Belch 13e PPT Ch06 WITHCOVER

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 42

Because learning changes everything.

CHAPTER 6
Source,
Message, and
Channel Factors

© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Learning Objectives

LO6-1 Discuss the variables in the communication system


and how they influence consumers’ processing of
promotional messages.

LO6-2 Identify decision factors involved in selecting a source


for a promotional message.

LO6-3 Compare the different types of message structures


and appeals that can be used in advertising.

LO6-4 Explain how different types of channels influence the


marketing communications process.

© McGraw Hill 2
Promotional Planning through the Persuasion Matrix 1

Persuasion Matrix
• Helps marketers see how each controllable element interacts with
consumers’ response process.
• Two sets of variables:
• Independent variables: Controllable components of the communication
process.

• Dependent variables: Steps receiver goes through in being persuaded.

© McGraw Hill 3
Figure 6-1 The Persuasion Matrix

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill 4
Promotional Planning through the Persuasion Matrix 2

Decisions Evaluated with the Persuasion Matrix


• Receiver/comprehension:
• Can the receiver comprehend the ad?

• Channel/presentation:
• Which media vehicles should be used to present the advertising
message?

• Message/yielding:
• What type of message will create favorable attitudes or feelings?

• Source/attention.
• Who will be effective in getting consumers’ attention?

© McGraw Hill 5
Source Factors 1

Sources
• Person involved in communicating a marketing message.

• Direct source:

• Delivers message and/or endorses product or service.

• Indirect source:

• Draws attention to and enhances appearance of ad.

© McGraw Hill 6
Source Factors 2

Source Credibility
• Credibility:
• Expertise: Recipient sees source as having relevant knowledge, skill, or
experience.

• Trustworthiness: Recipient trusts source to give unbiased, objective


information.

• Internalization: Adopting the opinion of a credible communicator and


believing information from that source is accurate.
• May become internalized into receiver’s belief system.

© McGraw Hill 7
Figure 6-2 Source Attributes and Receiver Processing
Modes

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill 8
Source Factors 3

Source Credibility continued


• Enhanced by:
• Applying expertise.

• Applying trustworthiness.

• Using corporate leaders as


spokespeople.

In this ad, Dove promotes the fact that it


is recommended by experts in skin care.

© McGraw Hill Source: Dove by Unilever. 9


Exhibit 6-3

James Dyson is considered one of the most


effective CEO spokespersons.

© McGraw Hill Source: Dyson, Inc. 10


Source Factors 4

Source Credibility continued


• Limitations of credible sources:
• High- and low-credibility sources are equally effective when arguing
for a position opposing their own best interest.

• Sleeper effect: Persuasiveness of a message increases with


passage of time.

© McGraw Hill 11
Source Factors 5

Source Attractiveness
• Attractiveness: Characteristic that encompasses similarity, familiarity,
and likability.
• Identification: Receiver is motivated to seek some type of
relationship with a source.
• Adopts similar beliefs, attitudes, preferences, or behavior.

• If source changes position, receiver might also change.

© McGraw Hill 12
Source Factors 6
Source Attractiveness continued
• Source characteristics:
• Applying similarity. (relatability)

• Communicator and receiver with similar needs, goals, interests, and


lifestyles.

• Consumer feels empathy for person in commercial.

• Using everyday people that customers can easily identify with.

• Applying likability: Using celebrities.

• Movie stars, athletes, musicians, public figures.

• Stopping power: Draw attention in cluttered media environment.

• Enhance customer’s view of product or service image or performance.

© McGraw Hill 13
Exhibit 6-5

Most golf equipment


manufacturers have
endorsement deals
with professional
golfers, such as shown
in this ad for Srixon’s Z
Star Series golf ball
featuring pro golfer,
Hideki Matsuyama.

© McGraw Hill Source: SRI Sports Limited 14


Source Factors 7

Source Attractiveness continued


• Limitations of using celebrities:
• Overshadowing the product.

• Overexposure.

• Target audiences’ receptivity.

• Risk to the advertiser.

• Return on investment must be Under Armour recently collaborated


considered. with Dwayne Johnson to create a new
product line called “Outlaw Mana”
which features a full line of clothing
and shoes for both men and women.

