Friday, February 25, 2011

Themes of Advertisements


Themes of Advertisements
Different advertisers use different themes of central ideas to influent the instincts of different kinds of people. Some of the important themes are —follows: -
1. Prestige. This theme is-used to popularize luxurious items like ma car, refrigerator and furniture Their possession acts as a symbol of pact’ to their holders.
2. Corn fort. This theme is used to advertise products like fans, ar conditioners and refrigerators, etc, as such products help to make the Ilk comfortable.
3. Health. Health is the central idea used to advertise food patented medicines, etc. For example, “Protect your family this monsoon i internationally acclaimed RESIN technology of Zero-B to eliminate disseat causing Bacteria audit Viruses in your drinking water.” (see Fig. 1).
4. Beauty. This theme is very popular with the manufacturers and dealers of cosmetics, toilet soaps, perfumes aid readymade garments.
5. Safety. The manufacturers of cables and electrical appliances may emphasize safety in their ad campaigns. For example, Sky tone cables highlight safety aspect .TISING
6. Parental affection. This idea is used for advertising products meant children like toys, baby tricycles, baby foods, and baby dresses, e.g. ways treat your children beautifully”. (see Fig. 3)
7. Achievement. Many big companies use this theme to advertise their ducts and also build-up public relations. Number of units sold, foreigner earned, profit earned, etc. are some of examples, e.g., “In the last three years, Corporation Bank has increased its net profits by over 150% led its EPS, doubled its Book Value per share. And doubled its customer’s hence.” (Business Today, July 22, 1997). The achievement theme is also by National Bank 

Significance of Advertisement Copy


Significance of Advertisement Copy
An effective advertisement copy lead to the following benefits.
(i) An advertisement copy helps a businessman in introducing a new
product in the market.
(ii) An attractive advertisement copy builds up the goodwill of the business
(iii) It communicates the message effectively.
(iv) It helps in convincing the consumers about the superiority of the advertised product.
(v) It facilitates competitive advertising in the market where a number f substitutes are available.


ADVERTISEMENT COPY


ADVERTISEMENT COPY
The word copy has been given different meaning by various authors on &overtiring. Some people refer it to the text or body copy of an advertisement. While others take it as the entire advertisement. We shall use the term in the latter sense of the word, “The copy in an advertisement is defined as the written or spoken material in it, including the headline, coupons and message”. Advertisement copy includes headline, body or real message, Illustrations, photographs, claims and logotype or the name of the advertiser. In simple words, ‘ad copy is the entire message whether written or spoken which the advertiser wants to convey to a certain class of people through any medium of advertisement.
Copy is the core of an advertisen3ent. It helps in communicating the advertiser’s message to the public. The ultimate purpose of an advertisement copy is to stimulate sales. In order to achieve this purpose, and advertisement copy should be drafted with utmost care. This jock must be handled by some specialist who has got sufficient knowledge and experience to make advertisement attractive and effective.
An advertisement is effective if it attracts the notice of busy and indifferent people and stimulates them to take some action desired by the advertiser. An advertisement copy should be so drafted that it can make the people see, read or listen to it. It should also make the people believe, if it has to persuade to buy the product. However, there should not be any false or misleading statement and exaggeration of qualities regarding the product advertised. The advertisement should suggest to the prospective customers the superiority of the product while catering to all consumer needs into consideration such as quality, prices, arid durability. Finally, it is significant to point out that an advertisement copy should be prepared keeping in mind the type of product to be advertised and the type of people, to whom it is addressed.
Elements of an Advertising Copy. The main elements of an advertising pay are as follows:
1. Heading. It is the first and top part of an advertising copy. It may be a word, a phrase or even a question about the product or service being 1vertised. The heading is used to attract the attention of the people. It should not be very lone. For example, Personal Point says ‘I never felt I was on a weight loss programme’ (See Figure 1).
2. Theme. It is the central idea used in an advertising copy. It gives the zasic idea about the product. It highlights the distinctive advantage of the product being advertised. Various types.of themes are used in different types advertisements. The Personal Point advertisement has the central theme of Healthy and safe weight loss.’
3. Picture. The advertising copy also contains a photo of the product ing advertised. The picture helps to attract attention. It enables the.cusmers to recognise/identifr the product. The Personal Point advertisment áows pictures of a person before and after weight loss.
4. Arguments. Advertising copy may give the arguments to convince the. stomers about the utility of the product. In some advertising copies, test zports about the product or prize won by it are also mentioned. The Personal ?áit advertisement argues ‘where else can you enjoy snacks, desserts, cool thnks, delicious food and lose over 20 kilos so easily?’ and ‘you need special
rition, not less!’ .
5. Closing part. In the closing part of the advertising copy, the contents d the advertisement are repeated in brief and price may be mentioned to act the prospective buyers. The Personal Point advertisement closes by 1ing ‘Rush! Even more affordable new!’ and ‘There’s Real Health at PerLal Point’.

