* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Assessing and Enhancing the Basic Writing Skills
Food marketing wikipedia , lookup
Neuromarketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing channel wikipedia , lookup
Affiliate marketing wikipedia , lookup
Target audience wikipedia , lookup
Marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Sports marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing research wikipedia , lookup
Target market wikipedia , lookup
Multi-level marketing wikipedia , lookup
Ambush marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing strategy wikipedia , lookup
Digital marketing wikipedia , lookup
Youth marketing wikipedia , lookup
Guerrilla marketing wikipedia , lookup
Integrated marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Viral marketing wikipedia , lookup
Advertising campaign wikipedia , lookup
Sensory branding wikipedia , lookup
Direct marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing plan wikipedia , lookup
Multicultural marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing mix modeling wikipedia , lookup
Global marketing wikipedia , lookup
Writing in Marketing 1 Writing in Marketing: Essentials for New Students Kelly Almeida Longwood University Writing in Marketing 2 Introduction Students across all disciplines learn to write in different ways, depending primarily on the area of study, the school the student is attending, and the professor(s) who are teaching them. This led me to question what similarities are there across all Marketing courses in regards to writing, and more importantly, what techniques or tips are the most important to learn in order to write efficiently. The basis of my research was, what are the mechanisms by which new students in Marketing can learn to write for their major? Through research, I have found that the three most important mechanisms of writing in the major are appealing to the audience, being timeless with our words, and using creativity to maneuver around any difficulties. Literature Review Every school, professor, and student takes a different path in the development of writing. In order to find the most efficient way of learning, it is crucial to know what the most important parts are. Through my research, I hope to discover how Marketing students learn how to write most efficiently within the major. In “The Concept of Discourse Community,” John Swales (1990) explains the concept of discourse communities. He describes the six characteristics of a discourse community, tying his definition together for other researchers. The goals that Swales describes are having a common public goal, using mechanisms of intercommunication among members, providing information and feedback, using genres, using lexis, and having members with knowledge and relevant content. His definition of the concept helped me understand that the Marketing major is a discourse community, and therefore will aid me in understanding how to navigate the learning process of writing in Writing in Marketing 3 Marketing courses at Longwood. For example, use of lexis would be used by students as a learning mechanism for familiarizing themselves with the language and tone, and voice of writing in the subject. This Argument gives the conversation an argument of how Marketing students, as a discourse community, will be an influence on the way a Marketing student will learn to write. In “Teaching Innovation Skills: Application of Design Thinking in a Graduate Marketing Course,” Benza and Lee (2015) introduce the topic discussing the importance of innovation for today’s Marketing students from a teaching standpoint, given the twenty-first century technology and competitive world of Business. The authors then summarize the parts of innovation and those essential for Marketing students, including critical thinking, creativity, problem solving, communication, and collaboration. After weaving these topics and finding overlapping terms, they summarize these moving parts into three categories: thinking, telling, and doing. It moves into the “Design Thinking” process used to teach many Marketing students these innovation skills with hands on methods. This narrowed the essentials of Marketing down into a more specific skillset and gave a method in order to obtain the knowledge and write efficiently in the discipline. In addition, this article poses a different point of view other than a student’s, as this article is written for teachers of Marketing students. Knowing about the 21st century objectives this is essential in the development of writing in Marketing. This 21st century knowledge and skillset is a part of the discourse community, and provides members with knowledge and relevant content, just as Swales defines a discourse community. Writing in Marketing 4 Bacon and Anderson’s article can also be connected to Swales’ on discourse community because it also provides students with knowledge and relevant content. Bacon and Anderson’s Article also proved that the Marketing major is a discourse community because it informs the reader of editing methods used and improvements for the grading system. To initiate the article, “Assessing and Enhancing the Basic Writing Skills of Marketing Students,” Bacon and Anderson explain what employers find important in the written communication skills of Marketing