© McGraw Hill Source: Under Armour, Inc. 15


Source Factors 8

Source Attractiveness continued


• Understanding the meaning of celebrity endorsers.
• Perspective on celebrity endorsement developed by Grant McCracken.
• Celebrities’ effectiveness as endorsers depends on culturally acquired
meanings they bring to endorsement.
• A celebrity brings their meaning and image into ad and transfers them
to the product.
• The meanings a celebrity gives to the product are transferred to the
consumer.
• Advertising industry refers to the cultural meaning that a celebrity
spokesperson brings as “borrowed equity.”

© McGraw Hill 16
Figure 6-3 Meaning Movement and the Endorsement
Process

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill 17
Choosing a Celebrity Endorser 1

Celebrity Factors
• Match with audience and product/brand.
• Overall image.
• Cost.
• Trustworthiness.
• Risk of controversy.
• Familiarity and likability.
• Choice between celebrity or social media influencer.
• Companies use Q-scores and other research methods.

© McGraw Hill 18
Choosing a Celebrity Endorser 2

Applying Likability Decorative Models


• Draw attention to ads with physically attractive people.
• Passive/decorative models rather than active communicators.

• Some products (for example, cosmetics) benefit since physical


appearance is relevant.

• Might not draw attention to product or message.


• Highly attractive models can have negative impact.
• Some companies undermine traditional approach to beauty care:
you’re beautiful just the way you are.

© McGraw Hill 19
Exhibit 6-10

Dove takes a social advocacy approach in promoting its beauty


products. Since 2004, Dove has run the “Campaign for Real Beauty”
which is designed to appeal to everyday women and offer a broader,
healthier, and more democratic view of beauty.

© McGraw Hill Source: Unilever 20


Choosing a Celebrity Endorser 3

Source Power
• When a source can administer rewards and punishments to a
receiver.
• Depends on source’s perceived control, perceived concern, and
perceived scrutiny.
• Compliance: To obtain favorable reaction or avoid punishment.
• Receiver accepts the source’s persuasive influence and acquiesces to
source’s position.

• Difficult to apply in advertising; more likely in personal communication.

© McGraw Hill 21
Message Factors 1

Message Structure
• Order of presentation:
• Strongest arguments presented early or late in message but not in the
middle.

• Primacy effect: Information presented first is most effective.

• Recency effect: Arguments presented last are most persuasive.

• Where to place depends on:

• Target audience’s receptivity to message.

• Length of message.

• Medium used to communicate message.

© McGraw Hill 22
Figure 6-4 Ad Message Recall as a Function of Order of
Presentation

© McGraw Hill 23
Message Factors 2

Message Structure continued


• Conclusion drawing:
• Messages should either explicitly draw a firm conclusion or allow receivers
to draw their own conclusions.

• Messages with explicit conclusions are more easily understood and


effective in influencing attitudes.

• Depends on:

• Target audience.

• Type of issue or topic.

• Nature of the situation.

© McGraw Hill 24
Message Factors 3

Message Structure continued


• Message sidedness:
• One-sided message: Mentions only positive attributes or benefits,
effective when target audience:

• Already holds a favorable opinion about the topic.

• Is less educated.

• Two-sided message: Presents both good and bad points, effective when
target audience:

• Holds an opposing opinion.

• Is highly educated.

© McGraw Hill 25
Exhibit 6-13

Volkswagen used a
two-sided advertising
message that
acknowledges the
diesel scandal as part
of an ad campaign for
electric vehicles.

© McGraw Hill Source: Volkswagen of America, Inc. 26


Message Factors 4

Message Structure continued


• Refutation:
• Refutational appeal:
Communicator presents both
sides of issue and then refutes
opposing viewpoint.

A refutational appeal was used by


SeaWorld to defend itself against
criticism by PETA and other animal
activist groups.

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill Source: SeaWorld 27


Message Factors 5

Message Structure continued


• Verbal versus visual messages:
• Pictures commonly used to
convey information or reinforce
copy or message claims.

This ad for Arrowhead Mountain Spring Water


uses a beautiful visual image of the mountains to
communicate the key product attribute of purity.

© McGraw Hill Source: Arrowhead by Nestle Waters North America 28


Message Factors 6

Message Appeals
• Comparative advertising:
• Directly or indirectly naming competitors in an ad and comparing one or
more attributes.

BodyArmor uses comparative advertising to challenge


Gatorade in the sports drink market.

