Archive for the 'Advertising' Category

Credibility and advertising

charukesi October 13th, 2005

As I drive down to work every morning, I cross the bridge at Ghatkopar to get to the West side. On the dug up pavement I see people walking quickly with a purpose, a couple of cows seemingly without any purpose, and always a few children in the background, defecating as they squat and watch the passing traffic with interest.

On two ends of the short wall along the bridge are painted advertisements for English coaching classes. Expert from New York on one side and on the other is Hi Fi English Classes along with a painting of a man in a suit, whose face always reminds me of similar faces across the country on the doors of public toilets, saying Gentlemen / Purush (both these ads are written in English).

And I wonder every day about how many and what kind of people even see these ads. And believe them. And intuitively I know the answer- a lot of people see them and believe them - they see English as a necessary tool for social mobility.

In advertising research, apart from testing for factors like comprehension (does the consumer understand the ad and the message), relevance (of the message to the consumer), enjoyability (does the ad create interest or boredom), we also test for credibility - do people believe what the ad is saying?

The ideal situation is when people do - atleast the target consumer group - usually because the message is not entirely unbelievable (given that this is advertising we are discussing here). There are times it is obvious (even to the ‘objective’ researcher or the casual viewer) that the ad is making tall claims. In which case, the consumer is understandably put off by the ad / brand.

Yet, there are also times when consumers do not seem to notice. Or care. What is called ‘willing suspension of disbelief’.

Because they want to desperately believe.

So, when is the consumer willing to cast aside scepticism and buy the message - and the product / brand? Take a look at this matrix - and imagine the “tall claims” scenario in all four quadrants.

Credibility in advertising

Low involvement : where the pay-offs for the consumer are not so significant, either at an emotional or functional level. Nor are the trade-offs or risk factors.

High involvement : as opposed to the earlier scenario, the consumer has a lot to gain or lose - the benefits sought are significant.

Humour : where the advertising is based on a light tone - either direct humour or even satire. Like this ad for Nerolac Paints)

Serious : the communication has a tone which intends to inform and convince.

Look now at the fourth quadrant - high involvement * serious tone of communication.

I immediately think of two business areas where we have been seeing the rise of tall claims, corresponding with an increase in demand for these, and therefore almost no questions about credibility of the claims from the consumers - beauty and education.

Quickly about the first - ranging from promises to find your prince charming - yes, the same man who ‘rejected’ you just six weeks ago when you skin was a few shades darker. To the new age man who is part of the “paradigm shift” (this phrase never fails to crack me up) from ‘dark and handsome’ to ‘fair and handsome’ - in the ad, men and women go from jeering to cheering within seconds (with the latter also lustily singing hi handsome to the tone of Pepsi’s Oye Bubbly). And creams which promise ‘glowing skin’ (which attracts your husband’s attention right back to you - why rove when the wife is so beautiful) to soaps which promise ‘younger looking skin’ (so young that women much younger than you are left feeling jealous).

So people desperately want to believe.

And the second - the education business. More depressing than the first. Going back to where I started this thought chain from - the English speaking courses that have sprouted across the country. Ads for which can be found not just on the Ghatkopar flyover but on walls across the city and the whole country. An ad for such a coaching centre in Dharavi (which has the ‘distinction’ of being the largest slum in Asia) proclaims, we don’t teach, we mould. While another says change your life in thrity days. For thousands of people in India, English = a way out. A better life.

So people desperately want to believe.

The countless private engineering and dental colleges found all over suburban and small town India. The coaching classes for IIT and CAT. And even for Class X and XII. Small and large MBA institutes offering degrees that are not worth even the paper the ads are written on.

Advertising for all of them promising jobs paying lakhs, trips abroad, international faculty, cottages by the seaside, real estate on the moon… Whatever.

Promising miracles. So people desperately want to believe.

Charles Revson, the founder of Revlon cosmetics said rightly ‘In the factory we make cosmetics; in the drugstore we sell hope’

Hope - that makes people desperately want to believe the promises made by the marketing companies, the MBA institutes, the beauty parlours, the coaching centres…

Some more thoughts : from the comments to this post. Apart from english language and “higher” education, computer training centres figure prominently in the education bit - open what is called thinnai pallikoodam (literally meaning school on the verandah) in Tamilnadu with two ancient computers, and become a millionaire in thirty days - or less…

And religion. High involvement. Tall claims. Zero accountability. Hope.

