Advertising Research and Measurements - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 67
About This Presentation
Title:

Advertising Research and Measurements

Description:

The Typical Environment of the Marketing Decision Maker. Has a high ... averaged time course taken from the fusiform face-related region (Hasson et al. 2004) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:277
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 68
Provided by: new74
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Advertising Research and Measurements


1
Advertising Research and Measurements
2
Strategy is all very well, But It Pays to Give
Thought From Time To Time To the Results.
Churchill
3
Categories of research in advertising development
Category 1 Advertising Strategy Research
Category 2 Creative Concept Research
Category 3 Pretesting
Category 4 Posttesting
Before creative work begins
Before agency production begins
Before finished artwork and photography
After campaign has run
Timing
  • Product concept
  • definition
  • Target audience
  • selection
  • Media selection
  • Message element
  • selection
  • Concept testing
  • Name testing
  • Slogan testing
  • Print testing
  • TV storyboard
  • pretesting
  • Radio
  • commercial
  • pretesting
  • Advertising
  • effectiveness
  • Consumer
  • attitude change
  • Sales increases

Research problem
  • Free association
  • tests
  • Qualitative
  • interviews
  • Statement
  • comparison tests
  • Consumer juries
  • Matched samples
  • Portfolio tests
  • Storyboards test
  • Mechanical devices
  • Psychological rating
  • scales
  • Aided recall
  • Unaided recall
  • Attitude tests
  • Inquiry tests
  • Sales tests
  • Consumer attitude
  • and usage studies

Techniques
4
The Typical Environment of the Marketing Decision
Maker
  • Has a high economic value of time.
  • Makes a variety of decisions in events involving
    risk and uncertainty.
  • Is frequently faced with unpredictable events
    that have not arisen previously.
  • Operates in bureaucracy that delays research
    resources, yet demands timely and undistorted
    output.

5
Advertising Works!
I know that half of my advertising is wasted. My
problem is that I dont know which half.
John Wanamaker (1930s)
6
Advertising Effects
High
Effectiveness
Low
1
7
15
Exposure Frequency
7
Media Measurements
8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
Managers don't Need Research, They Need
Information
11
(No Transcript)
12
Storyboard (MM)
1
4
7
8
2
5
3
6
9
13
10
11
12
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Classification of Advertising Effectiveness
Measures
Communication Effects
Sales Effects
Dummy Advertising Vehicles, Consumer Jury/Focus
Groups, Theater-Type Tests, On-the-Air,
Physiological Measures Projective Techniques
Inquiry/Direct Response Market Test
Pretesting
Market Tests Measures of Past Sales
Readership Tests, Recall Tests
Posttesting
17
"The most important word in the vocabulary of
advertising is T E S T. If you pretest your
product with consumers, and pretest your
advertising, you will do well in the marketplace"
David Ogilvy
18
Characteristics of Good Copy Testing Systems
  • Testing procedure should be relevant to the
    advertising objectives.
  • In advance of each test, researchers should
    agree on how the results will be used.
  • Multiple measures should be used.
  • The test should be based on some theory or model
    of human response to
  • communication.
  • The testing procedure should allow for more than
    one exposure to the advertising,
  • if necessary.
  • In selecting alternate advertisements to include
    in the test, each should be at the
  • same stage in the process as the test ad.
  • The test should provide controls to avoid biases.
  • The sample used for the test should be
    representative of the target sample.

19
Methods for Pretesting Ads /2
  • Broadcast Advertising
  • Central location projection test Respondents
    see test commercial films in a central location
    like a shopping center.
  • Trailer test Respondents see TV commercials in
    trailers at shopping centers and receive coupons
    for the advertised products a matched sample of
    consumers just get the coupons. Researchers
    measure the difference in coupon redemption.
  • Theater test Electronic equipment enables
    respondents to indicate what they like and
    dislike as they view TV commercials in a theater
    setting.
  • Live telecast test Test commercials are shown
    on closed circuit or cable TV. Respondents are
    interviewed by phone and/or sales audits are
    conducted at stores in the viewing areas.
  • Sales experiment Alternative commercials run in
    two or more market areas.

