Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 3 The Big Picture: Economic and Regulatory Aspects McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter Overview Identifies and explains economic, social, ethical, and legal issues advertisers must consider 3-2 Chapter Objectives Classify two types of social criticisms of advertising Use economic model to discuss advertising effects on society Explain social responsibility and ethics Understand how governments regulate advertising Discuss court rulings that affect freedom of speech Define regulatory roles of state/local government Describe how federal agencies protect consumers, competitors Discuss how other agencies fight fraudulent and deceptive ads 3-3 Advertising Controversies Does advertising . . . Affect product value? Cause higher or lower prices? Influence choices? Encourage materialism? Make us buy things we don’t need? Promote or discourage competition? Affect us subliminally? Affect demand? Debase language? Affect art and culture? 3-4 Free Market Economic Principles Selfinterest Complete information Many buyers & sellers Absence of externalities 3-5 Economic Impact: Global There is a positive relationship between advertising expenditures and personal wealth 3-6 Economic Impact: Billiards Model 3-7 Economic Impact: Affected Areas Product Value Prices & Competition Implies quality Ads paid for by consumer Enhances image Educates consumers Promotes mass production Price drop or support 3-8 Economic Impact: Affected Areas Consumer Demand Consumer Choice Primary Encourages unique products, services Product category Secondary Particular brand New, better brands dominate Wider choices for consumers 3-9 Abundance Principle In an economy that produces more goods & services than can be consumed, advertising: Keeps consumers informed about alternatives (complete information) Allows companies to compete more effectively (self-interest) 3-10 Social Impact: Criticisms Short-term Manipulative Arguments Deception Unfair Practices Puffery False promises Incomplete descriptions False comparisons Bait-and-switch Visual distortions False demonstrations False testimonials Partial disclosure Small-print qualifications 3-11 Social Impact: Criticisms Long-term Macro Arguments Stereotyping Offensive Proliferation Social impact 3-12 An Example of Puffery Claiming a Yamaha outboard actually leave a trail in stormlashed waters is legal because it is unbelievable 3-13 Social Responsibility and Ethics An advertiser can act unethically or irresponsibly… without breaking any laws! 3-14 Social Responsibility and Ethics Ethical = morally right Promote well-being Draw crowds to events Socially Responsible = society views as best Responsible advertising can... Promote harmony, stability Influence elections 3-15 Social Responsibility and Ethics Public service announcement from the Ad Council about Multiple Sclerosis 3-16 Interrelated Components of Ethics Traditional actions of people in a society or community Philosophical rules society sets to justify past or future actions Attitudes, feelings, and beliefs of personal value system 3-17 Levels of Ethical Responsibility 3-18 How Government Regulates National Legislative, executive, judiciary State Governor, attorney general, various departments Municipal Mayor, city manager, police chief, courts, city attorney 3-19 Pitfalls of International Regulation •Varies from country to country •Restrictions on what is said, shown, done •Bans on specific products •Time slot restrictions •Bans on coupons, premiums, tie-in offers •Prohibition of paid placements in shows •Arbitrary rulings •Pre-approval requirements 3-20 Current U.S. Regulatory Issues Supreme Court: “speech” or “commercial speech” Tobacco Controversy Advertising to Children Consumer Privacy 3-21 Speech: Central Hudson Test • Does the commercial speech at issue concern a lawful activity? • Will the restriction of commercial speech serve the asserted government interest substantially? • Does the regulation directly advance the government interest asserted? • Is the restriction no more than necessary to further the interest asserted? 3-22 Federal Regulation: Agencies FTC FDA FCC Patent & Trademark Office Deceptive, unfair, comparative ads Nutritional Labeling & Education Act (NLEA) Broadcast media licensing Intellectual property Library of Congress Copyrights “works of authorship” 3-23 Federal Regulation: Trademarks Coca-Cola’s trademark look is retained through use of similar letterforms and style, even with different alphabets 3-24 State & Local Regulation Printer’s Ink guidelines: untrue, deceptive, misleading “Little FTC” consumer protection acts National marketers comply with states’ laws Local govt. regulation: city and county consumer protection agencies 3-25 Nongovernment Regulation o Better Business Bureau (BBB) o National Advertising Review Council (NARC) o o National Advertising Division (NAD) National Advertising Review Board (NARB) o Regulation by the media o Regulation by consumer groups o Self-regulation 3-26 Self-Regulation: Agencies & Associations Advertising Agencies Research and verify claims & comparative data before use Liable for misleading/fraudulent claims May use in-house legal counsel Industry-Wide Associations American Association of Advertising Agencies (AAAA) American Advertising Federation (AAF) Assoc. of National Advertisers (ANA) 3-27 Self-Regulation: AAF Principles 3-28