© McGraw Hill Source: BA Sports Nutrition, LLC 29


Message Factors 7

Message Appeals
• Comparative advertising: continued
• So common, their attention-getting value has declined.

• Consider how comparative messages affect credibility.

• Often used to:

• Position new brands against market leaders.

• Differentiate high-profile brands in a competitive marketplace.

• Show candidate differences in political advertising.

© McGraw Hill 30
Message Factors 8
Message Appeals continued
• Fear appeals:
• Evoke emotional response to a
threat and arouse individuals to take
steps to remove threat.

• Stress physical danger.

• Threaten disapproval or social


rejection.

• Used to discourage unsafe


behaviors.

• Who advocated fear? Think.


The Ad Council uses a fear appeal to
discourage buzzed driving.

© McGraw Hill Source: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and Ad Council 31
Message Factors 9

Message Appeals continued


• How fear operates:
• Curvilinear: Message acceptance increases as amount of fear used rises
—but only to a point.

• Has both facilitating and inhibiting effects.

• Protection motivation model: Four cognitive appraisal processes mediate


the individual’s response to the threat.

• Fear appeals are more effective when recipient is:

• Self-confident and prefers to cope with dangers.

• A nonuser.

• Monotonic and positive: Higher levels of fear result in greater persuasion.

© McGraw Hill 32
Figure 6-5 Relationship between Fear Levels and
Message Acceptance

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill 33
Message Factors 10

Message Appeals continued


• Humor appeals:
• Often best known and best remembered.

• Humor used for many reasons:

• Attract and hold consumers’ attention.

• Put consumers in a positive mood.

• Distract consumer from counterarguing against the message.

© McGraw Hill 34
Message Factors 11

Message Appeals continued


• Humor appeals: continued
• Distract from brand and its attributes.

• Difficult to produce and may be too subtle.

• May experience wearout:

• Tendency to lose effectiveness when seen or heard repeatedly.

• Counter by creating “pool-outs.”

© McGraw Hill 35
Message Factors 12

Message Appeals continued


• Humor appeals: continued
• Must consider type of product or service and audience characteristics.

• More effective when involvement is relatively low.

This Volkswagen ad shows how humor can


be used effectively in a print message as the
porcupine is precisely parked to avoid
popping the goldfish bags.

© McGraw Hill Source: Volkswagen of America, Inc. 36


Channel Factors 1

Personal versus Nonpersonal Channels


• Information received from personal channels is more persuasive than
from mass media.
Effects of Alternative Mass Media
• Differences in information processing:
• Self-paced—readers process ads at their own rate and study them as long
as they desire.

• Newspapers, magazines, direct mail, and Internet.

• Externally paced—transmission rate is controlled by the medium.

• Radio and television.

© McGraw Hill 37
Channel Factors 2

Effects of Context and


Environment
• Qualitative media effect:
Influence medium has on
message.
• Media vehicle can affect
reactions to a message.

Travel + Leisure magazine creates an


excellent reception environment for
travel-related ads.

© McGraw Hill Source: Dotdash Meredith 38


Channel Factors 3

Clutter
• Amount of advertising in a medium.
• TV: All the nonprogram material that appears in broadcast environment.
(Cricket World Cup)

• Major concern among television advertisers.


• Difficult for commercials to attract and hold viewers’ attention and to
communicate effectively.

• Overload theory used to explain why clutter reduces advertising


effectiveness.

• When an individual is overloaded with too many ads at one time, the
absorption of one ad will be at the expense of another.

© McGraw Hill 39
Channel Factors 4

Clutter continued
• Advertising disengagement
• Lack of excitement, interest, attention, or involvement intended to be
aroused by an advertisement or advertising campaign.

• May have negative impact on brand relationships, commitment, brand


loyalty, message recall and effectiveness, and consumer attitudes toward
an ad.

• Trend toward shorter commercials.


• Several major networks announced they were also reducing the number of
commercials during prime time.

© McGraw Hill 40
Channel Factors 5

Clutter continued
• Clutter in online advertising
• The online environment “audience” is known as “users.”

• Users have to pay attention to the computer.

• Both a captive medium and a self-paced medium.

• Can result in ad avoidance and disengagement.

© McGraw Hill 41
End of Main Content

Because learning changes everything. ®

www.mheducation.com

© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy