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Ethics and Taste in Advertising

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In general, business people, ... Ethics in this course are related to matters of right and wrong or moral conduct pertaining to marketing communications. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethics and Taste in Advertising


1
Ethics and Taste in Advertising
  • Why should this be a significant issue of concern
    ?

2
Four Fundamental Assumptions of the Free Market
  • 1. Self Interest want more for less
  • 2. Many buyers and sellers
  • 3. Complete Information
  • 4. Absence of externalities (social costs)

3
Ethical Concerns
  • Ethical lapses and moral indiscretions can occur
    under the pressures in todays marketplace to
    generate profits.
  • In general, business people, students, customers
    know the difference between right and wrong!
  • Ethics in this course are related to matters of
    right and wrong or moral conduct pertaining to
    marketing communications.

4
Central Issues of Ethics
  • Advocacy
  • Accuracy
  • Acquisitiveness

5
Criticisms of Advertising
  • Short-term manipulative arguments
  • Focusing on style of advertising
  • Targeting Kids, Teens and the Elderly
  • Long-term macro arguments
  • Focus on the social or environmental impact of
    advertising
  • Complete information
  • Deception
  • Absence of externalities
  • Social costs

6
Targeting Kids and Teens
  • Concerns about realistic expectations and
    understanding advertising
  • Food and Beverages
  • Childhood Obesity fat, sugar, caffeine
  • Surge and Coca Cola
  • Healthful Choices (McDonalds)
  • Media choices Saturday morning TV

7
Ethics and Tobacco
  • Tobacco and Alcohol Products
  • Budweiser the fur factor
  • Cigarette products such as Dakota, Uptown and
    product placement in movies and TV

8
Targeting the Elderly
  • Susceptible to Fear ads
  • Mortality
  • Financial concerns
  • Illness and Dependence
  • Is targeting unethical, good marketing or both??

9
Ethical Issues in Advertising
  • 2/3 of Americans think advertising is often
    untruthful
  • Deceptive advertising harms consumers
  • Labeling is a tool to help reduce potential
    deception
  • Advertising is Manipulative and Makes People BUY!
  • Causes wants
  • Encourages materialism
  • Subliminal ads attempt to subvert conscious
    decisions

10
Ethical Issues in Advertising
  • Advertising Plays on Fears and Insecurities
  • Elderly and illness
  • Consequences of NOT buying a product (deodorant)
  • Advertising Creates and Perpetuates Stereotypes
  • Is advertising worse than society as a whole?

11
Ethical Issues in PR
  • Negative Publicity
  • Product Failure (real or perceived) Audi, Ford,
    Firestone
  • Product Side Effect - Vioxx
  • Product Tampering - Tylenol
  • Status Vulnerability Uptown Cigarettes

12
Ethical Issues in Packaging and Branding
  • Label Information suggests more of a
    nutritional item than actual (Hawaiian Punch)
  • Brand naming name suggests product has features
    and benefits it does not possess i.e., powerglider

13
Ethical Issues in Packaging and Branding
  • Safety Protects the product from damage
  • Packaging graphics toy appears bigger on the
    box of cereal
  • Environmental implications of packaging
  • Sales Promotion Ethics
  • Unmailed rebates
  • Consumers using coupons for unpurchased products

14
Deceptive Considerations
  • Puffery
  • If taken literally, can be perceived as deceptive
  • Generally non-product claim
  • Be all that you can be
  • Excluded from deception generally because it is
    assumed consumers do not believe it anyway!
  • Used to enhance images
  • Pepsi - the choice of the new generation

15
Puffery
  • advertising or other sales presentations which
    praise the product to be sold with subjective
    opinions, superlatives, exaggerations, or vaguely
    - generally stating no specific facts

16
Deceptive Considerations
  • Subliminal Advertising
  • A message transmitted in such a way that the
    receiver is not consciously aware of it.
  • Problems
  • Distance
  • Individual Differences (Perceptual Thresholds)
  • Effect of Recognizable Material

17
Deceptive Advertising
  • False Promises
  • Incomplete Description
  • Stating some but not all of the products
    contents
  • Solid oak furniture (only desktop solid)
  • Misleading Comparisons, visual distortions
  • False Testimonials, false demos
  • Partial Disclosures
  • Kraft cheese slices made with 5 oz. of milk but
    omit the processing loses about 2 oz. of the milk
  • Small-Print Qualifications
  • Bait and Switch
  • as defined by the courts

18
Ethics vs. Social Responsibility
  • Ethical advertising
  • Doing what is the advertiser and advertising
    peers believe is morally right in a given
    situation
  • Social responsibility
  • Doing what society views as best for the welfare
    of people in general

