A small space unit with a single large element — a word, a headline, an illustration — will get more attention than a unit the same size or even larger with smaller elements Reducing the number of elements by simplifying combining, or eliminating some of them will always result in a layout that is more inviting to view and usually more readable and more successful. 2) Convention: Pre existing associations with design elements will influence attitudes towards new creative efforts The principle in fine art called convention refers to the perceiver’s past experience and associations as an influence on how new perceptions are evaluated. For example, imagine for a moment that an artist has taken a canvas and painted the bottom half green and the top half blue. Most viewers, when asked to guess what is being portrayed would call it a landscape, with the green bottom representing grass and the blue top the sky. Add some white blobs in the top area and, depending on their size, they will be perceived as clouds or stars. A yellow blob might be seen as a sun or moon, depending on the total coloring. What the abstractions represent is influenced by what the colors or shapes conventionally represent in this context. Perceptions of quality, cheapness, bargain price, and elegance are all influenced by past experiences. 3) Convection: Once it is managed to attract the right readers to the message through the concept, copy and layout treatment, the job that remains is to keep them there long enough to get enough copy read to make the sale. This is a matter of flow or convection, the art of designing the message in a manner that carries the reader along in a logical fashion from one element to the other, right to the coupon. Other Principles 1) Principle of Balance: 35 Balance in advertisement is related with weight distribution. It involves the location of sizes, shapes and tones in relation to the optic centre Balance is the relationship that exists between the right and the left hand sides of an ad It is the artistic combination of various sizes and shapes that make up the advertisement. Balance m layout is achieved by combining the elements in terms of size and weight. 2) Principle of Rhythm: The principle of rhythm governs the movement of eyes from one part of the design to another Movement provides dynamism Some people call it as the principle of ‘movement’ or ‘gaze motion’ or ‘sequence’. Here, the movement is the principle of design that carries the reader’s eyes from element to element in the sequence desired for effective communication of the advertising message. Eye direction is achieved by mechanical devices like pointing fingers, dangling leg, lines,arrows, dotted line or special shading to push the attention from one unit to another. 3) Principle of Emphasis: The principle of emphasis is also known as the principle of contrast. This principle believes in emphasizing the important element of an advertisement to make it outstanding and enchanting. In an advertisement, all the elements are important but all are not of equal importance It is not a question of over or under emphasizing, but emphasizing as per its position and the contribution. 4) Principle of Proportion: They speak of the relationship of the elements of the advertisement to each other and to the background in which they appear Proportion implies the ratio of length to width. It has bearing on size and shape of the masses given in an ad. 5) Principle of Unity: Unity means union of all elements in the layout to produce the effects of homogeneous whole where each part supports and reinforces another. Unity is oneness providing cohesiveness to the advertisement The principle of unity or harmony speaks of making the advertisement to appear as a unified single whole rather than a series of disconnected parts. A united advertisement creates an impression of completeness or totality or the entirety. 6) Principle of Simplicity: Simplicity is indispensable in layout to achieve clarity. Design simplicity makes possible easier comprehension. Lack of simplicity in design would complicate and confuse the reader as it hinders the flow of the message. Complicated layout may be misunderstood or not at all understood by the reader. Simplicity and logical sequence promote clarity in comprehending the layout Functions of Layout: 36 The Main functions of layout are: 1) Assembling Different Parts: The main function of layout is to assemble and arrange the different parts or elements of an advertisement illustrations, headline, sub-headlines, slogans, body text and the identification mark, etc., and boarder and other graphic materials – into unified presentation of the sales message. 2) Opportunity of Modification: The layout offers an opportunity to the creative teams, agency management and the advertiser to suggest modification before its final approval and actual construction and production begins. 3) Specification for Costs: The layout provides specification for estimating costs, and it is a guide for engravers, typographers, and other craft workers to follow in producing the advertisement. 4) Brings Together Copy Writer and Art Director: Every advertisement is the outcome of the contributions of specialists. The services of creative persons are required like visualizers or idea-men, copy writers, art directors artists photographers, type-setters, block-makers and the printer. 5) Guide to the Copy Specialists: Layout serves as a reliable guide to the specialists such as type-setters, engravers, printers and other craftsmen. These are the persons who actually prepare the advertisement for use in print. 3.6.2 Components of Advertisement Layout 1) Background: This term is self-explanatory and does not require a detailed definition, its application being apparent in figure 3.3. In this example, the background has provided the theme of the layout, the other layout components or units being accommodated in a type mortice. In this example, too, the background has been broken; and here it should be pointed out that this simple method of employing a background is usually the most economical from an engraving point of view. The alternative method of leaving the background intact and of superimposing the other units upon it calls for more detailed art supervision, and often for more than one block from the engraver, before the layout can be completed. Border: 37 For separating the ad from the surrounding type a border is used. Borders should complement the look that are being developing with the ad and should never be the most prominent part of the ad. Straightforward and simple is best. Caption: This word is often used to describe the sub-tide. Both the editorial and advertisement columns of any daily newspaper carry captions much more freely, by the newspaper’s make-up man than by the advertiser’s layout man. One reason for this that the advertisement illustration must, where possible, tell its story quickly, dearly, and decisively, another is that the caption is often difficult to locate if it is to be read Coupon: The coupon is that portion of the advertisement which is intended for the convenience of the prospective customer m communicating with the advertiser The coupon is such a valuable unit that it deserves closest attention It must first contain the name and full postal address of the firm to which it is to be sent, unless this information is clearly given in the body of the advertisement The offer or the request must then follow, briefly and concisely, the prospective customer’s obligation by his signature being clearly set out Faint or dotted Iines for the prospective customer’s name and address are the next logical steps — these being spaced to allow easy use without cramping Body Copy: Body copy develops and expands on the benefits offered in the headline. The power of well written advertising copy is proven by the billions of dollars of sales directly resulting from great newspaper advertising Creativity If the ad is developed with simplicity, focal Point and sequence m mind, then it will be appealing to the eye. However, some ads are more visually appealing than others. The difference is m creativity Remember, creativity rarely occurs as a stroke of genius, it usually comes through persistent attempts and hard work. Decoration: The earliest conception of an advertisement decoration appears to have found its most popular expression in the type founder’s “ornament”. But type ornaments are not the most important or the most useful decorations at the layout man’s disposal. Of greater interest are those decorations drawn especially to emphasize or supplement the message of the advertisement as a whole. Heading: 38 The heading, or headline, may be defined as the tide of the advertisement. “Title” would, in fact, be a more appropriate term, for it is not a hard and fast rule that the heading should appear at the “head” of the advertisement. This position of eminence is often given to all illustration or some other component of the layout. In dealing with the technique of the heading, there is a considerable difference of opinion. In contradiction of the rule that the heading should be short, one comes across almost daily evidence pointing to the undoubted success of the four, five and even six-deck heading; and it soon becomes apparent that the size of the heading must depend upon the importance of what it, has to say, and on the support afforded to it by the other units of the layout. Illustration: Broadly speaking, any unit of a pictorial nature may be classified as an illustration; but in a study of the layout, it is easier to regard the dominating picture as the illustration and, should other pictures be used, to think of them as supports. The illustration, therefore, should be regarded as that unit of the layout which pictures the basic theme of the advertisement, either directly or by analogy. Mascot: The mascot is variously known as the Trade Character, or Trade Figure. It may be defined as art illustration of either a real or an imaginary figure or personality introduced into the advertisement to personalize the sales message or the name of the product or service. Signature: The signature is often a logotype. Though often used synonymously with logo, signature means the name of the advertiser in any form, and unlike the logo, may change form