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Role Value Of Advertising
1. The role and value of advertising What advertising CANNOT do Why do companies advertise? What are the benefits to society? What is the consumer benefit? Contributions of the marketing industry What does advertising do? www.valueofadvertising.org
8. Accountability Main Menu Cons. benefit menu Ingersoll Rand’s Kryptonite brand replaced 380,000 bike-locks after impregnable promise was shattered by a man and his pen. Source: USA Today, 18 September 2004
9. Better value proposition Main Menu Cons. benefit menu When bans on advertising were lifted in some US states, prices of eyeglasses fell by 30% to 40% thanks to public awareness and competition. Source: D. Carlton and J. Perloff, Modern Industrial Organization , 1989
10. Everyone advertises! Main Menu Cons. benefit menu The top 100 marketers account for only 20% of all media ad expenditure. Source: AdAge, 21st Annual Global Marketers, 19 November 2007; WARC, World Advertising Trends 2007 Local businesses, not-for-profit organisations, even individuals use advertising…in the classifieds, when distributing fliers for an event, or when selling products on eBay.
11. What are the benefits to society? Creativity and creative values Sports and Culture Job Creation Media pluralism Innovation Intangible assets Economic growth Main Menu
13. Intangible Assets Main Menu Societal benefits menu On average, the brand constitutes 30% of the stock-market value of listed companies. Source: Milward Brown Optimor. BrandZ: Top 100 Most Powerful Brands, 2007, pp. 3 & 26
14. Job Creation Societal Benefits Menu Main Menu US advertising plays a key role in generating 18.2 million of the 126.7 million jobs. Source: Lawrence R. Klein, The Role of Advertising in America , 1999 Societal benefits menu
15. Innovation Main Menu Societal benefits menu MP3 technology was invented in Germany, but developed and brought to market in the US.
16. Media pluralism On average, newspapers and magazines rely on advertising revenue for over 50% of their earnings. Source: SEO Economisch Onderzoek-Univ of Amsterdam, Het economische belang van reclame , Centrum voor Merk en Communicatie, 2006, pp. iii & 52 Main Menu Societal benefits menu
17. Main Menu “ No advertising at the Olympic Games but no games without advertising” Michael Payne (IOC Marketing Director 1983-2004) Sports and culture Societal benefits menu
18. Creativity and creative values Main Menu Societal benefits menu Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec was an ad guy.
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20. Contributions of the marketing industry Sustainable development Social marketing Teaching A model of responsible self regulation Main Menu
21. Advertising is the agent of social marketing, which can raise awareness, inspire action and save lives. Many national governments are among the largest advertisers. For internal use only: do not reproduce For internal use only: do not reproduce
22. Procter & Gamble’s Ariel consumers in the UK are twice as likely as the average consumer to reduce their wash temperature to 30 ° since the launch of the Ariel Cool Clean UK Campaign. Sources: ‘P&G Urges Business Leaders to Follow Green Path’, Brand Republic, 26 February 2008; P&G information: www.scienceinthebox.com/en_UK/programs/Cool_savings.html For internal use only: do not reproduce For internal use only: do not reproduce
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24. Teaching media literacy: Media Smart Contrib. of marketing menu Main Menu Materials are used in 20,000 schools across Europe, reaching 3 million students.
Hinweis der Redaktion
Slide I The role and value of advertising This presentation will consider the role and value of advertising based on the following questions: 1. What does advertising do? 2. Why do companies advertise? 3. What is the consumer benefit of advertising? 4. What are the benefits of advertising to society? 5. What advertising CANNOT do 6. What contribution does the marketing industry make?
Slide II What does advertising do? § Advertising creates awareness of the options available to us and helps us identify the products that best fit our needs. § For the purposes of this presentation, ‘products’ are intended to mean any object of an ad, including nonmaterial ‘ products’ such as services, newspaper subscriptions, holiday destinations etc.
Slide III. The desired response We can distinguish four different stages in the consumer’s choice of a product – awareness, knowledge, preference, purchase. Advertising can play a role at each of those (though not necessarily at the same time): § Awareness: ‘I remember that brand’ § Knowledge:, ‘I understand what they are offering me’ § Preference: ‘I choose this product over the competitor’. Preference can be based on both emotional and rational benefits o Example of an emotional benefit: Disney - Magic o Example of a rational benefit: Volvo - Safety § Purchase: ‘I am going to try it out/buy it again’
Slide IV. Why do companies advertise? § Advertising allows companies to match supply with demand and to build brands with clear values and personalities. § What is a Brand? One widely accepted description says: ‘If a customer can perceive that a product or service has a unique identity that differentiates it…and they can describe it and the unique set of benefits it offers, then it is a brand’. (Randall, Geoffrey. Branding, 2nd edition, Kogan Page Publishing)
Slide V. Advertiser Objectives At each of the four stages of choosing a product, companies use advertising for a distinct purpose. Advertising can: § Create awareness by establishing a product’s brand name: it is accepted as one of the choices among the consumer’s list of options; § Increase knowledge of the product by providing information on its attributes: how it works, how much it costs, where to get it etc; § Create a preference for the product by differentiating it from the competition: cheaper, higher quality, easier to use, more fun etc; § If it does its job well, advertising can ultimately be successful in convincing the consumer to buy the product.