20
Methods for Pretesting Ads /3
  • Physiological Testing
  • Pupilometric device Dilation of the subjects
    pupils is measured, presumably to indicate the
    subjects level of interest.
  • Eye-movement camera The route the subjects
    eyes traveled is superimposed over an ad to show
    the areas that attracted and held attention.
  • Galvanometer Measures subjects sweat gland
    activity with a mild electrical current
    presumably the more tension an ad creates, the
    more effective it is likely to be.
  • Voice-pitch analysis A consumers response is
    taped and a computer used to measure changes in
    voice pitch caused by emotional responses.
  • Brain-pattern analysis A scanner monitors the
    reaction of the subjects brain.

21
Illustration Message Research Methods
  • Measures of recognition and recall
  • Starch Readership Service (magazines)
  • Bruzzone tests (TV)
  • Burke day-after recall (TV)
  • Measures of emotion
  • The warmth monitor
  • Market Facts TRACE
  • BBDOs Emotional measurement System
  • Measures of physiological arousal
  • Psychogalvanometer
  • Pupillometer
  • Voice-pitch analysis (VOPAN)
  • Measures of persuasion
  • ASI theater testing
  • ARS laboratory testing
  • Measures of sales response (single-source
    systems)
  • IRIs BehaviorScan
  • Nielsens SCANTRACK

22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
Measures of Recognition Recall
Recognition Recall
  • Starch readership service

26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
.

Arthur Jones/ Medical Industries
31
Methods of Obtaining Feedback on the Effect
Process
Effectiveness Tests
Steps in Persuasion Process
Exposure
Circulation Reach
Listener,Reader, Viewer Recognition
Attention
Comprehension
Recall, Checklists
Brand Attitudes, Purchase Intent
Message Acceptance
Retention
Recall over time
Inventory, Point-of-Purchase, Consumer Panel
Purchase Behavior
32
Simplifies Rating Sheet For Ads
(Simmones Advertising Measures)
(Attention), How well does the ad catch the
readers attention? _20 (Read-through) How
well does the ad lead the reader to read
further? _20 (Cognitive) How clear is the
central message or benefit? _20 (Affective)
How effective is the Particular
appeal? _20 (Behavior) How well does the ad
Suggest follow-through action? _20
Poor Mediocre Average Good
Great ad ad ad
ad ad
33
(No Transcript)
34
Measures of Physiological Arousal
Physiological Arousal
  • Pupillometer - measures pupil dilation
  • Psychogalvanometer - measures galvanic skin
    response
  • Voice-Pitch Analysis (VOPAN)
  • Eye-Tracking
  • Brain- Waves

??????/????? ?????? 3
35
(No Transcript)
36
Diagram of path followed byEye-Tracking Camera
Eye Camera
Computer
Scene Camera
37
(No Transcript)
38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
42
(No Transcript)
43
(No Transcript)
44
(No Transcript)
45
  • SalesBrain Approach
  • The Three Parts of the Brain
  • -The New Brain thinks. It processes rational
    data and
  • shares its deductions with the other two parts
    of the brain.

  • -The Middle Brain feels. It processes emotions
    and
  • gut feelings and also share its feelings with the
    other
  • two brains.


  • -The Old Brain decides. It takes input from the
    other
  • two brains but it controls the decision making
    process.
  • Once you know that the true decision-maker is the
    old brain,
  • Your entire sales and marketing strategy should
    apply completely
  • Different marketing communication principles in
    order to be impactful.


46
Stimuli to reach the old brain
47
Measuring Internet Advertising Effectiveness
Two general Approaches
1. Site-Centric - Measurements from site.
Data is obtained from site owners. 2.
User-Centric -Measurement from the individual
user. Data is obtained from a surfers
sample (Panel) - from their own PC.
48
If You Can't Measure it,
You can't manage it !
49
Single-Source Data
Defined...
Single-Source Data are store or home electronic
measurements of purchase behavior for the same
household, usually linked to TV exposure (e.g.,
via people meters)
50
Single Source Data - Instore Scanning
Retailer HQ
T.V. Data
Stores
Scan Data
(People Meter)
Researcher HQ (Nielsen, IRI)
RS6000
Data Cleansing
Market Data
51
Single Source Data - Home Scanning
Retailer HQ
T.V. Data
Homes
Scan Data
(People Meter)
Researcher HQ (Nielsen, IRI)
RS6000
Data Cleansing
Market Data
52
Benefits of Scanning Data
  • More Robust Data
  • Weekly (daily)store level data
  • UPC/EAN level reporting
  • Demos Vals
  • Variety (e.g, volume quantities purchased)
  • Large sample (panel)
  • Timely Data
  • Real time data
  • Faster data updates
  • Proactive vs. reactive measures
  • Higher Quality Data
  • Measurement under more natural conditions
  • Improves Mktg. Mix Understanding
  • More measures
  • Casual data (vs. controlled experiments)
  • Application
  • how advertising works
  • copy testing
  • media planning
  • promotion effectiveness
  • retailing support system
  • longitudinal analysis