from one ad to the next. Remember not to let the signature overpower other important aspects. Name Plate or Company Logo: The name plate, or name block, is the “signature” of the advertisement. The term name plate is preferred because it does not restrict to the study of the advertising “signatures” on the blocks, in the engraver’s sense of that term. The logo adds strength to the entire business portfolio/products under the company’s umbrella Logo communicates for Corporate Policy and Brand Image, as illustrated by taking a few examples of successful logos. Price: When the price of the commodity is featured in a face larger or heavier than the body type, it is advisable to consider it as a separate and distinct unit of the layout. With the exception of bargain sale announcements, price is seldom the dominating feature in the layout. When the price is displayed boldly, the selling message of the 39 display is usually identified with the cheapness of the commodity. Product: Product, in the layout sense, refers to the representation of the product offered for sale. The product may be featured in startling isolation; it may be thrown up by a heavy or futuristic background, or by decorations; while a number of the products may be arranged and photographed so as to form an artistic or even a beautiful composite. A very popular practice is to show the product in use. Slogan: A slogan may be defined as a “tabloid” sales argument. In outdoor advertising, it is, of course, of immense value, for the wording on a poster must be brief and direct. In press advertisements, too, it enjoys a popular vogue because it establishes some sort of continuity between the two forms of advertising. The position of the slogan in the layout must be determined by the importance of its relation to the advertiser’s message. One Second Test: The one second test is a way of determining whether a reader can tell at a glance what the advertiser is selling. It simply means that reader should be able to look at a layout for a second, then close his eyes and recall its sales message. If he did not-get the message, we need to improve the layout. Another factor that affects eye appeal is concentration. This means grouping the selling points into display headings and text masses. Space: Space may be used to describe the entire space in a publication bought by the advertiser or the white space remaining when the layout has been completed. In the latter sense — as a unit of layout — it comes in for detailed attention in the page which follows. Sub-Heading: A sub-heading is a secondary heading. It may be employed either to supplement and support the heading or to “pick out” the various selling points contained in the text. For the use of sub-headings, two guiding rules may be laid down: Use them sparingly, and Use them to pick out the selling points in the text only when the text is too “heavy” to invite attention otherwise. Text: The “text” or the body of the advertisement is a term loosely applied to the general reading matter or copy. We may be permitted to think of the text as the panel or panels of type matter the advertisement may contain. The text should be set in panels neither too wide nor too narrow. Again, lower case letters are easier to read than capital letters; Leads (or space between lines) may also be employed for legibility. A type panel, leaded with 40 discrimination, is more inviting than the same panel “set solid.” Trade Mark: The trade mark is the word or design by which the commodity is defined. When the trade mark has been registered, there are very good reasons for its inclusion in the layout. Its position is entirely fluid. It may form the background or be embodied in the border; it may dominate the heading or the name plate. Color: Try to achieve contrast in layout by effective use of different size type, bold type and color. Try to fit color into the advertising budget. Introducing color increases impact. 3.7.1 ADVERTISEMENT PRODUCTION Introduction to Art Direction and Production Art direction refers to the decision taken about visuals because words alone are not enough to communicate well. Visual refers to any kind of art. In print advertising, the art usually consists of a photograph, a computergenerated image, or a hand-drawn illustration. In video, the art element may be live-action film, still photos, or animation. Production refers to the process of developing the advertisement in the desired art direction so that it could appeal to the target market. The terms art direction and production go side by side simultaneously. Various artists may create or develop specific parts of an art piece or scene; but a sole art director unifies the vision. In particular, the art director is in charge of the overall visual appearance and how it communicates visually, stimulates moods, contrasts features, and psychologically appeals to a target audience. The art director makes decisions about visual elements used, what artistic style to use, and when to use motion. One of the most difficult problems that art directors face is to translate desired moods, messages, concepts, and underdeveloped ideas into imagery. During the brainstorming process, art directors, coworkers, and clients are engaged in imagining what the finished piece or scene might look like. At times, an art director is ultimately responsible for solidifying the vision of the collective imagination while resolving conflicting agendas and inconsistencies between the various individual inputs. Despite the title, an advertising art director is not. necessarily the head of an art department. In modem advertising practice, an art director typically works in tandem with a copywriter. The team usually works together to devise an overall concept (also known as the “creative” or “big idea”) for the ad, commercial, mailer, brochure, or other advertisement. The copywriter is responsible for the textual content, the art director for the visual aspects. But the art director may come up with the headline or other copy, and the copywriter may suggest a visual or the aesthetic approach. Each person usually welcomes suggestions and constructive criticism from the 41 other. ideally, the words and visual should not parrot each other; each should enhance or enlarge the other’s meaning and effect. Art direction and production is learning all about creating effective print advertising (destined for magazines, newspaper, and direct- marketing promotions. The nature of the illustration, design and layout components of print advertising are considered in this) and creating exciting broadcast advertising (it includes people and techniques involved in creating television and radio ads). Art Direction and Production in Print Advertising Art direction in. print advertising is primarily concerned with the three main elements of print advertisement which are illustration, design and layout. When confronted with a print ad, most prospects spot the picture first, then read the headline, and then peruse the body copy, in that order. Since the visual carries so much responsibility for an ad’s success, it should be designed with several goals in mind. Some are as follows: 1. Capture the reader’s attention, 2. Clarify claims made by the copy, 3. Identify the subject of the ad, 4. Show the product actually being used, 5. Qualify readers by stopping those who are legitimate prospects, 6. Help to convince the reader of the truth of copy claims, 7. Arouse the reader’s interest in the headline, 8. Emphasize the product’s unique features, 9. Create a favorable impression of the product or advertiser, and 10. Provide continuity for the campaign by using a unified visual technique in each ad. All three elements together make a print advertisement as a big eye catcher stimulus An advertiser must appreciate the technical aspect of coordinating the above visual elements in an ad with the mechanics of the layout and ultimately with the procedure of print production. The production process in print advertising represents the technical and mechanical activities that transform a creative concept and rough layout into a finished print advertisement. The agency’s print production group performs the transformation process from the original creative concept to the client’s printed communication. This may include magazines, newspapers, outdoor and transit, point-of-purchase, collateral brochures and direct 42 response This group must have a working knowledge of all these production processes, as well as publication mechanical specifications, budgetary considerations, and quality requirements. Print production people and not merely technical people who are knowledgeable. They are also graphic arts consultants production planners, and production liaison people. They function both internally, with the creative, traffic, media, and account management areas, and externally, with graphic arts vendors and the print media. The size of a print production group is related to the billing size of the agency A very small agency may employ a single print production expert In a very large agency, the print production staff, headed by a print production manager, may consist of a considerable number of people with very specialized expertise. Print Production Process In most cases, the printing process used depends on the medium in which the ad is running, not on the advertiser or the agency However, m some areas, such as sales promotion ad inserts, direct mail, and point-of sale, the advertiser must make the final decision regarding print production To deal effectively with printers, the advertiser must have some knowledge of the basic production techniques and which one is the most appropriate for the job at hand. If the printing process is not predetermined, the first step in production is to decide which process is most suitable. There are three major printing processes, which are as follows: 1) Letterpress printing (from a raised surface), Offset lithography (from a flat surface), Rotogravure (from an etched surface). Each of these printing processes has certain advantages and disadvantages, and one process may be more efficient than another for a particular job. Once the printing process has been established, the production process has been dictated, for all production work depends on the type of printing used. As it is