students, and how many educators in business programs overlook basic communication skills in order to master the content and concepts of the course instead. However, the article reveals that automated scoring systems may reveal minor grammatical errors, but is otherwise inefficient in student’s learning of the content. One study, for example, revealed that making grammatical errors found by a computer part of the grade improved because it gave students an incentive to be more attentive to basic writing skills (Anderson and Bacon, 2015). Bacon and Anderson’s article states that the most important part of writing in Marketing is the content, but employers look for both basic writing skills, and knowledge in the discipline. This has revealed that while in Marketing courses, the focus will be put on content of the assignment, although employers are looking for both thorough content and correct conventions. Although some emphasis is put on mechanics and conventions, McCorkle, Payan, Reardon, and Kling (2007) stress the value of creativity in Marketing education in “Perceptions and Reality: Creativity in the Marketing Classroom.” In this, they discuss the importance in a company, perceptions and the reality of what creativity is and whether it can be taught or nurtured, if professors are steering students towards Writing in Marketing 5 creativity, and recommendations in order to do so. They have concluded that creativity can, in fact, be learned. Ways in which Creativity can be nurtured include, “Giving imaginative assignments, brainstorming, creating a classroom environment in which risk taking is encouraged, and forming grading systems that recognize the creativity displayed in performing assignments” (McCorkle et al.). This article gives examples of practices that are used to learn creativity, and using that creativity in writing within the major. Like Bacon and Anderson, de los Santos believes in a balance of writing skills and critical thinking skills, as told in “Marketing Controversy in the Retailing Classroom: Teaching Critical Thinking and Writing to Millennial Business Students.” de los Santos reveals that she uses a variety of assignments, ranging from editing, to finding debatable ideas, assessing credibility of sources, and integrating knowledge from other business courses into a paper. This article exhibits the variety of strategies a professor could take while teaching students to write in a Marketing course, and helps discriminate whether teaching creativity should occur in a marketing course. Data Collection My data is composed of a book called Creative Marketing Communications by Daniel Yadin. The book contains creative Marketing techniques and guidelines for Marketing Communications such as copywriting, headlines, and body copies. I read through the guidelines Yadin explained would generate a better consumer reaction if executed correctly. In addition, I collected rubrics for writing assignments in Marketing courses from two different sources. One, from the Pittsburg State University Marketing department, and the other from a Dutch firm for a thesis paper on Marketing. I looked Writing in Marketing 6 for common themes throughout the explanations of the guidelines and the rubrics and dissected three that were clear and cohesive. Once I found the themes, I went back to the sources and analyzed the most important pieces of information into themes. Findings Through coding my data, I found three themes pertaining to learning how to write in Marketing. The themes are appealing to the audience, being timeless with words and sentences, and creativity. The point of Marketing is to get consumers to buy the product so learning how to appeal to the consumers is essential for any Marketing major. Learning to appeal to them quickly is a mechanism that must be used in Marketing so that you catch their eye so they don’t lose interest. Lastly, creativity is the basis of constructing any type of writing in Marketing but also serves as a means of working around obstacles one might face in this field. With these themes, students of Marketing will know what the most important parts of writing in the field are and ultimately be more prepared as they begin their studies. Appealing to your Audience The most important action to take in writing in Marketing is to appeal to the consumers. The “umbrella” that I am using for expressing themes in writing in Marketing is appealing to a specific audience. For example, the author informs that you should intrigue consumers in headlines and make the reader feel involved. In order to do this, Yadin says “if you want to influence your reader, talk direct to that reader. Use words like you, yours, yourself, your company, your home.” Personalizing the headline will involve the reader more than if you address an “anonymous third party” and attract the specific group of consumers to buy your product. In addition, in the rubric for the Writing in Marketing 7 Marketing research paper from the Dutch firm defines distinguished “Design-Layout and Organization” as “Content was well organized with headings and subheadings. Text and graphics were neatly organized and made the project easy to read.” An organized and pleasing design and layout will help to support content, and entice consumers. Timeless words and sentences The second theme I found was