53
Single-Source Data
Disadvantages
  • Problems with non UPC coded products
  • Sample limitation
  • Need advanced analysis software
  • Might limit some implications
  • Need store/chain cooperation
  • for store scanning (not home scanning)
  • retail tracking systems
  • Data stability not yet determined
  • Need some complimentary data
  • especially, media (radio, outdoors, etc.)
  • Cost (?)

54
Single-Source Data
For Promotion Effectiveness (Blattberg Neslin,
1995)
Optimal promotion occurrences
Optimal promotion incentives
Last purchase effect on loyalty
Last purchase effect on promotion responsiveness
Related to personal and demographic
characteristics
55
(No Transcript)
56
Single Source Data - Decision Support Systems
Stores
Decision Support Software
Market Data
Weekly Scan Data
Adv./Promotion Casual Data
57
Use the worlds best advertising techniques...
Let your customers do the talking !
58
Back to the Future
59
The future of Advertising
  • Rapid increase in number of outlets
  • Broadcasting to narrowcasting to relationship
    marketing
  • Role of traditional agencies is up in the air
  • division of functions creates new competition
  • changes in compensation
  • increasing need to integrate advertising with
    other marketing elements (IMC)
  • need for new skills (advertising strategysts)

Future trends
60
Successful direct mailing requires availability
of computer databases and addressability Direct
Advertising does not deal with customers as a
mass Creates individual relationships with
customer
61
Customer Lifetime Value
  • The net present value of the profit that a
  • company stands to realize on the average
  • new customer during a given number of
  • years

62
Customer Lifetime Value
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4
Year 5
Revenue A Customers
1,000 400 180 90
50 B Retention Rate
40 45 50
55 60 C Average yearly sales
150 150 150
150 150 D Total Revenue
150,000 60,000
27,000 13,500 7,500 Costs E Gross
Profit 50
50 50 50
50 F Total Costs
75,000 30,000 13,500 6,750
3,750 Profits G Gross Profit
75,000 30,000 13,500
6,750 3,750 H Discount Rate
1 1.2
1.44 1.73 2.07 I NPV
Rate 75,000
25,000 9,375 3,902
1,812 J Cumulative NPV
75,000 100,000 109,375 113,277
115,088 K Lifetime Value (NPV) per Customer
75.00
100.00 109.38 113.38 115.09
63
A Fully-Connected Consumer World
Store
Air
Travel
Office
Home
Car
Factory
64
Powering toward the future
  • The use of powerful, bright colors and more sex
    and nudity in print advertising will be part of
    print advertising in the next century, according
    to Roper Starch Worldwide, Mamaroneck, N.Y.
    Ropers 10 print advertising predictions for the
    next century were drawn from analyzing trends of
    ads in the Starch database, which includes about
    2 million ads.
  • An explosion of color
  • A profusion of black and white advertising
  • Simplicity in, complexity out
  • More dramatic ads
  • Greater emphasis of benefits
  • More sexiness and nudity
  • Business to business ads will improve
  • Technology ascending but not intruding
  • Renewed interest in unified campaigns
  • Increasing demand for accountability

65
Remember
Stop Exercising, and you will lose
conditioning and probably gain weight.
Remember!
Stop Advertising, and your brand likely will lose
some of its equity and market share as well!
66
Advertising Repetition and Product Extinction
100
Reinforcement
Forgetting
50
Extinction
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Number of repetitive exposures over time
67
The Best Advertisement is A Satisfied Client
Duane Collins CEO, Parker-Hannafin
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com