indicated, the pre-press operation is in transition from traditional to digital operations. Once the ad, collateral advertising, or promotion has been created and converted to a printing plate, the printing process is very similar to what it has been for many decades. The presses are more efficient now than ever before, but the printing concept is not new: 1) Letterpress Printing: It is not as popular as it once was in printing publications; however, advertisers have many uses for this printing process, and one should know the basics. In its simplest form, think of the concept of letterpress as follows — If 43 people have ever used a rubber ink stamp (with name, address, etc.), have applied the principle of letterpress printing. People press the rubber stamp against an ink pad. Then, as the stamp is pressed against paper, the ink is transferred from the stamp to the paper, and the message is reproduced. In letterpress printing, the area to be printed is raised and inked. The inked plate is pressed against the paper and the result is a printed impression. The artwork, photographs, type, and so forth must be converted to a photoengraving (a process of making the plate a raised surface) before printing can occur. The advertiser or agency must supply the photoengraving or duplicates of such plates to the newspaper, magazine, or letterpress printer. In general, this process does not reproduce photos as well as offset or gravure. Each of the printing processes has advantages and disadvantages that the advertising person needs to learn over time. There are several types of letterpress presses. The “job press” platen can print many forms, but it can also die cut (cut shapes in paper), emboss (raise images on paper), perforate, and score (which creases so thicker paper can be folded). 2) Offset Lithography: In its basic description, offset lithography is a photochemical process based on the principle that grease and water will not mix. In theory, offset can print anything that can be photographed. in reality, although there are, some things that will not print very well by offset, it is the preferred process for most jobs, accounting for 80 to 90 per cent of all printing jobs. Offset lithography is a planographic (flat-surface) process using a thin, flat aluminum plate that is wrapped around a cylinder on a rotary press. The plate is coated with a continuous flow of liquid solution from dampening rollers that repel ink. The inked plate comes in contact with a rubber blanket on another cylinder. The inked impression goes from the plate to the rubber blanket. The inked blanket then transfers or offsets the inked image to the paper, which is on a delivery cylinder. The plate does not come in direct contact with the paper Because offset is a photographic process, it is very efficient and is the most popular printing process in this country. It is used to reproduce books, catalogs, periodicals, direct-mail pieces, outdoor and transit posters, pointof-sale, and most newspapers. Advertisers or their agencies must supply the artwork and electronic mechanicals or films from which offset plates can be made. 3) Rotogravure: The image in rotogravure printing is etched below the surface of the copper printing plate — the direct opposite from letterpress printing — creating tiny ink wells (tiny depressed printing areas made by means of a screen). The gravure plate is inked on the press and wiped so that only the tiny ink wells contain ink. The plate is then pressed against the paper, causing suction that pulls the ink out of the wells and onto the paper 44 Gravure is used to print all or parts of many publications, including national and local Sunday newspaper supplements, mail-order catalogs, packaging, newspaper inserts, and large run magazines, e.g., National Geographic. The gravure plate is capable of printing millions of copies very efficiently; however, it is not economical for short- run printing. Rotogravure becomes competitive with offset when printing exceeds 1,00,000 copies. When printing exceeds a million copies, gravure tends to be more efficient than offset. Rotogravure prints excellent color quality on relatively inexpensive paper, but the preparatory costs is comparatively high, and it is expensive to make major corrections on the press. Screen Printing: Another printing process, screen printing, which is based on a different principle than letterpress, offset, and rotogravure, is especially good for short-runs. This simple process uses a stencil. The stencil of a design (art, type, photograph) can be manually or photographically produced and then placed over a textile (usually silk) or metallic-mesh screen (it actually looks like a window screen). Ink or paint is spread over the stencil and, by means of a squeegee, is pushed through the stencil and screen onto the paper (or other surface) Screen printing is economical, especially for work in broad, flat colors, as in car cards, posters, and point-of-sale displays. It can be done n almost any surface — wallpaper, bricks, bottles, T-shirts, and so on. Basically, screen printing is a slow, short-run process (from one copy to 100 or 1,000 or so copies) although sophisticated presses can print about 6,000 impressions per hour and in some cases accommodate billboard-sized applications. This expanding printing process is becoming more useful to advertisers. Typography in Print Production Type has always been an important part of ad design. It creates moods, enhances or retards readability, and gives the communication an image. Type inspires passion. Hermann Zapt’s favorite typeface is Optima. George Bernard Shaw insisted all his works be set in Caslon. Type is powerful. It is one of the most important design tools. Type creates communication that is friendly and inviting. It keenly focuses attention. It organizes the complex and creates a mood It is now more important than ever before for advertising people to understand how to use type because so much of it is being created in house on the agency or client computer Before the computer explosion, art directors would use specialists — typesetters or typographers — for type Most agree that few art directors or designers have as good an understanding of type use as typesetters or typographers Getting type up on the screen does not mean that it is typeset effectively. The art of using type effectively is called typography It entails a number of issues — choosing the typeface and size of type, deciding on the amount of space between letters, words, and lines; determining hyphenation use; and preparing type specifications for all the ad copy. The Howard Merrell & Partners’ ad for the Museum of the Mountain Man uses type that reflects the mood of the product. The treatment of the body copy also reflects the mood of the design. 45 Not only do Art Directors carefully choose colors, they also design the ad’s typography — the appearance of the ad’s printed matter in terms of the style and size of type-faces. In most cases, good use of type does not call attention to itself because its primary role is functional — to convey the words of the message Type, however, also has an aesthetic role and the type selection can, in a subtle or not so subtle way contribute to the impact and mood of the message. Print ad designers choose from among thousands of typefaces to find the right one for the ad’s message Designers are very familiar with type classifications, but it is also important for managers and other people on the creative team to have some working knowledge of typography in order to understand talking what designers are taking about and to critique the printed material and make suggestions. Categories of Type Typefaces have distinct personalities, and each can communicate a different mood and image. These are as follows: 1) Families and Fonts: The basic set of letters in a particular typeface is known as the font. A font contains the alphabet for one typeface, such as Times Roman, plus the numerals and punctuation that go with that typeface. Each font represents one size of that alphabet style. There are two major typeface families — serif and sans serif. Serif means that the end of each stroke of a letter has a little flourish. A sans serif typeface is one that is missing this detail and the ends of the stroke tend to be more block like. Serif letters are most often used for formal effects — invitations, e.g., — and when there is a lot of copy to be read; most books, e.g., are basically set in serif faces (as is this one). Sans serif faces are used for copy that is consulted, rather than read — think about a phone book, or type in a diagram, because the look is “clean” — or as purposeful contrast to the serif type. Designers must work with the following aspects of typeface selection: i) Uppercase: It refers to the use of a capital letter, as in the capital U in the word, Uppercase. ii) Lowercase: It means small letters used without capitals. iii) All Caps: It is a design in which every letter in a word is a capital letter. iv) U&lc (upper- and lowercase): It is a design in which the first letter of every important word is capitalized and the others are lowercase (prepositions and conjunctions are usually lowercase). v) Weight, Posture, and Width: Weight, posture, and width of a typeface can vary using such elements such as light, bold (weight), italic (posture), expanded, and condensed (width). 2) Justification: 46 How the lines align at the end is another design choice. With justified type, the ends align on both the right and left sides of the column of type (they are flush right and flush left). With unjustified type, also called ragged right, the line endings on the right side of the column fall where they will. The opposite, which is rarely used, is ragged left (more often known as flush right where the lines are aligned on the right but the beginnings of the lines vary. A final option is to center the type. 3) Type Measurement: There is several measurement systems used in graphic design. The smallest system of measurement units is called points, which designers use to indicate the size of typefaces. There are 72 points in an inch. Display copy is usually 14 points or larger. Body copy in newspaper and magazine ads is usually 12 points or smaller. (The body copy of this text is 12 point Times.) Designers also measure the width and length of columns in picas. The pica is a bigger unit of measurement with 6 picas in an inch and 12 points in a pica. So 12-point type is exactly 1 pica high, or one-sixth of an inch. The column width used for the captions is 10 picas. The text of the book is set on a 30-pica line length. 