What Is Advertising?
Using skillful
means, the creativity in advertising is able to encourage potential
customers
to purchase the product or service which is at the centre of the
advertising campaign.
Advertisements
are created to generate interest in the product. As soon as interest
has been
attained, it is therefore much easier initiate increased consumption of
the
product or service. This is done by means of enhancing the image of the
brand,
which is a symbolic representation of everything connected to the
company,
product or service.
A brand often
includes an explicit logo, or emblem, with colour schemes, symbols and
sounds
which may be developed to represent implicit values, ideas, and even
personality. The key objective is to create a relationship of trust.
The
natural extension of a brand’s image is that of loyalty to the brand which been proclaimed by some to
be the
ultimate goal of marketing.
In marketing
terms, brand loyalty is consistent with the consumer's willingness to
repurchase the brand, not just on one occasion, but in a systematic
manner.
This can be demonstrated by the repeated purchase of a product or
service, or
by other behavioral patters, such as word of mouth endorsement. What
may be
defined as true brand loyalty is the implication that the consumer is
prepared,
at least some of the time, to forgo their own desires in the interest
of the
brand.
In the past,
television and radio were the established methods of reaching the
consumer.
However, times and tastes change, and it is now the age of the
internet, which
has now assumed the mantle of choice.
The main vehicle
for controlling advertising campaigns is the advertising agency which
is a
service business dedicated to creating, planning and handling
advertising, or
promotion as it is sometimes called, for its clients. Accordingly,
without any
conflicts of interest, it can handle the overall marketing, branding
and sales
promotion for its clients.
Advertisements
are seen and heard everywhere, such as on the sides of buses, on the
side of
buildings, in the underground, in telephone messages, on public address
systems, to mention but a few. Essentially, advertisements can be
placed
anywhere so long as they can interact with passing traffic, whether the
medium
is visual, spoken or printed.
There are some
groups, such as non profit organisations, which would not normally be
associated with promotional campaigns.
However,
advertising is not without its critics. The upsurge of unwarranted
commercial
emails and some associated spam have reached the level of a nuisance
level as
well as being a financial burden on internet service providers.
Advertising
– How To Succeed
Peter Radford writes
Articles
with Websites on a wide range of subjects. AdvertisingArticles cover Background,
History, Types, Alternative Forms, Today’s
Methods,
Effects, Regulation, Trends.
His
Website contains over 140
Advertising Articles
View his Website
at: advertising-how-to-succeed.com
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