Transcript Advertising
Advertising
GCSE Business Studies
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Revision Presentations 2004
What is Advertising?
An important part of the way a business promotes its
products and services to customers
Use of “media” to reach and communicate with potential
customers
Encourages customers to buy through information and/or
persuasion
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How is Advertising Used in the UK?
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Choice of Advertising Medium
Who does the medium reach?
National or local audience?
How many customers will see the advert?
Nature of product
Media needs to reflect image of product
E.g. a recruitment advert would be placed in a trade magazine or
newspaper but a lipstick advert would be shown on TV or
women’s magazines
Position in product life cycle
Launch stage will need different advertising than adverts for a
product that is well established
Cost of medium
Television is the most expensive; national advertising is more
expensive than local advertising
May want to consider cost per head if reaching a larger audience
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Television Advertising
Advantages
Use of pictures and sound very powerful combination
Can reach a large audience
Can target audience with different adverts going out with certain
programs (children’s TV and toys)
Disadvantages
Very expensive – both the cost of making the adverts – and the
cost of buying the broadcasting time
Need to get message across in very short space of time – e.g.
15-30 seconds
Need to look good against some other very clever and attractive
advertising by other businesses and/or competitors
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Classified and Display Advertising
Classified advertising
Normally put into a newspaper or magazine
Expressed solely in words and numbers
Less space – therefore lower cost
Display advertising
Space also bought in newspapers or magazines
Can be filled with words and/or pictures
Takes up more space and is more expensive
Often more effective in attracting attention of readers
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Persuasive and Informative Advertising
Persuasive advertising
Aims to convince customers that they really like the
product or service
Focuses on product benefits and features
Aims to persuade customers to buy – i.e. increase
demand for the product or service
Informative advertising
Provides customer information
Mostly done by government (e.g. health campaigns, new
welfare benefits)
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Newspaper Advertising
Advantages
Cheaper than TV advertising
Market segments can be targeted better:
• National, regional and local newspapers
• Target different socio-economic groups – e.g. popular tabloids (Sun,
Mirror)
Newspapers also have special sections, such as Homes, Travel
and Gardens where advertising will reach target audience
Disadvantages
Newspaper readership is falling – adverts do not reach as many
people
Still expensive – particularly for smaller businesses
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Advertising Agencies
Role
Plan, organise and produce advertising campaigns
Design and produce advertising material (e.g. posters, display
adverts, television commercials)
Monitor and report on effectiveness of advertising
Advantages:
Expertise a business may not have, e.g. copywriters, designers
and media buyers
Specialise in particular markets (e.g. agencies
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Advertising and the Law
Advertising is covered by legislation (law)
Trade Descriptions Act – goods advertised for sale must be as
they are described.
However, the advertising industry is largely “self-regulated”
Advertising Standards Authority – regulates adverts that appear
in “non broadcast media” (e.g. newspapers, magazines, posters)
Broadcasting regulator (OFCOM) regulates adverts on television
and radio
Misleading adverts can be referred to the Office of Fair
Trading
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“Above Line” and “Below Line”
Above the line
Paid for communication in independent media
E.g. advertising on TV or in newspapers
All advertising done via advertising agencies is “above the line” –
because the agency is paid to arrange publication of the adverts
Below the line
Promotional activities where business has direct control
No payment made for the “advertising” itself
E.g. direct mail, point of sale displays, giveaways
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