4) Legibility: The legibility of type refers to how easy it is to perceive the letters. Research has discovered a number of typographic practices that can hinder the reading process. For example, reverse type, white letters reversed out of a dark surrounding area, is hard to read because people are accustomed to reading type as black or dark shapes on a white or light background. Reverse works best for headlines and is more problematic for body copy. The same thing is true for all capitals People identify words by their distinctive shapes, and when they are set in all caps, and then the word’s distinctive shape is obscured It is less of a problem for headlines but slows-down the reading of body copy Surprinting, which means running the type over another image, is difficult to read because the letters can be confused with the background pattern. Art Direction and Production in Radio Advertising Although there are certain broad similarities producing radio commercials is far simpler and less costly than producing T V commercials First, the agency or advertiser appoints a radio producer, who converts the script into a recording ready to go on the air After preparing the cost estimate and getting budget approval, the producer selects a recording studio and a casting director, if necessary If music is called for, the producer calls a music “house” that usually composes, arranges, and takes all steps necessary to get the finished music If the music is not a big-budget item, the producer may call for “stock” music (pre-recorded and used on a rental basis). After the cast has been selected, it rehearses in a recording studio which can be hired by the hour However, because most commercials are made in short “takes” that are later joined in the editing a formal rehearsal is usually unnecessary When the producer feels the cast is ready, the commercial is acted out and recorded on tape Music and sound are taped separately and then mixed with the vocal tape by the sound-recording studio In fact, by double and triple-tracking music and singers’ voices modem recording equipment can build small sounds into big ones However, union rules require that musicians and singers be paid extra fees when their music is 47 mechanically added to their original recording After the last mix the master tape of the commercial is prepared When final approval has been obtained, duplicates are made for release to the list of stations. Things to Remember during Production Often the account executive or client will be at the recording session, however, Phil Cuttino has a bias against having either of them at a recording session. He feels their presence creates too many problems, which can inhibit great production Among these are the talent and engineer tighten up and everyone is concerned about time instead of producing an effective spot He suggests that you use a phone patch from the studio to play the spot for the account executive first Then, with his or her blessing, call the client for the final approval The engineer and talent should remain in the studio until the final approval is achieved Some other production thoughts: 1) Call Ahead: Have the studio pull the music and sound effects selections 2) Studio: Find a studio that has several talented engineers who will quickly learn your style Make sure the studio has a good SFX and music library and the latest technology. 3) Brain Power: During production, use everyone’s brain to make the spot better Ask for input from your engineer and voice talent Remember they probably have been involved in more spots in a week than you have in months. 4) Take your Time: Do not push the talent or engineer Lead them to what you want. 5) Keep-Up with the Technology: New technology will always broaden your creative envelope. 6) Casting: Acting professionals usually have the best and most believable voices because they are visualizing the scene. This is particularly true with dialogue or group scenes. Go to plays often to find new talent Do not look at the people who are auditioning for a part in the spot They will try to sell you with facial expression, body language, and hand motions —all worthless on radio. At first, allow talent to give you their own interpretation of the scene. You may be inspired by their rendition. Steps in Radio Production We may summarize the steps in producing a commercial as follows: 1) An agency or advertiser appoints a producer 2) The producer prepares Cost estimates 3) The producer selects a recording studio. 4) With the aid of the casting director, if one is needed, the producer casts the commercial. Art Direction and Production in Television Advertising 48 Like other media, television first struggled to find its best form, but soon did. In many ways, television was simply made for advertising. It is. everywhere, serving as background to much of daily life Television is about moving visuals Sometimes, it s just about leaving impressions, or setting moods, or telling stories. Many believe that the best television ads work just as well with sound turns off, that the best television tells its story visually Of course what film critics say about good art directors The complexity of art direction and production for television is unrivaled and thus demands the inputs of a variety of functional specialists From the ad agency come familiar players such as the art director, copywriter, and account executive. During the brainstorming process, both copywriters and Art Directors are engaged in visualization, which means they are imagining what the finished ad might look like. Then there are a host of individuals who have special skills in various aspects of production for this medium. These include directors, producers, production managers, and camera crews. Editors will also be needed to bring all the raw material together into a finished commercial. Organizational and team-management skills are essential to make all these people and pieces work together. Art Direction in Television Advertising The primary creative directive for TV is the same as for other media Television presents some unique challenges, however Due to complexity, television production involves a lot of people These people have different but often overlapping expertise, responsibility, and authority The person most responsible for creating visual impact is the Art director The Art director is in charge of the visual look of the message, in both print and T V and how it communicates mood, product qualities, and psychological appeals. Specifically, art directors make decisions about whether to use art or photography in print — or film or animation in television — and what type of artistic style to use. They are highly trained in graphic design, including art, photography, typography, the use of color, and computer design software Although Art directors generally design the ad, they rarely create the finished art If they need an illustration they hire an artist Newspaper and Web advertising visuals are often clip art, images from collections of copyright-free art that anyone can use who buys the clip-art service. In addition to advertising, Art directors may also be involved in designing a brand or corporate logo, as well as merchandising materials, store or corporate office interiors, and other aspects of a brand’s visual presentation, such as shopping bags, delivery trucks, and uniforms A logo, which is the imprint used for immediate identification of a brand or company, is an interesting design project because it uses typography, illustration, and layout to create a distinctive and memorable image, as the Falling Rock logo demonstrates. Think of the cursive type used for Coca-Cola, the block letters used for IBM, and the rainbow-striped apple for Apple computers. Creative Team in Television Advertising The vast and ever-increasing capability of the broadcast media introduces new challenges and complexities to the production process. One aspect of these complexities is that aside from the creative directors, copywriters, and art directors who assume the burden of responsibility in the production of print advertising. In general, the responsibility for the visual, layout, and graphics is that of the art director. The copywriter has the job of creating the words for the ad and maybe the ad concept. The copywriter needs to understand art direction and the art 49 director needs to appreciate the impact of words Together as a creative team they need to have a rapport to be successful. This relationship between copywriter and art director is almost like a marriage. Both are concept thinkers. Both think in terms of words and pictures, after the team arms themselves with all the information they need. When they have settled on a target audience and a creative strategy, these left- and right-brain people begin to create. Some art directors and copywriters like to work by themselves first. The proper and effective production of broadcast advertising depends on a team of highly capable creative people — agency personnel, production experts, editorial specialists, and music companies. An advertiser and its agency must consider and evaluate, the role of each of these participants. The Global Issues box on this page describes how Charlotte Beers, probably the most powerful woman in advertising, faces the challenge of assembling a creative team to enhance the global image of the United States. Production in Television Advertising For the bigger national commercials, there are a number of steps in the production process that fall into four categories — message design, pre-production, the shoot, and post- production. I) Message Design and Development: Message design is concerned with the clarity, accuracy, and conciseness of messages and their design as a visual perception. The message needs to get attention and build awareness. It also needs to get consumer interest, which it tries to do by being relevant. If the message recipient expects the message m a particular format the producer should obtain an interface document from the recipient. This document should specie the type and format of the messages the recipient will accept. After getting the approval from the recipient the producer should prepare the script and then final approval of the script by the recipient is required. 