Title: Source, Message and Channel Factors
1Source, Message and Channel Factors
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2The Communications Process
Noise
3Source Attributes andReceiver Processing Modes
4Source Credibility
- Credibility is the extent to which the recipient
sees the source as having relevant knowledge,
skill, or experience and trusts the source to
give unbiased, objective information. - Internalization
- Two dimensions expertise and trustworthiness.
5Source Credibility
- Applying expertise
- Oral-B ????????????
- Extra??????????????
- Applying trustworthiness
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- Using corporate leaders as spokespeople
- ?????????LG
6Celebrities Sell Out
- Dont want fans to think theyve sold out.
- Examples
- Meg Ryan cosmetics and tea
- Brad Pitt canned coffee and blue jeans
- Demi Moore protein drink
- Harrison Ford Kirin beer
- Stars Fascination, Culture, International
7Limitations of Credible Sources
- High-Credibility ? Asset and Low-Credibility ?
Liability ? - Audiences position
- Sleeper effect the persuasiveness of a message
increases with the passage of time.
8Source Attractiveness
- Attractiveness encompasses similarity,
familiarity, and likability. - Identification
- Two dimensions similarity and likability.
9Source Attractiveness
- Applying similarity
- Applying likability using celebrities
- Applying likability decorative models
10Applying Similarity
- Similarity resemblance between the source and
the receiver of the message. - Similar people or situations
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- ???B
- ???????
11Likability
- An affection for the source as a result of
physical appearance, behavior, or other personal
traits.
12Using Celebrities
- Nearly 20 of all TV commercials feature
celebrities. - Tiger Woods, Michael Jordan, Brittany Spears.
- Stopping power
13Dell Computer uses its founder and CEO as an
advertising spokespeson
14Pepsi used pop star Brittany Spears as an
endorser for several years
15Using Celebrities
- Overshadowing the product
- Overexposure
- Target audiences receptivity
- Knowledge, attitude
- Endorsed by no one New Balance.
- Risk to the advertiser
- Pepsi Mike Tyson, Michael Jackson, Madonna
16Decorative Models
- Physically attractive communicators generally
have a positive impact and generate more
favorable evaluations of both ads and products
than less attractive models. - Gender appropriateness and relevance to the
product - An attractive model facilitates recognition of
the ad but does not enhance copy readership or
message recall.
17Source Power
- A source has power when he or she can actually
administer rewards and punishments to the
receivers. - Compliance
18Message Structure
- Order of Presentation
- Conclusion Drawing
- Message Sidedness
- Refutation
- Verbal versus Visual Messages
19Order of Presentation
- Primacy effect information presented first is
most effective. - Recency effect the last arguments presented are
most persuasive. - Most effective sales presentations open and close
with strong selling points and bury weaker
arguments in the middle.
20Message Recall and Presentation Order
21Conclusion Drawing
- In general, messages with explicit conclusions
are more easily understood and effective in
influencing. - Open-ended ads were more effective than
closed-ended arguments that did include a
specific conclusion but only for involved
audiences. - Factors involvement, education, the type of
issue or topic, the nature of the situation,
complexity.
22Message Sidedness
- One-sided message mention only positive
attributes or benefits. - Two-sided message present both good and bad
points. - Factors education, audiences attitude.
23Refutation
- The communicator presents both sides of an issue
and then refutes the opposing viewpoint. - Build attitudes that resist change and must
defend against attacks or criticism of their
products or company.
24Verbal versus Visual Messages
- Visual images are often designed to support
verbal appeals. - Pictures increase both immediate and delayed
recall of product image.
25(No Transcript)
26Message Appeals
- Comparative Advertising
- Fear Appeals
- Humor Appeals
27Comparative Advertising
- The practice of either directly or indirectly
naming competitors in an ad and comparing one or
more specific attributes. - Recall, Brand attitudes, Purchase intension,
Credibility. - For brand which is new or with small market share.
28Political Ads
- Voters often tend to weight negative information
more heavily than positive information when
forming impressions of political candidates. - The use of attack advertising by politicians
can result in negative perceptions of both
candidates.
29Fear Appeals
- The relationship between the level of fear in a
message and acceptance or persuasion is
curvilinear. - Facilitating effects
- Inhibiting effects
- Example ????, ?????, ???
30Fear Appeals and Message Acceptance
31The Protection Motivation Model
- Information
- Perceived probability
- Perceived ability
32Humor Appeals
- Attract consumers attention.
- Create positive mood.
- Distract consumers from brands and attributes.
33Do Humorous Ads Wear Out Too Fast?
- Two opposing opinions.
- Solution humorous campaigns consisting of many
different commercials. - BRAHMA Beer 1, 2
- PILOT 1, 2
34Channel Factors
- Personal versus Nonpersonal Channels
- Effects of Alternative Mass Media
- Effects of Context and Environment
- Clutter
35Personal versus Nonpersonal Channels
- Personal channel is more persuasive
- Flexible
- Personal
- Powerful
36Effects of Alternative Mass Media
- Differences in Information Processing
- Using Strategy
37Effects of Context and Environment
- Qualitative Media Effect
- Consumers reaction positively or negatively.
- Aylesworth MacKenzie process more or less
systematically - central route ? positive program
- peripheral route ? negative program
38Clutter
- The problem of clutter
- Magazine ? 1/2
- TV ? 1/4
- Radio ? 1/5 1/6
- Junk mail
- Solutions
- Shorter commercial
- Humor, celebrity spokespeople, or novel, creative
approaches