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Discourse Analysis in Advertising and Marketing

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I plan today to talk about some examples of how I've tried to apply DA ... Potter, J. and Wetherell, M. (1987) Discourse and Social Psychology, Routledge. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Discourse Analysis in Advertising and Marketing


1
Discourse Analysis in Advertising and Marketing
  • I plan today to talk about some examples of how
    Ive tried to apply DA principles in advertising
    and marketing research. I wont be focussing on
    methodological detail but will set out some of
    the assumptions that inform my particular take
    on DA.

2
DA some assumptions
  • I see DA as part of a group of interpretive
    approaches that focus on the production of social
    life through language and social practice. The
    analytical emphasis falls on structure, function,
    and variation in social texts.
  • Potter, J. and Wetherell, M. (1987) Discourse and
    Social Psychology, Routledge.

3
Related approaches
  • Related approaches (I would argue) include
    narrative analysis, some phenomenological
    studies, and studies of rhetoric in marketing. DA
    is one dimension of a turn to
    theoretically-informed interpretation of
    qualitative data that has developed in marketing
    and management research.

4
Published DA studies in marketing.
  • Uses of overt sexuality in advertising
  • Uses of advertising by adolescents
  • Advertising management and creative development
  • Young peoples social identity and consumption of
    branded alcohol ESRC study
  • Advertising textual analysis Cook, G. (2002) The
    Discourse of Advertising, Routledge, 2nd Edn.

5
Critical DA Language and power in management
  • ..language and communicative action produce and
    reproduce the world-taken-for-granted thereby
    giving priority to certain (unrecognised)
    interests and presenting social reality as
    natural and given
  • Alvesson, M. and Willmott, H., 1992, Critical
    Management Studies, Sage, p. 16

6
Three studies
  • 1. Advertising agency management
  • 2. Implicit models of the consumer
  • 2. The discourse of marketing management text
    books

7
Data gathering in agencies
  • I asked ad professionals to explain what they did
    and give me examples. The transcribed interviews
    were supplemented by ethnographic context to
    ground indexicality.
  • Informal observation, field-notes, email and
    telephone conversations, supporting documents
    e.g. agency publications, internal documents

8
Study 1 British Journal of Management
  • In accomplishing their professional positioning
    and accounting for their own actions and
    reasoning in their work, interviewees seemed to
    draw on several important (and mutually
    supporting) interpretive repertoires. The
    agency is highly successful.

9
The corporate way
  • This repertoire produced the speaker as a solid
    corporate citizen rather than a maverick (we do
    things this way here.
  • The agency doesnt approve of that system
  • account managers here contribute a lot to the
    planning process
  • ..people here are twenty times cleverer than
    other agencies..

10
  • the culture here is very different to the BBC,
    less hierarchical, more articulatea place where
    people think through issues in great detail (an
    account manager)
  • There isa very intellectual approach to
    creativity, not just creativity for its own sake
    (a creative)

11
Intellectual contingency
  • This repertoire created space for much variation
    in accounting (justifying, describing) while not
    undermining the notion of a corporate ethos of
    creating advertising. It was evident in a highly
    qualified and imprecise style of accounting,
    punctuated by constant pauses and strategic
    vagueness (BJM p.241).

12
Strategic Imperative
  • This repertoire justified particular actions in
    terms of an overarching strategy
  • all the way through the process when everyone
    was being really wobbly...I was always able to
    bring back the debateto a really commonsense
    view of what we had to communicate (account
    planner)

13
Variation in accounting
  • indispensible contribution of research.. (from
    an agency booklet)
  • ..we have to have a consumer perspective.. from
    an account person
  • this agency approach is very thinking and
    analytical
  • the proposition has to encapsulate the brief..

14
Positioning strategies
  • ..we hate research.. (from a creative)
  • proposition..I mean, for a start, its a silly
    word isnt it? It encourages people to be really
    precious and often just takes people away form
    being really commonsensical.
  • well, yeh, were supposed tobut Im not very
    good at thatno reason for it.

15
Study 2 International Journal of Advertising
  • Interviewing professionals in several agencies I
    began to think that implicit working assumptions
    seemed powerful in framing the way that people
    oriented themselves to the task of advertising.
    In particular, they seemed to have different
    ideas about the consumer.

16
Implicit models of the consumer
  • In DA terms professionals in different roles
    seemed to account for actions in terms of
    differing implicit models of the consumer. These
    models informed their working practices. I
    characterised these models as android, poet and
    cave-dweller.

17
Consumers as androids
  • The account manager seemed to see the consumer in
    terms of an information-processing entity driven
    by economic rationality and motivated by
    communications that offered persuasive economic
    reasons to purchase.

18
Consumers as poets
  • The account planners seemed to feel that
    consumers were like poets, seeking meaning in
    their lives and motivated by communications that
    reflected their own lived experience and desire
    for symbolic transformation.

19
Consumers as cave-dwellers
  • Creative professionals seemed to see consumers as
    busy, inattentive entities living mundane lives
    who can be motivated to consume by aesthetic and
    emotional themes in advertising inspiration, not
    information, persuasion or even meaning, was the
    key issue.

20
Study 3 Journal of Management Studies
  • The JMS study focussed on written rather than
    spoken text and explored the deployment of
    ideological rhetoric to produce a sense of unity,
    consensus and authority in marketing management
    text books.

21
The marketing text producing consensus, unity
  • marketers manage demand and build profitable
    customer relationships
  • marketing is the establishment of mutually
    satisfying exchange relationships

22
  • marketing...is more than a business function- it
    is a philosophy that guides the entire
    organisation (creating) customer satisfaction
    profitably
  • We are all customers now

23
Ideological-rhetorical strategies
  • Binary of theory/practice
  • Marketing texts both aggrandise theory and
    despise it to produce a sense of practical
    authority
  • JMS passage on p.1332

24
References
  • We Are All Customers Now Rhetorical Strategy
    and Ideological Control in Marketing Management
    Texts, Journal of Management Studies (Vol.40,
    No.5, pp.1325-1352 June, 2003)
  • How divergent beliefs cause account team
    conflict, International Journal of Advertising
    The Quarterly Review of Marketing Communications
    (2003) Vol.22, No.3, pp. 313-332.
  • Silent Running tacit, discursive and
    psychological aspects of management in a top UK
    advertising agency, (2000), British Journal of
    Management, Vol. 11, Iss. 3, pp.239-254.
  • Doing Research Projects in Marketing, Management
    and Consumer Research, London, Routledge
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