2) Pre-Production: The producer and staff first develop a set of production notes, describing in detail every aspect of the production These notes are important for finding talent and locations, building sets and getting bids, and estimates from specialists In the “Cat Herders” commercial, finding the talent was critical Some 50 felines and their trainers were involved in the filming Surprisingly, different cats have different skills; some were able to appear to be asleep or motionless on cue, others excel as runners or specialize in water scenes. Once the bids for production have been approved, the creative team and the Producer, Director, and other key players hold a pre-production meeting to outline every step of the production process and anticipate every problem that may arise. Then the work begins. The talent agency begins casting the roles; the production team finds a location and arranges site use with owners, police and other officials If sets are needed, they have to be built Finding the props is a test of ingenuity, and the prop person may wind-up visiting hardware stores, secondhand stores, and may be even the local dump Costumes may also have to be made, located, or bought. 50 3)Production (The Shoot): The film crew includes a number of technicians all of whom report to the director. For both film and video recording, the camera operators are the key technicians. Other technicians include the gaffer, who is the chief electrician, and the grip, who moves props and sets and lays tracks for the dolly on which the camera is mounted The script clerk checks the dialogue and other script details and times the scenes A set is a busy, crowded place. The Audio Director records the audio either at the time of the shoot, or, m the case of the more high end productions, separately in a sound studio If the sound is being recorded at the tithe of shooting, a mixer, who operates the recording equipment, and a boom person, who sets-up the microphones, handle the recording on the set. In the studio it is usually recorded after the film is shot — so the audio is synchronized with the footage. Directors often wait to see exactly how the action appears before they write and record the audio track. However, if the Art Director has decided to set the commercial to music, then the music on the audio track may be recorded before the shoot as m the “Do re-mi” audio track, and the filming done to the music. The Director shoots the commercial scene-by-scene, but not necessarily in the order set-down in the script. Each scene is shot, called a take, and all the scenes in the storyboard are shot and then assembled through editing. If the Director films the commercial on video tape, it is played back immediately to determine what needs correcting. Film has to be processed before the Director can review it. These processed scenes are called dailies. Rushes are rough versions of the commercial assembled from cuts of the raw film footage. The Director and the agency creative team view them immediately after the shoot to make sure everything’s been filmed as planned. In some rare cases, an entire commercial is shot as one continuous action and there are no individual shots that are edited together in post-production. Probably the most interesting use of this approach is an award-winning commercial for Honda, named “Cog” The principle in filming this kind of commercial is get it right, even if one have to do it over and over. 4) Post-Production: For film and video, much of the work happens after the shoot in post-production — when the commercial begins to emerge from the hands and mind of the editor. The objective of editing is to assemble the various pieces of film into a sequence that follows the storyboard Editors manipulate the audio and video images creating realistic 3D images and combining real-life and computer-generated images. The post production process is hugely important in video because so many digital effects are being added to the raw film In the ‘Cat Herders’ commercial, Fallon could not film the cats and horses at the same time because of National Humane Society regulations The Director had to film the horses background, and kitties separately An editor fused the scenes together during post production editing seamlessly to create the illusion of an elaborate cat drive Another goal of video editing is to manipulate time, which is a common technique used in commercial storytelling Condensing time might show a man leaving work, then a cut of the man showering, then a cut of the man at a bar The editor may extend time Say a train is approaching a stalled car on the tracks By cutting to various angles it may seem that the train is taking forever to reach the car — a suspense tactic To jumble time, an 51 editor might cut from the present to a flashback of a remembered past event or flash forward to an imagined scene in the future All of these effects are specified by the Art Director in the storyboard. The result of the editor’s initial work is a rough cut a preliminary edited version of the story that is created when the editor chooses the best shots and assembles them to create a scene. The editor then joins the scenes together. After the revision and re-editing are completed, the editor makes an interlock, which means the audio and film are assembled together. The final version with the sound and film mixed together is called an answer print. The answer print is the final version printed onto a piece of film. For the commercial to air on hundreds of stations around the country, the agency has to make duplicate copies — a process called dubbing The dubbed copies are called release prints and are usually in video form. Production Options in Television Advertising There are a number of ways to produce a message for a television commercial. It can be filmed live or prerecorded using film or videotape It can also be shot frame-by-frame using animation techniques. Let us look at these production choices. Typically the film is shot on 35-mm film or videotape and then digitized, after which the editor transfers the image videotape for dissemination a process called film to tape transfer Film consists of a series of frames on celluloid; actually, each frame is a still shot. Film is shot at 24 frames per second. To edit on film, editors cut between two frames and either eliminate a segment or attach a new segment of film. The term cut, which comes from this editing procedure, indicates an abrupt transition from one view of a scene to another. Art directors work closely with editors, who assemble the shots and cut the film to create the right pacing sequence of images as outlined in the storyboard. There is lot of production options for advertisement production which can be carried out by advertising agency: 1) Videotape: A videotape is a recording of images and sounds on to magnetic tape as opposed to movie film or random access digital media Videotapes are also used for storing scientific or medical data such as the data produced by an electrocardiogram In most cases a helical scan video head rotates against the moving tape to record the data in two dimensions because video signals have a very high bandwidth, and static heads would require extremely high tape speeds Videotape is used in both video tape recorders (VTRs) or, more commonly and more recently, video cassette recorders (VCRs) and video cameras Tape is a linear method of storing information and, since nearly all video recordings made nowadays are digital, it is expected to gradually lose importance as nonlinear/random-access methods of storing digital video data become more common. 2) Digital Video: Digital video is a type of video recording system that works by using a digital rather than an analog video signal The terms digital camera, video camera and camcorder are used interchangeably in this article Digital video comprises a series of orthogonal bitmap digital images displayed m rapid succession at a constant rate In the context of video these images are called frames We measure the rate at which frames are displayed in frames per second (FPS). 52 Since every frame is an orthogonal bitmap digital image it comprises a raster of pixels. If it has a width of W pixels and a height of H pixels we say that the frame size is W x H. Pixels have only one property, their color The color of a pixel is represented by a fixed number of bits The more bits the more subtle variations of colors can be reproduced This is called the color depth (CD) of the video For example, a digital video can have a duration (T) of 1 hour (3600sec), a frame size of 640 x 480 (WxH) at a color depth of 24bits and a frame rate of 25fps. 3) Animation The technique of animation traditionally meant drawing images on film and then recording the images one frame at a time For example, Cartoon figures were sketched and then re-sketched for the next frame with a slight change to indicate a small progression in the movement of an arm or a leg or a facial expression. Animation is traditionally shot at 16 drawings per second. Low-budget animation uses fewer drawings, so the motion looks jerky. The introduction of computers has accelerated the process and eliminated a lot of the tedious hand work. 4) Stop Motion A particular type of animation is stop motion, a technique used to film inanimate objects like the Pillsbury Doughboy, which is a puppet. The little character is moved a bit at a time and filmed frame-by-frame. The same technique is used in claymation, which involves creating characters from clay and then photographing them one frame at a time. Both have been popular with art directors who create advertising where fantasy effects are desired, although new computer effects also are simplifying these techniques. 5) Live Production: There is always the choice of live television commercial production. Live production can result in realism and the capturing of spontaneous reactions and events that could not possibly be recreated in a rehearsed scene. It is clear however that the loss of control in live settings threatens the carefully worked-out objectives for a commercial. On occasion, local retailers (such as auto dealers) use live commercials to execute direct response message strategies. Such a technique can capture the urgency of an appeal 6)Music and Action: Specifying the music is usually done as part of the copywriting. But matching the music to the action is an art director’s or producer’s responsibility. In some cases, as in high-production song-and-dance numbers, the music is the commercial. 7)Still Production: 53 Still production is a technique whereby a series of photographs or slides is filmed and edited so that the resulting ad appears to have movement and action. Through the use of pans, zooms and dissolves with the camera, still photographs can be used to produce an interesting yet low-cost finished advertisement. Art Direction & Production in Web Advertising / Cyberspace Cyber space has its own space. Cyber production does not differ significantly form radio or television production, but it does differ from these traditional media in how aspects of production are combined with programming language, such as HTML, and with other. Web design includes creating ads that run on the web as well as the website itself. Banner ads are designed more like outdoor boards than conventional print ads because their small space puts intense requirements on the designer to make the ad communicate quickly and succinctly, and yet attract attention and curiosity in order to elicit a click-through response. One can check-out banner ads online at www.banneradmuseum.com. Designers know that web pages, particularly the first screen, should follow the same layout rules as posters: The graphics should be eye-catching without demanding too much downloading time; type should be simple, using one or two typefaces and avoiding all capitals and letter spacing that distorts the words. Because there is often a lot to read, organizing the information is critical. In terms of legibility, black type on a high-contrast background usually is best; all the design elements — type and graphics — should be big enough to see on the smallest screen. Sometimes the illustrations, as well as the photos, are obtained from clip-art services, or rather click art, such as that provided by www.eyewire.com. Actually, any image can be scanned and manipulated to create a web image, which is causing a copyright problem for artists. Because of the magic of digitizing, web pages can combine elements and design styles from many different media — print, still photography, film, animation, sound, and games. The combination of interactive navigation, live streaming video, online radio, and 360-degree camera angles creates web pages that may be more complex than anything you see on TV, which is why ease-of-use is a factor in website design. The Inside Story describes research on the best and worst site design practices conducted by Forrester Research, a company that specializes in monitoring the effectiveness of internet advertising. Web designers use a completely different toolbox than other types of art directors. Animation effects, as well assophisticated navigation paths, are designed using software programs such as Flash, Director, Blender, Squeak, and non-linear editing tools such as Premier, FinalCut, and AfterEffects, among others. It is such a rapidly changing design world that it is difficult to keep track of the most recent Innovations in web design software. An example of a good website design is crewcuts.com, which was designated as the Best Website by the Internet Professional Publisher’s Association. It is hard to convey here why the site is effective because of the animation, so check out www.crewcuts.com. One source for tips on website design is www.eMarketers.com. 54 3.8.1 Testing validity and reliability of advertisements Introduction A very wide range of copy-testing alternatives has been developed and is available to the advertiser. Beyond the question of whether to test copy at all lies the question of what particular test or tests should be used. The question has occupied the attention of professional and academic researchers since copy testing first began, and a great deal has been written on the subject. Much of the interest lies in assessing the validity and reliability of various types of tests. The subject is also important because considerable stakes are involved by research supplier companies who tend to offer a particular kind of testing service or rely on one testing method. The Advertising Research Foundation maintains a standing committee to monitor and encourage the development of new and better testing methods, and its annual conferences generally relate to questions of the strengths and limitations of particular methods or techniques. The basic question in test selection is whether or not a test is valid and reliable. Does it really measure the effectiveness of advertising? More specifically, are the particular measures used in any one test true measures of the constructs involved? Is the test reliable and will it measures the same thing each time it is used? For these questions to be answered we must go through validity and reliability first: 1) Validity: In simple terms, validity questions whether the research really studied what it proposed to study. Did it really find out what it was trying to find out, about the subjects that it intended to study? It is of two types: i) Internal Validity: It applies to the study itself. Did this particular research project or study really find out what it said it was going to find out? If it did not, there is a problem of internal validity — within the study itself. There are many possible common problems of internal research validity — Suppose, e.g., that part of the study involves getting information about respondents’ ages and incomes. These are questions to which people often provide misleading answers — in fact, outright lies. Many respondents will lie about their ages, indicating a younger age than their true age. Similarly, respondents often lie about their incomes, indicating larger incomes than their real incomes. ii) External Validity: Another type of validity concern is external validity. Even if the study has internal validity, there may be external validity difficulties. External validity is the validity of generalized statements based on limited research studies, or implying that one variable caused another to vary when such conclusions are unwarranted. These problems often arise when studies in a controlled research laboratory situation cannot be replicated outside the lab. 55 2) Reliability: In research, reliability occurs when a study is repeated and arrives at the same results as the original study. If repeating the research results in different findings, then there is a problem of lack of reliability. Let us say you want to find out how much airline companies spend on their public relations operations. In winter, you send out a survey to the public relations departments at several major airlines. Just to verify the results, you send out the same survey in summer, and to a different list of airlines, and you find that the results are widely varied from the original survey’s findings The discrepancy may be caused by a number of problems, different times of year will affect the airlines’ passenger traffic; different airlines likely have differing opinions on how important public relations may be, which could affect their budgets, different airlines may define certain functions differently, so not all functions are counted as public relations by all the airlines In any case, you have a problem of reliability, because replicating the original study came up with different results. Methods of Testing Validity and Reliability of Advertisements Various methods are available for testing/evaluating components of an advertising program. At the most general level, two broad categories of evaluation tools can be used to evaluate advertising program: 1) Message Evaluations 2) Evaluating Respondent Behaviors In today’s marketplace, many advertising companies are being asked to deliver compelling proof that the ads they design actually work Respondent behaviors provide such evidence. Changes in sales coupons redeemed, increases in store traffic and other numbers-based outcomes appeal to many managers Consequently, both forms of evaluation help the marketing manager try to build short-term results and long-range success. Ad testing deals with the measurement advertisement effectiveness. What constitutes effectiveness? Which variables (s) should be tested, or, measured to know the degree of advertising effectiveness? In practice, the following four categories of variables, are, generally, tested viz. (1) message variables, (2) media variables, (3) scheduling variables and (4) budgeting variables. Message Variables : In the case of an advertising message in an advertising message in a typical print advertisement the variable to be tested would be the headline, the illustration, the body test, the layout, and the typography, individually as well as severally. In the case of television commercials, the variables to be tested 56 would be appeals, themes, propositions, rhetorical style, audio-visual devices, format illustration technique, staging casting music, sound effects, etc. Media Variables : The media testing opportunities are considered at the following four levels, viz., The advertiser must decide the type of media, such as, newspapers, magazines, television, radio or direct-mail, etc., he intends to use. The advertiser then, must decide the sub-class of media, he is to use. For example, what king of newspapers : Daily Sunday, Evening or Morning Newspapers. Likewise, what kind of television and / or radio : sport, Network, or, Regional channels, in the same way, what kind of magazines : General, Women, Sports, Healthcare, etc. The advertiser, then must selected specific media vehicles, what newspapers in Mumbai, which television channels in Delhi, and what media mix is to be used? Finally, he must determine space units i.e. full page, or, half pages, or, quarter pages broadcast time units, such as 60 seconds, seconds, and the position of the ad in print media as well as in television. Scheduling Variables : Consumer behaviour is generally influenced by the time factor, such as season of the year, occasions like Diwali, Christmas, Id day of month or week, etc. timing of television commercials frequency continuity are also important factors. Budgeting Variables : Budget affects, and is affected by all other advertising variable. How much money should be spent on advertising? How should be the total amount of money be allocated to markets, to media to sales territories and to specific items in the product line? The advertiser must measure the relationship between budgeting variables and profit yields. 