Health-care. As part of the larger “beauty” business or as a separate money spinner in itself. Overnight weight reduction to smile rectification to breast enlargement. And even a cure for AIDS?

Now that there is light…

charukesi July 14th, 2005

…can we hope for more fresh air.

And better features? And better editorial content?

And yes, certainly a better Sunday newspaper as Uma MD says here (oops, her title for this post is the same as mine - can I claim I thought of it first in my mind?)

Today’s Time of India carries a full page for HT - lovely photograph of Flora Fountain all in muted greys and greens - overall stunning visual.

HT

And then this perplexing line - Starting today, see Mumbai in a new light.

See Mumbai? Are they being admirably honest and laying no claims to being a national newspaper? Or has someone tipped them off to the fact that with all that is happening in the newspaper market, Mid-day with it local Mumbaiyya timepass flavour and bindaas attitude still rules the hearts of Mumbai readers?

Or, does HT believe that what people really want is local news - international bombings and peace summits be damned - let there be supplement ?

And if that is true, then that ties in perfectly with what Dilip is saying here ?

(Personally, I am cheesed off at this upstart outsider to Bombay claiming to show me Mumbai in a new light).

Update : I just read the newspaper - the post was more about the advertisement. First reaction - why the Salman Khan tapes on front page top story - obviously they have had it for a long time now and were hoarding it for the big bang launch edition. Liked the photo feature on Mumbai. Did not like the supplements.

Will buy
Won’t buy

As of now won’t - but willing to wait and watch…

Advertising to invade textbooks

charukesi July 1st, 2005

I remember some of my most exciting moments in school were when we got free samples of new products - usually food-beverage types - I would run home proudly and show them off to friends and family… And my parents would never hear the end of it till we actually brought home the stuff in a much larger quantity than the sample. Of course, many times, the stuff lay untouched after that - like the horrendous milk-additive made with soya, the name of which I forget now…

To put this in perspective - imagine this…

Parent

Speech bubble - yes, yes, we will buy the super-sugary-soya-syrup, just stop talking about it

Thought bubble - pesky brat - what did I do to deserve this?

Marketer

Speech bubble - our super-sugary-soya-syrup is the best for growing kids - it has soya which gives strength to your bones and Vitamin x+y (whole squared) which makes your teeth brittle and cool… AND you get this free tacky plastic bottle-cap with this sample. And if you buy two packs of the ssss, you get the tacky plastic bottle free!

Thought bubble - Sucker. I lovvvvve kids…

Ah! hindsight - where was it when I was a child?

***
And where is all this heading?

To this article which says that in Canada, textbook publishers McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. have been trying to coax companies into buying advertising space in their texts. (Link through Stephen’s Web)

The article in Toronto Star describes how the publisher is pitching this idea to advertisers - “Reach a hard to get target group where they spend all their parents’ money,” says a McGraw-Hill brochure touting its planned ads. “Do you really think 18-24 year olds see those on-campus magazine ads? Do you really think they could miss an ad that is placed in a very well-respected textbook?”

The really scary thing about this is that it is not advertisers who are toying with such a thought - but the publishers who are pushing for it…

There are some sane voices against this - “Textbooks are one of the last bastions,” said Randy Stein, a partner at Grip Media Ltd., a Toronto ad agency. “There are some things that should remain pure and sacred. What’s next, university professors with logos on their blazers like NASCAR?” - but it looks like advertisers and media planners are already clapping their hands in glee at the thought of a captive - and totally malleable audience…

I tried to imagine such a situation in India - apart from marketers, will political parties also jump at this opportunity? Think : Drink Diet Pepsi and Support Saffron campaigns in your child’s civics textbook…

The last time I was so appalled was when I read about neuromarketing with children

***

Speech and thought bubbles (or balloons) is an interesting technique used in qualitative research to understand a subject’s hidden emotions and thgouhts - what is left unsaid - due to various reasons, including politeness and political correctness, often finds expression in the thought bubble…Of course, these have been used by cartoonists for many many years before qualitative researh discovered it! Read more about them here

Voices on India2

charukesi June 30th, 2005

Another view on India - Jack Yan writes in the beyond branding blog that the next revolution in motoring is likely to come from this part of the world… (I am quoting the entire post here since it is not very long…)

Ford is going to launch a replacement for the Excursion, which by my reckoning is over 19 ft long, that’s even bigger. Somehow I think this is foolish given that oil has just hit $60 a barrel. Last time the Japanese walked all over the Americans when the Arab–Israeli War took place. This time, I’m betting it’s Tata’s $2,000 car that the Indian company is planning.

Tata might not have a brand that is as well known as Toyota, and its exports have been fairly limited. But when the demand comes, it’s going to be the only place with a small, cheap mass transport that the Smart could have been but isn’t.

It’s going to be one of those cases where a great product defines or redefines a brand, just as iPod is doing for Apple. And at least its brand is already out there, in a limited way, which is more than I can say for the Red Chinese ones. Tata may well be providing the world with the next Fiat Cinquecento or Mini. And then Detroit will be wondering why it didn’t remember the lessons of the 1970s.

Oh, I’m betting the world’s next revolution in software, operating systems and computing could well come from there, too.

Update : Sambharmafia links to this article in newsweek on how Tata is a ‘uniquely Indian kind of multinational’…
****

Talking about the lessons of the 1970s, I just had to show you this ad for Volkswagen - created by Bill Bernbach for Volkswagen showing an America reeling under the rising price of gas… This entire campaign for Volkswagen has been called the greatest ad campaign of the century - and very rightly so…

Bernbach built the Volkswagen, and particularly the Beetle story at a time when anti-German sentiments were very strong in America. Couple this with the fact that the car he was selling was ugly - no getting away from that. And with these, he built not just an advertising campaign bordering on genius, but a lovable brand too… the Volkswagen Beetle…

Volkswagen

Joy is just a click away

charukesi June 28th, 2005

One minute they were all walking in line…. listlessly but in a disciplined manner nevertheless…

The next minute, as my friend and I pulled out our cameras, all hell broke loose….

And this is the result…



Bare feet and happy faces, originally uploaded by Road Blog.

Photographing children, old people and rural folks is a particularly rewarding experience - there is an innocence in their eyes as they stare into the camera, that reaches out straight to you and touches you…

What is this fascination with being a “part of the picture”? Even in cases where the person with the camera is a stranger and the subject knows that s/he is never going to see the photograph…

I remember the ad for Kodak KB10 camera which had captured this insight in a wonderful storyline…

A wedding procession… the groom asks every passerby to tke a picture for him… and every passerby in turn, wants to be included in the photograph… and finally the bridegroom is left holding the camera… taking pitcures of a bunch of strangers cramming themselves into the frame… (I have googled furiously for this ad and could not find it anywhere - if anyone remembers more about this ad or can find any link to it, please let me know…)

Pears the family soap

charukesi June 16th, 2005

Was going through some ad archives on work and found some old ads which might be potential world war material…

For a soap that is so popular - and has been for more than a century - Pears has managed some of the most politically incorrect advertising in the history of, well, advertising.

Starting with the ‘powerful enough to clean a black child’, way back in 1903 - when ‘black’ was less politically volatile - the ad intended to convey that black was unclean - and a soap that could clean black could clean anything…




pears soap

Originally uploaded by Road Blog.


And then the Happy Jappy ad in 1906 - a miniature Japanese woman squeezed into a smaller tub - and looking ecstatically happy… Happy Jappy as opposed to what - Grumpy Chinky? And the ad proudly says, for white hands….. and - the only soap used all over the civilized world - ‘developing nation’ as a term had evidently not been coined then…

From this site on japanese soap ads, …this “ethnic” image would have trumped the more staid pictures of Japanese women used by Jap Rose soap at the time. The image of the woman in a tub is authentic (except for the soap bar–the Japanese rinsed off soap before getting in the tub), similar to images in travel books. It is obviously meant to titilate by the woman’s “oriental” lack of modesty–as in the anecdotes quoted above, she seems quite ready to invite the viewer to join her in the tub. Pears in fact sometimes exploited sexual themes or innuendo (”He won’t be happy till he gets it”–a bar of soap or a kiss) and a famous early ad shows Lillian Russell naked in a bubble bath.

happyjappy

Look again at the picture and try to get titilated… And imagine squeezing into a tub that size… And now stop.