Slide VI. What is the consumer benefit? This section looks at four ways in which advertising has a direct benefit for the consumer: § Advertising is the driver of consumer choice; § Advertising makes brands accountable to consumers; § Advertising generates a better value proposition for consumers; § Advertising is used by us all every day.
Slide VII. Advertising promotes choice § We all live different lives and have different values and needs. A product that is right for one may not be right for another. § There are many levels on which advertising can promote choice: 1. Price: advertising tells us about differences in prices for the same or comparable products. E.g. Tesco vs Aldi. 2. Quality: advertising tells us about differences in quality between comparable products. E.g. Tesco vs Marks&Spencer. 3. Taste Preferences: advertising tells us about products that best fit our own individual tastes. E.g. Tesco vs The Body Shop. 4. Convenience: advertising tells us about products that best suit our lifestyle. E.g. Tesco vs Amazon. § Companies seek to respond to these differences in values and needs. § Advertising helps them link their offering with such diverse demand.
Slide VIII. Accountability § Advertising is a public commitment. On the basis of an ad, the consumer has precise expectations about what a brand will deliver. § Through advertising, a brand establishes a ‘contract of confidence’ with its consumers. § Failure to meet the consumers’ expectations risks breaking the brand’s ‘contract of confidence’ and undermining consumer trust in the brand. § When trust is lost, consumers will easily switch to another brand. § As a result, advertising makes a brand publicly accountable. Proof-point : In 2004, the company Ingersoll Rand had to replace 380,000 of its supposedly impregnable Kryptonite brand bike locks in 21 countries after it emerged they could simply be picked with a pen. The experience cost the company $10 million – reducing the lock division’s operating margins by almost a quarter compared with the previous year.* The reason, however, was not a looming lawsuit. The company felt obliged to avoid the embarrassment of breaking the promise it had made to its customers. * Cf. USA Today, 18 September 2004; Ingersoll Rand SEC filing, 21 October 2004.
Slide IX. Better Value Proposition § Advertising enables new companies to enter into the market, and allows existing companies to differentiate themselves from their competitors. § This helps promote and stimulate competition. § Competition forces companies to keep improving the value of their products for their consumers: driving down prices and driving up quality. Proof-point: When bans on advertising were lifted in some US states, the FTC estimated that prices of spectacles fell by 30% to 40% thanks to public awareness and competition.* § Value does not have to be material – it can also be created in meeting specific tastes and preferences. *Carlton, Dennis and Jeffrey Perloff. Modern Industrial Organization, New York: 1989. pp. 602-603.
Slide X. Everyone Advertises § Not just big businesses advertise. Proof-point: The top 100 marketers account for only 20% of all media ad expenditure.* § Advertising is critical for start-ups who want to break into the market with novel products. § It is also essential for small-and-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), the backbone of any economy, to succeed. § Governments use advertising to communicate about public services and government projects, and to tackle social problems like domestic violence, drunk driving, or low disease awareness. § Civil society groups, NGOs, universities, museums, operas all advertise to showcase their events and projects. § All of us advertise when searching for jobs and houses in the classifieds, when distributing fliers for an event, or when selling products on eBay. *AdAge, ‘21st Annual Global Marketers - PART 1: Global Ad Spending by Marketer’, November 19 2007; WARC, World Advertising Trends 2007.
Slide XI. What are the benefits to society? This section looks at the numerous benefits of advertising to society: § Advertising generates economic growth and jobs; § Advertising turns innovation into products we use; § Advertising funds a pluralistic media landscape, empowering free speech in an open, democratic society; § Advertising supports cultural and sports and is a source of creativity and creative values.