57 3.8.2 Need of Evaluating Advertising Effectiveness : Achieve Awareness : Testing of advertisement will show whether there is an increased influence of the advertising message, product or service advertised. Testing enables, the advertiser to be aware of all the reasons why an advertisement has been effective or otherwise. Affects Attitudes : Testing enables the advertiser to know whether the attitude of the prospects towards the advertised product or service has been changed or not, it also enables him to understand whether any message of the advertisement is recollected by the customer. Actuate Action : Advertisement testing enables the advertiser to analyse the response by the prospects to an advertisements. It gives him an idea of when, how, why a customers accepts a particular products or rejects it. This will help him to present the product in such manner that he (prospects) takes a favourable or positive action. 4. Judge Overall Effectiveness : Testing of advertisement-helps the advertiser injudging the total effectiveness of a particular advertisement in respect of their headlines, layout, copy, illustrations, layout or any other quality that is important within the advertisement. Thus, advertising evaluation can be done before the campaign is over. The main object of evaluating the campaign is “to get all the bugs out” before sending precious money. When advertisements are tested after the campaign it is called “postmortem” of an advertisement effectiveness. The advertising can be evaluate or tested before or after its application. Both have got various advantages. Pre-Testing Methods : An advertisement can be tested at two stages namely: (a) prior to the commencement, and (b) after the commencement of the advertising campaign. The former stage is called „pre-testing‟ and the latter „posttesting‟. The following are the pre-testing methods : 58 1. Proposition Tests : Tests of creative strategies are called proposition tests. Strategy refers to the alternative course which can be tried to know most suitable course of action. For example, the advertising campaign of a watch manufacturing company might follow such strategies as: (i) It is stylish watch for fashion conscious man. (ii) It is a dependable watch. (iii) It is an inexpensive watch and looks like a watch that costs twice the price. Each proposition reflects a different advertising strategy for watches. Fashionable appearance, expensive appearance and reliable. To choose which is the best representative sample of prospective watch buyers would be shown all three on individual cards as if they were different watches. The sample respondents would then be asked to choose between the watches, and to give their choices. The most widely acceptable proposition would be established as an advertising strategy. 2. Concept Testing : Under this method, testing is carried out in the same way as Proposition Testing, except that roughly drawn advertisement concepts are used instead of placing alternative strategies on the cards. As the public is not used to look at rough advertisement concept, the respondents must be explained in advance that what they are about to be shown are rough layout of the artist. Headlines should be shown clearly and such irrelevant details must be excluded as: Cufflinks on a shirt because this may 59 give a chance to worry the respondents about why they are there, whether they are fashionable and so on. Concept tests are used to measure the interest and credibility of different advertising approaches. Sales Area Testing : The most reliable method of testing the effectiveness of any advertising is initially to run it in one or two selected areas. This testing is used to facilitate launching advertising campaign on a large scale, because effectiveness is first tested in a smaller area. Folio Tests : Folio tests are used for press advertisements that are finished or near finished form. Test advertisement along with a couple of advertisements is placed into a folder. The „Folio‟ composed in this way is then placed before the selected few consumers who are expected to give their reactions. The rest advertisement is singled out later in the interview and the consumer is asked to discuss its appeal and motivational power in creating interest, arousing desire and attracting attention. This method of pre-testing spots out the most responsive advertisement. Project Tests : Television commercials are sometimes tested in consumers‟ home by means of portable movie projectors. Often the commercial is inserted in a short sequence from an entertainment film. After showing the film to the consumers, the interviewer asks their opinion about the commercial. Trailer Tests : In trailer testing, a trailer or van is parked in a parking zone of a shopping centre and people are invited to come in for interviews. Everyone who enters the trailer is shown a television commercial on a rear screen projector and questioned about it. This method is very economical for it costs less to bring people into, the trailer for interview. Consumer Jury Tests : Consumer jury tests are based on the rating given on advertisement by a typical group of consumers. Rating implies comparison of one advertisement with several others. A consumer jury test is made in a variety of ways. The usual procedure is to ask a relatively small group of consumers, who represent potential buyers of the product to rate alternative pieces of copy. Different data collection methods may be used in implementing a consumer jury test. For example, personal interviews may be used or a group may be assembled and the members may be asked to rate on the alternative copy. 60 Rating Scales : This method of copy testing requires the establishment of standards for effective copy and numerical weights for each standard. The weights or values indicate the 61 relative worth of a standard in the overall success of copy. Advertisements are then rated according to scale value and a numerical score is obtained. Portfolio Tests : These tests are named after the manner in which advertisements to be tested are packaged. A group of advertisements usually a mixture of advertisements to be tested is placed in portfolio. Sometimes, advertisements are actually placed in dummy copies of newspapers and magazines. Respondents are given the folio and asked to go through it, reading whatever interests them and taking as much time as they want. After completing this task, the respondents are asked to recall the advertisements what they can remember. Simulated Tests : Simulated tests are tests in which consumers are exposed to alternative pieces of copies through point of purchase displays of direct mail. These tests are simple and less expensive to implement than actual sales tests. However, they are artificial. Benefits of Pre-Testing : To check clerical, grammatical, printing or technical errors. To make communication more effective from readers points of view. Minimise waste in advertising. To make it m ore meaningful and effective. It is simple, less time consuming, and less costly. Methods of Post-testing : 62 Tests that are applied after the commencement of the advertising campaign are called post-tests. Post-testing enables to study the impact of advertising on the effective sales promotion.The following are the methods of Post-testing : Recognition Tests : Under this method the respondents are asked to point out the contents of those advertisements which they might have seen. The objective of this test is to know the degree of effective impact of advertisement. Recall Tests : Under recall tests the entire advertising campaign is considered as against recognition tests. Where only specific advertisements are considered Recall tests are applied to measure the attention, interest and memory value of advertisements after they have been launched. 63 Inquiry and Coupon Response : Under inquiry testing, the advertiser sends a free sample to the reader, on request. The reader is expected to mail the coupon to take advantage of the offer. It is quite likely that such advertisements are given simultaneously in different publications of the newspaper or magazine. The advertisements are keyed in order to know which of the several advertisements resulted into more response. It is assumed that the advertisement which brings largest number of inquiries is superior to others. Split-Run Test : It is a modification of inquiry test. An advertiser takes two advertisements in magazine offering split-run facilities. The two advertisements differ in one respect only e.g., one advertisement presents the cold drink in a transparent bottle and the other advertisement presents the cold drink in a non-transparent bottle. The advertisement is keyed. Now, in two different markets i.e., cold drink marketed in transparent bottle is more, it is taken for granted that this advertisement has been more successful compared to the second one. Psychological Tests : A variety of psychological tests are used which include story telling, word association, sentence completion, depth interviewing etc. This test attempts to find out what the respondent has been in different advertisements and what they mean to him. These tests can be conducted only by trained interviewers. Focus Interviews : In this method some selected consumers are called and are asked to deliberate discussion on the advertisements presented to them. The attention of the members of the panel is focused on certain aspect of the advertisement. The opinion expressed by the participants becomes the basis to study the effectiveness of advertising. Readership Test : This method attempts to study the impact of advertising in increasing the product awareness by the consumers. Readership test facilitates the relative importance and effectiveness of advertisement published in national press. The readers are asked to tell where have they read the advertisement and how it has increased their awareness about the product. The various methods used to study the effectiveness of an advertisement provide information about the impact of an advertisement on the product awareness and bringing about a change in the attitude of the consumers. 