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The response to advertising

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Reassuringly expensive... Consumer Behaviour and Food Marketing AEB 41 ... 'Stella Artois has used the same Reassuringly Expensive' slogan for over 20 years ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The response to advertising


1
The response to advertising
  • Week 9 7 March 2003

2
Methods for measuring advertising response
  • Qualitative research
  • Focus group, personal interview
  • Little relevance
  • Experiments
  • Are they realistic?
  • Surveys
  • More value when data are collected at intervals
  • Links with demographic characteristics
  • Consumer panel data
  • Change over time (panellists diary, home scan)
  • Econometric analysis
  • Data fusion
  • Combining data from two sources using common
    elements, e.g. purchase with TV viewing through
    consumer viewing habits

3
IRI BehaviorScan
  • Cable tv checkout scanner very accurate
    measure of response to advertising
  • IRI BehaviorScan in the 1980s
  • Poor off-air TV transmission and relevance of
    cable TV
  • IRI can control (switch) the advertisement for
    each individual (consenting) household
  • Local stores are equipped with IRI scanners
  • Purchases are associated with households through
    identification card
  • Marketing mix variables (prices, deals) are also
    recorded
  • GFK Behaviorscan in Europe (France and Germany)

4
Limits of IRI BehaviorScan
  • Household owning more than a TV set (one not
    scanned)
  • Out of town shopping
  • Is the isolated community representative of the
    US?
  • Tests limited to commercially advantageous
    studies and big brands (they are expensive)
  • Trade response is not taken into account
    (retailers stock advertised goods)
  • Competitor response is not considered
  • There is no market validation ads that are
    perceived as weak do not enter the nationwide
    market

5
Nielsen home scan
  • Home scanned panels
  • National samples
  • No experimentation
  • Link with television viewing data

6
Store level data
  • Sales extracted from checkout data
  • Aggregate sales by brand and variety
  • Nielsen ScanTrack
  • IRI Infoscan

7
Sales response
Spontaneous or assisted advertising recall
Advertising effort (expenditure, pressure)
?
Advertising awareness
Purchase
8
Effects of advertising
  • Direct effects
  • Price support
  • Sales support
  • Indirect effects
  • Increases consumption from stock, future purchase
  • Increases retailer demand, opportunity to
    purchase, sales
  • Improves targeting, reducing costs
  • Restrains market entry by competitors, which may
    raise sales and margins

9
Price support
  • Limited supply
  • Advertising raises price by raising demand
  • Unconstrained supply
  • Increased acceptability of brand price
  • Price premia due to brand name

10
Reassuringly expensive
11
From the web site
  • Stella Artois has used the same Reassuringly
    Expensive slogan for over 20 years but in that
    time only five adverts have been made.

12
how much does it cost?
  • On blind tests Stella is not significantly
    preferred
  • In Britain it is premium priced
  • The price premium is estimated at 7.5 (Baker,
    1993)
  • Larger turnover finances the adspend

13
Sales support
  • In mature markets competition is on market
    shares, not total product sales
  • Advertising can be necessary just to defend a
    companys own market share
  • Advertising has usually a modest impact (brand
    loyalty)
  • Some numbers from IRI tests (293 cases)
  • Considering a 50-100 increase in adspend, 49 of
    the companies experienced an increase in the
    volume of sales (23 on average)
  • Only in 20 of the tests the increase in adspend
    was justified by a sufficient increase in profits
  • Half of the tests had no effects ineffective
    ads? Competitors reaction?

14
Increasing consumption from stock
  • Goods kept in home (cereals, canned soups, tea)
  • Increased consumption leads to further sales

15
Supporting distribution
  • It is rare that loyalty leads to refusing an
    alternative when favoured brand is unavailable
  • Availability on shelf
  • Distribution increases are reported in relation
    to advertising effects

16
Supporting promotions
  • Synergy between ads and promotions joint effect
    is larger than the simple sum of the two effects
  • Strong effects of in-store advertising
  • Point-of-sale discounts (coupons) act
    sinergistically with advertising

17
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18
Improving targeting
  • Communicating with the right groups and
    discouraging those who are unsuited to the
    product will reduce costs (e.g. enquiries to
    staff)
  • Especially for expensive goods and for elite
    stores

19
Restraining market entry
  • Big brands advertise more, but maybe spend a
    lower proportion of sales profits
  • Economies of scale
  • Customer retention
  • Trade commission (e.g. US) see excessive
    advertising as a restraint of trade

20
Advertising and price elasticity
  • Despite higher prices, heavy advertising seems to
    lead to lower price elasticity, especially for
    fast moving consumer goods
  • Hamilton et al. article (1997)

21
Advertising and consumer response
  • Unique Selling Proposition (USP) a marketing
    claim based upon a distinctive product feature or
    unique element in the marketing mix
  • A good ad is one that successfully implants
    knowledge about USP (Reeves, 1961)
  • Too cognitive approach?
  • For fmcg there are just one or two salient
    attributes

22
Effect sequential models AIDA (19th Century)
Attention
Interest
Desire
Action
23
Lavidge and Steiner (1961)
Awareness
Knowledge
Liking
Preference
Conviction
Purchase
24
DAGMAR model(Colley, 1961)
Awareness
Comprehension
Conviction
Action
25
Conversion and reinforcement
  • Problems in sequential models
  • They are not appropriate for repetitive
    advertising of established brands
  • Not appropriate for repeat purchase and full
    awareness
  • Ehrenberg theory (1974)
  • Advertising to retain consumers
  • Quality to retain consumers

26
Ehrenberg ATR model
Awareness
Before purchase
Trial
Advertising
Reinforcement
After purchase
Repeat purchase
27
Leaking bucket approach
  • Customers do switch brand, so a brand can attract
    non-customers to replace the ones it is losing
  • Offensive function of advertising
  • Defensive function of advertising

28
Rossiter and Percy (1997)Buyer response sequence
Exposure
Processing
Involvement
Communication effects in relation to brand
positioning
Target audience action
29
Involvement and information processing
  • Different levels of involvement lead to a
    different way in processing ads
  • High involvement decisions are more consistent
    with sequential models
  • Low involvement purchases are more related to
    reinforcement models

30
Batra and Ray classification
  • Three types of response to advertising
  • Low involvement process, the ad affects brand
    salience and increase purchase disposition (no
    prior change in attitudes)
  • High involvement process following the Theory of
    Planned Behaviour (belief, attitudes, intentions,
    actions)
  • High involvement sequence (dissonance-attribution)
    , behaviour first change and then there are
    changes in attitudes and beliefs

31
Elaboration-likelihood model
  • Petty and Cacioppo (1983,1985)
  • Persuasion is more likely to occur when people
    need to review the arguments (supporting or
    contrasting them) rather than with ready-made
    arguments
  • Central route to persuasion
  • Elaboration
  • Long-lived and resistant changes
  • Predictive of future behaviour
  • Peripheral route
  • Association of feelings and response to cues
  • No arguments generated (future change more
    likely)
  • Involvement increases elaboration

32
The five communication objectives (Rossiter
Percy)
Category need
Brand awareness
Brand attitude
Advertising
Brand purchase intention
Purchase facilitation
33
Category need
  • Arousing need
  • Connections between audience values and product
    category
  • Good association also with the brand

34
Brand awareness
  • Recall or recognition?
  • Recall category brand
  • Recognition brand category
  • It depends on purchasing context
  • Recall products bought via intermediaries
    Courier service, radio stations
  • Recognition the visual part is relevant
    (supermarket) Packaged foods (conjoint
    analysis)

35
Brand attitude
  • Some brand names are well known despite a bad
    attitude towards them
  • Better attitudes may be achieved by advertising
    how the product meets specific needs

36
Purchase intention
  • Advertising can generate a purchase intention by
    instructing consumers how to buy
  • E.g. times and places which can become cues to
    buy when the consumer finds himself in such
    situation

37
Purchase facilitation
  • How much does it cost?
  • Where can you buy it? (Store)
  • How can I pay? (e.g. diluted payments, on-line
    purchase)

38
Securing attention
  • Not only grabbing attention, but also remaining
    on the subject
  • Arousal
  • Relevant information
  • Attitude change

39
Image meaning and culture
  • Framing (schemata, heuristics) are important
  • Music, communication ads as art
  • Advertising is culturally (socially) situated
  • Long-lived shared meanings
  • Transnational advertising must rely on basic
    ideas to be cross-cultural

40
Ads classification
  • Credibility
  • Stimulation
  • Taste
  • Empathy
  • Clarity
  • Attracting attention
  • Involving

41
FCB classification grid(Foote, Coone, Belding)
42
Percy-Rossiter grid
Type of motivation
Informational (-)
Transformational ()
Low involvement
Type of decision
High involvement
43
Sales effects over time
S Shaped (unfamiliar products)
Sales
Concave (mature brands)
Threshold frequency
0
1
2
3
Number of exposures
44
Implication of scheduling and media
  • If the curve is concave, burst advertising
    strategy is questionable
  • Burst is appropriate for new products (S-shape?)
  • It is more effective to spread adspend across
    media (more coverage, fewer exposure, defer
    saturation)
  • Media multiplier effect
  • However, it can be more expensive
  • Message change to overcome habituation

45
Effects in the longer term
  • 90 of the extra sales tend to occur in the first
    3-9 months of the advertisement
  • 50 are made in the first 1-3 months

46
Responsiveness to advertising
  • Which brands are worth to be advertised?
  • Size of the user group
  • Large number of purchase occasions
  • Leading brands
  • Frequently purchased goods
  • Proportionate loyalty
  • Advertising in different loyalty segments
    (especially those at 50-70 level)
  • New products
  • Novelty effects
  • Flexibility of total category consumption
  • Food categories can gain against others (e.g.
    fish/meat)

47
Ads or sales promotion?
  • Discounts favour
  • Stock/staff management
  • Better returns than media advertising
  • Media advertising favour
  • Extra sales
  • In the short or long term?
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