Slide XII. Economic Growth § By helping businesses succeed in the marketplace, advertising is a cornerstone of a dynamic economy. § Successful companies create more jobs, pay more tax for inward investment and contribute directly to economic growth. Proof-points: Research demonstrates that there is a direct correlation between advertising and economic growth:* · There is a positive correlation between the rates of total investment in advertising and the average rate of growth in GDP (1991 to 2000) across major markets. · A higher rate of advertising investment as a percentage of GDP directly increases the rate of return on other tangible and intangible investments (e.g. R&D, product development, skills training). · Business sectors where advertising is used effectively are that those with the most dynamic market share movement and therefore those in which competition, a recognised driver of growth, is liveliest. · Those countries in which relatively little is invested in advertising are also those in which economic growth is weakest. · Sectors with a high advertising investment rate ‘over-contribute’ to growth in consumption, and therefore to economic growth. § The advertising industry itself, too, contributes disproportionately to economic growth. Proof-points : At 6.4% in 2007, the communications industry the third-fastest growing sector of the US economy.** Within the wider advertising industry added value is increasing twice as fast as in the economy as a whole.*** *5 WFA, ‘Advertising and Economic Growth’, http://www.wfanet.org/documents/3/WFA-UDA_Advertising&Economic_Growth.pdf. **Veronis Suhler Stevenson, Communications Industry Forecast 2007-2011 ***WFA, ‘Advertising and Economic Growth’, p. 28
Slide XIV. Intangible Assets § Increasingly, a country’s wealth is not based on physical assets but on its intellectual and human capital: the capacity to innovate, create concepts and produce ideas. These intangible assets are a key element of any knowledge-based economy. § Intangible assets allow national economies to remain competitive in the global market. § Brands (alongside human resources) are one of the largest intangible assets of an economy. Proof-point : On average, the brand constitutes 30% of the stock-market value of listed companies.* § Advertising builds and sustains brands, guaranteeing the promise of long-term profitability. § Countries too have their own identities and ‘brands’. We often think of particular products that come from these countries as symbolising a certain quality, taste or idea. Just imagine a ‘un-branded’ France, Japan or US. *Milward Brown Optimor. BrandZ: ‘Top 100 Most Powerful Brands 2007’, pp. 3 & 26.
Slide XV. Job Creation § Through its positive effect on economic growth, advertising helps generate jobs. Proof-point: In the US advertising plays a key role in generating 18.2 million of the 126.7 million jobs.9 § The wider advertising industry itself has a positive leverage effect on job creation. Proof-point: The ad industry’s contribution to employment growth is two to four times greater than the average for the overall economy.* *Advertising Tax Coalition, ‘Role of Advertising in America’ prepared by the WEFA Group & Nobel Prize Winner, Dr. Lawrence R. Klein, 1999.
Slide XVI. Innovation § Innovation is widely recognized as the single most important ingredient in any modern economy. § Advertising helps turn innovative ideas and technological developments – often in danger of remaining unexploited – into products we use. § Innovation on its own does not create economic value: we need advertising to make R&D investments profitable. Proof-point: The MP3 technology for playing electronic music was invented in Germany by the Fraunhofer Institut, a research body. The first patent for the technology was registered in 1989. Yet it was brought to market as a commercially viable product by US-based Diamond Multimedia in 1998. Proof-point: When Sir James Dyson launched the ‘bagless’ vacuum cleaner in the 1980s it went largely unnoticed. The breakthrough came more than ten years later, following a memorable ad campaign with the slogan ‘say goodbye to the bag’ which revolutionised the vacuum cleaner market and soon led other manufacturers to introduce their own ‘bagless’ models.
Slide XVII. Media Pluralism § Advertising funds a diverse, pluralistic media landscape. Without advertising, many of the world’s media as we know them would not exist. § By supporting multiple voices, advertising ensures diversity in the marketplace of ideas. It is essential for an open, democratic society Proof-point: On average, newspapers and magazines rely on advertising revenue for over 50% of their earnings.* § On television and radio, the huge variety of sport, drama, news and children’s programs that we have come to expect would be unthinkable without advertising. Proof-point : An estimated 94% of revenues from children’s TV advertising are directly reinvested in children’s programmes.** § Most content and technology available online is free – paid for by advertising. § ‘Advertising as an art, as a need and especially as a duty, is an integral part of the freedom of expression. It is impossible in a democracy to separate the freedom of publishing or broadcasting news, opinions or entertainment, from the freedom of advertising.’*** (Francisco Pinto Balsemao, Former Prime Minister, Portugal) * SEO Economisch Onderzoek-Univ of Amsterdam, Het economische belang van reclame, Centrum voor Merk en Communicatie, 2006, pp. iii & 52 ** Data provided by egta, Association of Television and Radio Sales Houses, 2005, www.egta.com *** He is also Chairman and CEO of Impresa SGPS and Former Chairman of the European Publishers’ Council.