64 Benefits of Post-Testing : To find out the extent to which the ad has been noticed, seen or read. To find the extent to which the message is understood by the readers. To measure the memory value of advertising. To find the impact of advertising on consumer buying behaviour. To see whether ad is accomplishing its objectives. To evaluate the comparative effectiveness of different ads in terms of appeals, layout illustration etc. To improve future advertising efforts. 3.8.3 Approaches of Evaluating Advertising Effectiveness According to Philip Kotler, there are two main approaches for measuring advertising effectiveness Sales Effect Approach/Sales Research Method: The main objective of any advertisement is to increase the sales According to this approach, if ad results in increased sales then ad is treated as effective. On the other hand, if advertisement does not result us much increase in sales then this ad is not much effective. Under this method, the sales in pre-advertisement period and post advertisement period are measured and compared. There are some methods which measure the effectiveness of advertisement on the basis of sales effect approach. These methods are sales result test, trial area test, trailer test, split run test, direct mail test, etc. 65 | P a g e This approach is based on the assumption that advertisement is the only factor affecting sales. But in reality many other variables of marketing mix also affect sales, viz quality of product, price of product, sales promotional efforts, level of competition, packaging of product, etc Moreover, effect of advertisement on sales may be us the long run In the short run, advertisement may not generate immediate sales. Communication Effect Approach/Communication Research Method: Another main objective of advertising is to communicate the desired message to target audience. The effectiveness of advertising depend an effective communication The communication effect can be measured in terms of effect of ad on memory, knowledge, or attitude of consumer. The limitations of sales effect approach encourage the use of communication effect approach to evaluate the effectiveness of advertisement. Moreover, this approach can be used even us short-run According to this approach, if ad is able to communicate the message to the target audience effectively, then ad is evaluated as effective If more viewers/readers are able to recall / recognize / identify the ad message, then it indicates that ad is able to communicate the message effectively Methods like Recognition Test, Association Test, Gallup and Robinson Recall Test Inquiry Test, Mock Magazine Test are based on this approach. Factors to be Considered in Measuring Advertising Effectiveness 1) Establish Communications Objective: Except for a few instances (most specifically direct response advertising), it is nearly impossible to show the direct impact of advertising on sales So the marketing objectives established for the promotional program are not good measures of communication effectiveness For exam pie, it is very difficult (or too expensive) to demonstrate the effect of an ad on brand share or on sales On the other hand, attainment of communications objectives can be measured and leads to the accomplishment of marketing objectives 2) Use a Consumer Response Model: Hierarchy of effects models and cognitive response models, which provide an understanding of the effects of communications and lend themselves to achieving communications goals. 3) Use Both Pretests and Posttests: From a cost standpoint both actual cost outlays and opportunity costs pre-testing makes sense. It may mean the difference between success and failure of the campaign or the product. But it should work in conjunction with posttests, which avoid the limitations of pretests, use much larger samples, and take place in more natural settings. Post testing may be required to determine the true effectiveness of the ad or campaign. 4) Use Multiple Measures: Many attempts to measure the effectiveness of advertising focus on one major dependent variable perhaps sales, recall, or recognition. Advertising may have a variety of effects on the consumer, some of which can be 66 | P a g e measured through traditional methods; others that require updated thinking. For a true assessment of advertising effectiveness, a number of measures may be required. 5) Understand and Implement Proper Research: It is critical to understand research methodology. What constitutes a good design? Is it valid and reliable? Does it measure what is needed? There is no shortcut to this criterion, and there is no way to avoid it if one truly wants to measure the effects of advertising. Difficulties in Measuring Advertising Effectiveness Measuring ad-effectiveness is very beneficial for the business unit, but it is not an easy task. Doubts have often been raised about its reliability and validity. Different persons give varying opinions in the regard. Moreover, advertising is not an exact science; therefore its effectiveness cannot be measured in exact/mathematical terms. The main difficulties and hindrances in the evaluation of advertising effectiveness are discussed below: 1) Advertising is not the only Factor Affecting Sales: Most of the methods used for evaluating effectiveness of advertisement assume that advertisement is the only factor affecting sales. But there are many other factors which may be responsible for increase in sale, viz., change in price, improvement in product features, sales promotion schemes, etc. So assuming that, increase in sale is the result of advertisement only, is wrong. 2) Effect of Past Advertisement: Methods of evaluating advertisement effectiveness assume that response of customers in test area is the outcome of advertisement done in test period. But actually, the response of customers may be because of past advertisement. For example, if a person had seen an advertisement long ago, but at that time either because of financial constraints or because of no need, he did not buy that product. But it is possible that he is carrying deep favorable impressions of that past advertisement till now. If at present, he is financially sound or he realizes the need of product now then he may purchase that product now. So in this case, sale has occurred on account of past advertisement and not present advertisement. 3) Difficult to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Goodwill Advertisement: Goodwill ads are issued to improve the image of the organization in the lone-run. The purpose of these ads is to improve the image of the organization by meeting some social responsibilities like creating awareness for growing more trees, eye donation, pollution-control, etc. Effect of these advertisements on sale, image or goodwill cannot be measured. 4) Ad-effectiveness using a Communication Objective is not sufficient in itself: 67 | P a g e Some advertisement may achieve communication objectives, but may not promote sales. Some advertisement may be very attractive, well remembered, entertaining and liked by many viewers/audience, but still it may be ineffective in generating additional sales. These advertisements may be well recalled because of attractive models, easy to remember phrases, humorous appeal, etc., but viewers still may not be buying the product; because they have no liking for that product. For example, advertisement of Bagpiper-Soda with Sunny Deol as model is remembered by many viewers, because its model is attractive, but still all such viewers don’t buy Bagpiper- Soda. So measuring ad-effectiveness only on the basis of communication objectives is not sufficient in itself. 5) Subjective Method for Measuring Advertising Effectiveness: There are various methods given by different experts for measuring ad-effectiveness. But most of the methods are subjective in nature, as they do not give any universal criterion for measuring ad-effectiveness. There are various criteria for measuring ad-effectiveness like increase in sales, attention getting ability, easy to remember, entertaining, humorous, persuasive, etc So there is no precise and universally accepted criterion It is possible that an advertisement is effective on one criterion, but ineffective on the basis of other criterion. 6) Not Suggestive in Nature: Most of the methods for evaluating effectiveness of advertisement classify the ad as effective or ineffective. But these methods do not suggest what extra points should be added, what modifications be made to make the advertisement more effective. 7) Difficult to Evaluate Percentage Response: For evaluating effectiveness, some response is desired from the customers But because total number of readers/viewers of media is not exactly known, so percentage of response generated because of advertisement cannot be measured If ad is given only through mail then this percentage can be calculated easily, as total number of persons who are contacted through mail are known, but if ad is given by any other sources like radio, magazine then the percentage of viewers cannot be precisely obtained, as total number of readers/viewers is unknown to us. 8) Difficult to Use Laboratory Tests: Use of laboratory or mechanical tests requires expert knowledge The instrument used in laboratory tests like galvanometer, pupilometer, techistoscope is technical in nature The use of these instruments is a complex job and it can only be handled by experts. 9) Difficulties of Sampling Method: Almost methods of evaluating advertising effectiveness are based on sampling. Some respondents and market areas are selected for measuring effectiveness. It may involve following difficulties: 68 | P a g e i) Selected sample units may not be representative of whole group or area. ii) Sample size may be very small in comparison to total number of actual buyers. iii) The area selected as control area or test area may differ in terms of economic or demographic features. 69 | P a g e