19
Style Considerations
  • Stereotyping
  • presenting one group in an unvarying pattern that
    lacks individuality
  • Offensiveness in Advertising

20
Racial and Ethnic Stereotypes
  • Portrayals of groups in
  • subservient or unflattering lights
  • Example
  • Southerners portrayed as dumb or hicks

21
Offensiveness in Advertising
  • What is viewed in bad taste by some is quite
    acceptable to others in other words, taste is
    subjective and individual ..
  • Taste is also affected by locale
  • European ideals of sexuality vs. U.S.
  • Advertisements more overtly sexual in Europe

22
Advertising and the Law
  • Agencies Involved
  • FTC, FCC, FDA
  • Problem Areas
  • Deceptive Advertisements
  • Misrepresent, mislead, omit
  • Bait Advertisements
  • Endorsers
  • Unfair Advertising
  • Unjustifiably injured or violate public policy
  • Inadequacy of complete disclosure or other
    externality

23
Agency Roles
  • FDA
  • Monitors drugs, cosmetics, food products
  • Labels, packaging, branding of these products its
    domain
  • Seeks complete information for consumers
  • Requires warning labels
  • Monitors terms such as low fat, fat-free,
    etc.
  • Nutritional labels

24
Agency Roles - FCC
  • Maintains jurisdiction over radio, TV, telephone,
    satellite, the Internet and the cable industry
  • Indirect impact on advertising as it enforces
    cease and desist orders
  • Monitors profanity and obscenity issues

25
First Amendment Protections
  • There is a distinction between speech and
    commercial speech in the court system
  • Twenty year history favors significant protection
    for truthful advertising under free speech, hence
    use of advertising by professionals such as
    attorneys and physicians

26
Bait Advertising
  • Attractive but insincere effort to sell something
  • Example See the Kohls or Walmart Sunday Flier
    for a great promotional price, not available when
    you get there.
  • Bait and Switch - not available and try to sell
    up!

27
Corrective Advertisements
  • If lingering effects known - cease and desist or
    consent decree not sufficient or agreed upon
  • must correct the false impression made that
    consumers use for future purposes
  • Examples Listerine, Ocean Spray

28
Guidelines to Ethical Advertising
  • Truthful no false promises
  • Substantiate Claims
  • No Visual Distortions or False Demonstrations
    (Campbells)
  • Refrain from False Comparisons
  • no bait! / small print qualifications
  • Partial disclosures
  • explicit guarantees
  • no false price claims
  • competent witnesses
  • tasteful and decent

29
Arguments against advertising to children
  • Children, especially young ones, are vulnerable
    to advertising because they lack the necessary
    experience and knowledge to understand and
    evaluate the purpose of persuasive advertising
    appeals.
  • Children cannot differentiate between commercials
    and television programs, do not perceive the
    selling intent of commercials, and cannot
    distinguish between fantasy and reality.
  • Children must be able to understand how
    advertising works and develop a skeptical or
    critical attitude to defend themselves against
    it.
  • Advertising to children is inherently unfair or
    deceptive.

Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Slide 22-2
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998

30
Arguments in favor of advertising to children
  • Advertising is a part of life and children must
    learn to deal with it as part of the consumer
    socialization process of acquiring the skills
    needed to function in the marketplace.
  • Studies have shown that children are capable of
    perceiving persuasive intent and the inability to
    perceive such intent does not necessarily lead to
    incorrect beliefs about a product.
  • Parents should be involved in helping children
    interpret advertising and can refuse to purchase
    products they feel are undesirable for their
    children.
  • Advertisers have a right under the First
    Amendment to communicate with consumers who make
    up their primary target audience

Slide 22-3
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998

31
Arguments For Advertiser Control of the Media
  • The media's dependence on advertising revenue can
    make them susceptible to advertisers because
    advertisers can influence the media by
  • exerting control over editorial content
  • biasing editorial opinion
  • limiting coverage of controversial issues

Slide 22-6
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998

32
Arguments Against Advertiser Control of the Media
  • It is in the best self-interest of the media to
    report the news fairly and accurately and not be
    perceived as biased to retain public confidence.
  • It can be argued that advertisers need the media
    more than the media need any individual
    advertiser.

Slide 22-7
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998

33
Proposed Restrictions on Use of the Internet
  • Banning unsolicited e-mail that cannot
    automatically be screened out.
  • Disclosing fully and prominently both the
    marketers identity and the use for which
    information is being gathered.
  • Giving consumers the right to bar marketers from
    selling or sharing any information collected from
    them and to review the personal information
    collected.

Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Slide 21-6
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998
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