Slide XVIII. Sports and culture § There is little in the world of culture and sport that we can dissociate from advertising. Advertising and sponsorship play an essential role in enabling sporting events such as the Olympic Games and the football World Cup. It also heavily subsidises the transmission of such events to a global audience. Proof-point: ‘No advertising at the Olympic Games but no games without advertising.’ Michael Payne (IOC Marketing Director 1983-2004)* § In the arts, sponsorship subsidises and pays for major exhibitions whether at the Museum of Modern Art or the Guggenheim or for performances at La Scala or the Opéra National de Paris. § Global spending on sponsorship exceeded $30 billion in 2005.** § Sponsorship also supports grassroots and community sports teams, cultural events and aspiring artists. Proof-point: Damien Hirst, today one of the most eminent contemporary artists, started his rise to fame with a student exhibition sponsored by the London Docklands Development Corporation. * Also the author of Olympic Turnaround ** European Sponsorship Association http://www.europeansponsorship.org/brochure.asp
Slide XIX. Creativity and Creative Values § Advertising plays an important role in social and art history and provides substantial work and public display for the talents of the world’s best photographers, designers, film makers, graphic artists, indeed artists of every description. Proof-point: Toulouse-Lautrec was an ad guy! § Advertising champions creative values and inspirational and innovative ideas. It supplies a constant source of wit, humour, neologisms, catch phrases and profound and provocative ideas. § Advertising also allows the creative industries to flourish.
Slide XX. What Advertising CANNOT do It is important to acknowledge the limitations of what advertising can do. § Advertising cannot convince us to buy a product against our better judgment. § Advertising cannot deliver success for product consumers do not want, or whose quality does not live up to consumer expectations. Proof-point: Research shows that 75% of new product launches fail: nothing kills a bad product like good advertising.* § Advertising cannot afford to ignore societal expectations of responsible advertising, as it would jeopardise consumers’ trust and undermine the very purpose of advertising. These expectations are recognised in the self-regulation codes which the industry sets for itself. *AMR Research Report, ‘The CIO's Guide to the PERFECT Product Launch: Translating Innovation to Business Benefit’, June 2005.
Slide XXI. Contributions of the marketing industry The marketing industry contributes directly to a better society: § Advertising helps address societal challenges through social marketing; § Advertising helps promote sustainable development; § The marketing industry ensures responsible advertising through a model of effective and responsible self regulation; § The marketing industry is actively engaged in teaching media literacy.
Slide XXII. Social marketing for a better society § Public service announcements (PSAs) have been proven to be effective in raising awareness about social issues and changing societal behaviour for the better. § Examples include reducing the casualties of road accidents by encouraging the use of seat belts, educating citizens about the risks of drunk driving, encouraging the use of hot-lines for depression, fighting domestic violence and increasing AIDS awareness. Proof-point: Many national governments are among the largest advertisers.
Advertising for Sustainable Development § Companies too are using advertising to help address societal challenges. § They are increasingly conscious that, beyond selling brands and ideas, advertising can be used to show how their products and their initiatives can help make a difference. § Advertising enables companies to differentiate themselves on basis of their ethical, environmental and social credentials. Proof-point: Procter & Gamble’s Ariel consumers in the UK are twice as likely as the average consumer to reduce their wash temperature to 30° since the launch of the Ariel Cool Clean UK Campaign.* *www.scienceinthebox.com/en_UK/programs/Cool_savings.html
Slide XIV. A model of effective and responsible industry self-regulation § The industry sets the common global standards for marketing communications in the International Chamber of Commerce Consolidated Code on Advertising and Marketing Communication Practice (2006).* § All marketing communications have to be legal, decent, honest and truthful. § Self-regulation also allows fast, free and flexible consumer protection. § It is paid for by the marketing industry at no charge to the consumer. § The advertising industry has been commended on its self-regulatory system by the European Commission.** § Governments from India to Brazil rely on the advertising industry to help ensure responsible advertising through self-regulation. Proof-point: Comprehensive, independently-verified monitoring of self-regulatory systems shows compliance rates above 95%.*** *http://www.iccwbo.org/uploadedFiles/ICC/policy/marketing/Statements/330%20Final%20version%20of%20the%20Consolidated%20Code %20with%20covers.pdf ** European Commission, ‘Self-Regulation in the EU Advertising Sector: A report of some discussion among Interested parties’, July 2006, downloaded: http://ec.europa.eu/consumers/overview/report_advertising_en.pdf *** See e.g. http://www.efrd.org/communication/docs/Monitoring%20Report%202007.pdf
Slide XXV. Teaching media literacy § Media Smart is an educational program designed to help children ages 6-11 understand and interpret advertising21. § The content and pedagogic methods are developed by independent experts. § All costs are covered by the industry. Over £4 million has already been spent on this program. § Media Smart has been endorsed by the WHO, European Commission, the UK & Dutch Governments, and teachers. Proof-point: “An expertly written resource that will encourage children to engage with the world around them at a more sophisticated level.” John Dabell, primary school teacher22 *http://www.mediasmart.org.uk/index-2.html ** Primary Choice Magazine, January 2008 § Media Smart is currently used in the UK, Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Hungary and Portugal, with more to follow. § Similar initiatives exist in other major markets. Proof-point: Today, materials are in use in 20,000 schools across Europe, reaching 3 million students.