CONSUMER DECISION PROCESS


CONSUMER DECISION PROCESS
The major influence of the buyer decision is to cope with the buyer’s decision process If the marketer reads the major factors wrongly, reading of the buyer’s decision process would also be affected The buyer might be one and the user might be another person. To properly uriderstand buyer decision process, one must first understand the buying roles. Initiator (daughter.first brings the idea, for example, of buying a TV from recent exchange offers), Influence (Daughter’s friends influence her view), Gate keeper (Father informs that there is no budget and the offers are fake. Father is unwilling to go for exchange offer) ; Decider (Mother\therefore decides to further the wishes of her daughter) ; Buyer (Father and Mother go to shop and buy the Television), and User (the family uses Telvision for education, entertainment, and enjoyment).
While taking into accoun1 various buying roles, the consumer decision process has to be thoroughly scrutinized for effective delivery of the product. Th fact wiii steps are taken into account:
1. Need Recognition. The customer feels that some product is desire to satisfy the emerging need. If it is hupger, food is desired. If it is personal safety, grilling of doors and windows would be desirable. Depending upon the type of need, the related satisfiers would be reached.
2. In formation Search. The felt need must have some satisfiers. To’ look at this possibility,, scanning of the information sources takes place. The sources might be personal (friends, colleagues, family etc.), infomercial TV, radio, retailer, etc), public (looking at others, consumer information Dentures), or experiential (meeting people who lave the type of product one is looking for). The consumer leans about the various alternatives, their features, strengths and weaknesses.
3. Evaluation of Alternatives. Once the learning process is complete, a detailed analysis of the alternatives• is prepared. The evaluation process starts at this stage. Depending upon the involvement level of the customer and the significance of differences between brands, a particular type of a buying be heavier is adopted. Have a re-look at Fig. ‘3.
(a) High Involvement. A customer is highly involved in the product if it expensive, involves some risk, bought infrequently, is highly self-expressive, or in specialised/technical/mechanical product. For example, computer, television, car, wall paper, camera, saris, aluminum sliding or carpet. The consumed buying behaviors can be of two types:
(i) Complex Buying Behavior. The consumer would inhibit such a Saviour if the product is not only of high involvement, there are significant fervencies between brands. For example, camera can be bought
A perusal of the table suggests that main consideration is shutter spee4 and price. But how to decide on shutter speed? Customer needs specialist advise to buy. Before the specialist is consulted, the data would be compiled. Other considerations include the brand name, the after-sales service, etc.
(ii) Distance Reducing Buying Behaviour. A high involvement product with few differences iii the brands would make the consumer to seek maximum reduction of post-purchase dissonance by comparing prices, convenience, speed, durability, etc. For example, buying of carpet, wall paper, or aluminium sliding hardly matters whether bought from Rodi, Hindustan Carpets, Novel, etc. So long as finish is acceptable and the desirable impact will be made, the product would be acceptable.
(b) Low Involvement. A product is not considered to be highly involved if it is having low cost and frequently purchased. For example, toothpaste, stationery, salt, etc. Here also, two extreme types of consumer buying behaviors are visible.
(i) Variety-seeking Behavior. The product would be highly searched and compare on account of price, feature quantity, package, incentives, etc. For examples toothpaste, tooth brush, powder, soaps, detergents, toiletries, etc. Here a lot of brand switching is possible. Customer can try new products without much risk of money. Thus, it is easy to change customer beliefs in these categories foods. The market leader would try to convert the variety seekers into brand loyalty, i.e., habitual behaviour, discussed next.
(ii) Habitual Buying Behavior. A low involvement product with insignificant brand difference would lead to a passive habitual buying behaviour. For example, salt until recently was offered by Tata. Then it was joined by Captain Cook. However, even if the Captain Cook has positioned itself as free flowing salt, customer has not found much of difference for kitchen uses because no extra benefit is perceived to have been accrued to the consumer. However, as an itenr that offers choice in salts, the ales of Captain Cook have picked-up. As pointed out earlier, the marketers tend to convert variety seeking behaviour into habitual buying behaviour i.e., buying Promise toothpaste on a regular basis. Similarly, when no specific brand differences exist, (habitual buying behaviours, the marketers use price, sales promotion, and advertising to bring about brand differences and hence change consumer behaviour into variety behaviour.
4. Purchase Intention. Once the question of consumer level of involvement and consumer perception of differences in brands is sorted out, the marketers turn top study the stage of reaching at a purchase intention. This can be achieved by looking at the consumer behaviour. A consumer who wishes to buy a product to satis1’ his need may not be aware of the total number of product varieties that are available at that moment. Even out of the awareness set, the consumer might not consider certain product varieties because of the limitation of time, budget, past experience, availability, etc. Out of the consideration set, a list of products is made out based on certain criteria (features, quality, quickness of delivery, after-sales service, brand image, etc.). The application of criteria might lead to decision to go for a particular product

WHY STUDY CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR?


WHY STUDY CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR?
A number of reasons6 make the stu4 of consumer behavior relevant effective marketing management. These are as follows:
1.Consumers do not always act or react as the theory would suggest. F example,. consumer of the past reacted to price levels as if price and quail had positive relation. Today, consumers seek value for. money, less price h with superior features. This has led Videocon to go for Bazooka which positioned above the economy class but below premium class. The consume response indicates that the shift has occurred.
2. Consumer preferences are changing and becoming’ highly diversified. The shift has occurred with availability of more choice compared to pre-1991 era. For example, PCL broke the price barrier ir September 1996 with all-time low- PC-Pentium prices. Customer was tempted to purchase the product and shift their brand preferences from HP-HCL, Apple, Compaq, IBM, etc.
3. Consumer research has vividly pointed out that consumers dislike using identical products. and prefer differentiated products to \reflect their special needs, personalities, and life-styles. Thus, when Onida 2 was introduced, it referred that the television was for the elite class. Maggie introduced Sour and Chilly sauce with emphasis ‘its’ different’.
4. Meeting of special needs of customers requires market segmentation. The LIC provides its insurance cover to suit the needs of different types of customers — Jeevan Suraksha (Financial security and post-retirement benefits),Asha Deep II (Medical coverJeevan Shree (to retain key iidividuals in oranisations), Jeevan Surabhi’ (money back with rising insurance cover), Jeevcin Mitra (double benefit endowment plan), Money Back.
I
5. Rapid introduction of nave products with technological advance me,it has made the job of studying consumer behavior more imperative. For example, the information technologies are changing very fast so far as personal computer industry is concerned. lere, the PC-486 has been declared as dead and even PC-Pentium got two molle aggradations PC-Pentium Pro and MMX within a period of one year from May 1996.
6. Consumer behaviour can be used to sell products that might not sell easily because some other product has been satisfying the customer, even if the new product saves life-much quicker than the old product. For example, Havel’s India has given advertisement using fear of fire as instinct to promote their wires and cables, MCBs, and ELCBS. The advertisement shows fire- caught building just three days back, and the related news items.

7. Implementing the marketing Concept’ calls for studying the consumer behaviour. The shift in the age from selling age to marketing age meant that customer’s needs be given priority aver the hard-sell tactics. It was realised that consumer would not buy anything sol4. The consumer would buy only those products which satisfied his needs and wants. Thus, identification of target market before production became essential to deliver the desired customer satisfaction and delight.

8. Study of consumer behavior has shown fallacies more apparently than ever before:

(i) Consumers are loyal to products or organizations. Consumers re not inherently disloyal and they become so only if utterly neglected or conditioned to do so. Loyalty is not dead. If market becomes flooded with more and more products, customer expects their favoured product organistion should produce them and deliver the same. Thus, companies who place major aphasias on attracting new customers and place minor emphasis on retaining existing customer should not be surprised to see that the customer has left their fold.
(ii) Customers do not patronize the best available product. They patroness the best available offer. Thus, if Mercedes Benz and Maruti Esteem ire the two models that are under customer choice set, then the the firm which n promise better payment terms and features would win the customer.
(iii) Marketer cannot sell the product to the customer against his will The marketing-mix (product, price, place, promotion) cannot create internal desire of the prospect to buy a personal computer. The customer has feel the need and then marketers can provide various satisfiers. A good marketer, therefore, studies the drives and needs of customer and then tries best satisfy them.

CONSUMER BUYING MOTIVES


CONSUMER BUYING MOTIVES
The modern concept of marketing considers the customer as the king or prime as satisfaction and delight of customer is the ‘mission of a business. is the customer who shapes the production and ma4eting policies of the rm. A marketer should understand this fact if he is to beuccess  in this mission. He must have sufficient knowledge about the customers to whom he s going to sell. He must try to understand the nature of customers, their this and their buying motives if he is to win permanent customers.
A buying motive induces a buyer to buy a product. It is an influence or consideration which provides an impulse to buy. There is a buying motive  hind every purchase. It may not be the same with every buyer One buyer away purchase a product to satisfy his one need and another may purchase a product to satisfy an altogether different nerd. Therefore, it is necessary for áe marketer to identify the buying motives of different kinds of customers. Fr this he must study the psychology of the customer and design his market-
-mix accordingly. Maslow’s need hierarchy which explains buyer’s motives as been discussed later in this chapter.
types of Buying Motives,
There are three considerations which make a person purchase a product:
& He has a desire which needs to be satisfied ; (ii) He has an urge which Nueces him to purchase ; and (iii) He has a reasoning.
Broadly speaking, individuals are motivated to buy by internal and renal forces as under:
Internal motives often originate in the minds of the people and are both typical and psychological in nature. They are broadly classified into two rational which are based on logical reasoning or thinking and amoral , which are based on personal feelings.
External motives are outside oneself. Since a consumer is the product iiss environment, his buying motives are influenced by the external factors. us factors like income, occupation, religion, culture, family and social ‘environment act as motivators.
Buying motives. may also be classified on the basis of product and patronage.
1. Product Motives. These explain why people buy certain products. motives result directly from the needs of customers. Product motives be of two kinds:
(A) Primary buying motives relate to the reasons why consumers buy one foods rather than another Such motives result directly from the needs and wants, and include the d 3ire to achieve recognition, physical well- preservation of self-image, relaxation, beauty, knowledge, money gain. The seller must discover the customer’s primary motives (for they are unaware of these) and then direct has appeal as effectively as possible.
(b) Selective buying motives relate to causes that induce a consumer€ purchase certain class of quality goods. Selection is based on such motives the desire for both economy and convenience. Some of the most com
selective buying motives include desire for convenience, versatility, econ dependability and durability.
2. Patronage Motives. These cause a customer to buy products for. particular manufacturer or retailer. Important patronage motives are the. concerned with fashion, exclusiveness, dependable after-sales service, vengeance of location, quality, price, reliability of the seller, punctuality delivery, variety of selection, etc. When a person decides to buy a particular product or patronize particular retailer, he may be guided by rational or emotional motives as cussed below.



Rational Motives (Economic Considerations)
These motives are based on a man’s reasoning, logic and ability consideration of economic consequences. They include the immediacy monetary cost, and long-range cost effecting the buyer such as economy durability, depreciation, efficiency, degree of labor needed, dependability and ultimate benefits achieved.
Emotional Motives (Psychological Considerations)
Emotional buying motives are based on personal feelings and cover a we range of motives including impulses, instincts, habits and drives, etc. The motives include pleasure, comfort, status, pride, ambition, economic e social achievement, selection of gifts, maintaining and preserving heath satisfaction of appetite, proficiency, romantic instinct, social accepted recreation and relaxation, etc. Emotional motives are found more among people of high income group TV, Air Conditioner, Refrigerator, Washing Machine,. Geyser, Car, etc. a generally bought to satisfy emotional motives.


Consumer Behavior


Consumer Behavior

“The fact of buying changes the dynamics of the relationship. The will never views the sale as a favor conferred on the seller and, in effect, bits the seller’s account. A healthy relationship requires a conies and constant fight against the forces of decline. One of the west signs of a bad relationship is the absence of complaints. The stomper is either not being candid or not being contacted. Probably both.
Theodore Levitt

INRODUCTION
The modern marketing concept makes. customer at the centre-stage of sanitation efforts; The focus, within the marketing concept to reach the -et customer, sets the ball rolling for analyzing each of the conditions of the -t market. The first being to find out interest of such persons as would :‘-t me prospective customers. Then comes the. willingness of such interested :.ones to buy the offered product. But since customer needs come first and the organization offers the product, as imperative of the marketing pt, customer’s willingness to buy cannot be studied in isolation of the nearest of such prospects to satisfy a basic need from different satisfiers. Consumers’ needs recognition, their involvement level, the available alternate decision to buy and post-purchase behavior, all are part of the consumer behavior. Every consumer is unique and this uniqueness infest in search, purchasing, consuming, reacting, etc. Thus, consumer behavior must be properly understood by marketers.