And then very recently, the Indian ad ends with the little girl peeping out from behind the soap to lisp to her mother - kuch nahi (nothing) - in answer to her mother’s question - accha aaj mein kya kapde pehnun? (what clothes shall I wear today?) - the background to this ‘perfectly innocent’ reply is the theme of the ad - which suggests that Pears is so pure it is transparent and contains nothing harmful blah blah - in short, usme kuch nahi

Innocent? Or not so innocent?

DNA - will read / won’t read?

charukesi June 14th, 2005

DNA targets August 15 launch date, unveils campaign to get advance bookings - the ‘will book’ / ‘won’t book’ hoardings are up all over Mumbai.

Sure all marketing is centred around focused targeting-positioning but I have rarely seen targeting as blatant - or non inclusive as this. Which means, advertisers never say “this not our ideal consumer” - which is what DNA seems to be doing. While the ‘Will book’ shows trendy, upscale readers, the ‘Won’t book’ shows a different kind of reader.

er, different? DNA is not yet in the market and the newspaper has already decided - this is the kind of reader we want - and this is the kind we don’t? Rather presumptuous?

Why will he book?
Will book

…. And she not?
Will not book

Or are these ads really not meant for the reader / consumer at all ? Sure the theme is you-reader-are-important-to-us-so-you-decide - the tone that competition has forced newspapers to adopt. The truth however is that newspaper (or any mainstream media vehicle) revenues come not from subscription but from advertising.

So are these ads really targeted at advertisers - look at the kind of readers we have - or hope to have?
And is anybody else offended by them as I was?

Deliver us from the darkness…

charukesi May 25th, 2005

Harini has a scathing post on the headlines Now, Mumbai to get a no-nonsense paper…. featured prominently in today’s Economic Times.
Today it is the turn of their yet to be launched tabloid (why would any group want two tabloids) the Mumbai Mirror. :) (words hers, smile mine)

“Bennett now has a good insight of exactly what readers in Mumbai want” - does this mean that so far they didn’t know what the readers of Mumbai wanted.

This reminds me of the ad / corporate slogan that Philips had come up with - let’s make things better - implying what? that things were so bad at Philips they finally decided to roll up their sleeves and do something about it…? The sad thing is, having adopted this slogan, they failed to milk it in any way - they could have used it to pitch strongly for their sense of social responsibility - we are concerned not just with making better products but also a better society… but no. A smart slogan is the key to market supremacy.

And now having cracked the ‘better’ scene, they have moved on to sense and simplicity

In the same vein is Hindustan Times’ Let there be light - are the Caucasian model types featured in the ad to deliver us from the darkness and lead us on to the light? I know there have been a lot of power cuts in Bombay but surely this is not the solution? And does anyone know if this campaign is on in Delhi as well or is HT content with leaving their strong market in the grip of darkness?

In this case, there is clearly no place for the prosumer - in a market where newspapers are vying with each other to tell the readers that it is their opinion which matters (your newspaper, your DNA), HT is sticking to the role of traditional agenda-setter…. They must have their reasons…

Incidentally, The Catholic Bishop’s Conference of India, the apex body of all catholic churches in the country, has expressed its displeasure at the way Hindustan Times has borrowed ‘Let there be light’ from the Old Testament of the Bible. Copyright issues can be rather complicated in this case…

Do you feel the way I do - that less slogan and more strategy is in order?

Which Aamir Khan is best?

charukesi May 17th, 2005

… Asks a poll in the Brand reporter

Of all the characters that Aamir Khan has played for Coke, which one is your favourite? Tapori or Hyderabadi? Punjabi Farmer or UP Bhaiyya? Nepali Guide or Bengali Babu? Manno Bhabhi or Dinu Kaka?

Go vote here

A new take on celebrity endorsements

charukesi April 23rd, 2005

I was reading this in Bombay Times this morning…. and wondering afresh why marketing companies and ad agencies waste so much money on hiring totally over-exposed and jaded (if familiar) faces to endorse their brands….

They stare down at you from huge billboards and help push products on TV ads. Amitabh Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Aishwarya Rai, Aamir, Salman and Saif Ali Khan, Akshay Kumar, Rani Mukherjee, Preity Zinta and now even Kajol, Ajay Devgan and Karan Johar have now occupied the place which once ‘officially’ belonged to models.

And then I saw this from Dilbert…

celebrity endorsement

Also read Celebrity = credibility? from a long time ago…

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