being quick and timeless in using your words and sentences. Because it is essential that you express a potentially large amount of information while interesting a specific audience, it is important that you catch their eye with your words. There are some techniques that the author believes are ways to do this. In the sections of “Creative Marketing Communications” concerned with writing body copies and headlines, one guideline is to keep words terse. The book emphasizes that terse means tight, concise, and smooth-flowing, making sure that each word has a use. He suggests using “trigger words” to defines a trigger word as “One which propels your reader into your proposition, towards the action you want.” (Yadin, 28). This will catch the reader’s attention and make them feel some emotion, seducing them to buy your product. In Pittsburg State University’s Marketing Department’s rubric, under “Exceeds Expectations” for Style, it states, “Sentences are clear, effective, and coherent; vocabulary is broad.” This, too says that in order to catch the reader’s attention and keep it, it is important that you are clear, effective, and quick. Creativity The last theme I found was using creativity. You must be creative in order to find ways to appeal to the specific audience in a fast manner. Creative planning in Marketing is not the type of creativity that one might think it is. It is “more professional, Writing in Marketing 8 more structured, and systematic” (Yadin, 21). Because writing in Marketing is appealing to consumers, and all consumers are different, you must manipulate consumers in a creative way in order to overcome these obstacles. In the book, while creativity is significant, it is exemplified as not something you can do to learn to write in the field, but something you can’t write without, it is the main component of Marketing. Also, in the Dutch firm’s rubric, it defines the highest level of “Content-Creativity” as, “Project demonstrated student’s own interpretation and expression of research material. Used pictures, images, or other visual aids to display information in multiple ways.” Although this rubric is for a thesis paper in the marketing field, it still requires creativity. Not only is creativity important to overcome difficulties and issues, it also can be used to appeal to your audience. Discussion The conception that creativity is an important component of writing in Marketing is supported in McCorkle, Payan, Reardon, and Kling’s “Perceptions and Reality: Creativity in the Marketing Classroom.” In this, they describe the importance of creativity in Marketing courses. However, they also argue that creativity can be learned. Teachers can nurture students with creativity by “Giving imaginative assignments, brainstorming, creating a classroom environment in which risk taking is encouraged, and forming grading systems that recognize the creativity displayed in performing assignments.” (McCorkle et al., 8). This argument leads me to believe that creativity is more important to some professors than others. Furthermore, my findings suggest that one must conform to the consumers’ lives to be successful in the field, just as a middle school student conforms to the requests of their art teacher. Writing in Marketing 9 Implications Learning how to appeal to an audience and doing so quickly is undeniably essential for students in marketing. Whether or not professors should attempt to nurture or teach creativity in the classroom is debatable. Some students will already have a knack for creativity, but others will need to be nurtured to gain creativity in the classroom. This means that some teachers may need to add activities to the course that would stimulate creativity. On the contrary, this might mean that the marketing major at some schools is only meant for those who have a knack for creativity. This depends on whether professors in the field believe that Marketing courses should teach creativity or if students in the major must already have creativity. Ultimately, the development of Marketing students is held in the hands of their professors, but since creativity is a vital part of a career in marketing, it is worth the time to attempt to teach and nurture it. Writing in Marketing 10 References: Anderson, E., & Bacon, D. (2004). Assessing and Enhancing the Basic Writing Skills OF Marketing Students. Business Communication Quarterly, 67(4), 443-454. doi:10.1177/1080569904271083 Benza, R., & Lee, C. (2015). Teaching Innovation Skills: Application of Design Thinking in a Graduate Marketing Course. Business Education Innovation Journal, 7(1), 43-50. Retrieved from Business Source Complete. de los Santos, E. (2014). MARKETING CONTROVERSY IN THE RETAILING CLASSROOM: TEACHING CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING TO MILLENNIAL BUSINESS STUDENTS. Proceedings Of The Marketing Management Association, 112-113. Mccorkle, D., Payan, J., Reardon, J., & Kling, N. (2007). Perceptions and Reality: Creativity in the Marketing Classroom. Journal of Marketing Education, 254-261. Swales, John. “The Concept of Discourse Community.” Genre Analysis: English in Academic and Research Settings. Boston: Cambridge UP, 1990. 21-32. Print Yadin, D. (2001). Creative marketing communications: A practical guide to planning, skills and techniques (3rd ed.). London: Kogan Page.