Common Persuasive Techniques
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Transcript Common Persuasive Techniques
Propaganda and
Advertising
A means of convincing people:
to buy a certain product
to believe something or act in a certain way
to agree with a point of view
Pathos
Ethos
Logos
Name
Calling
Snob Appeal
Bandwagon
Testimonial
Loaded words
Appealing
to your audience’s emotions.
Usually trying to make them sad or angry,
however any strong emotion (joy, pity, etc)
will do.
Making
yourself seem trustworthy,
believable, credible.
If people think you are trustworthy, they will
be more likely to think/do what you want.
You can do this a few different ways:
Plain Folks: “I’m just like you! I was in your
shoes! It worked for me, so it will work for you!”
Demonstrate honesty/consistency: “I’ve always
supported the environment, just look at my
record!”
Be an expert: “I have a degree in medicine and
10 years experience as a doctor. I know this
works.”
Using
facts, statistics and logic to persuade
your audience
A statement suggesting that everyone is using a
specific product, so you should, too!
Being “in the group” makes you feel secure.
Loaded
Words = Words that will make you feel
strongly about someone or something (fear,
desire for success, excitement, being part of a
group).
Loaded Words can be Glittering Generalities
Glittering Generalities=Words that “glitter” but give
no details about the product.
“NEW IMPROVED TIDE”
A well-known person or a previous customer
supports a product or service
Is
used to incite fears and arouse prejudices
in the viewers
Also called “Ad Hominem”
Often seen in politics- The candidate cannot
attack the person’s ideas, so instead they
attack the person to distract people from the
ideas.
In ads, used to compare your product to a
competitors and make them look bad.
Just the opposite of “bandwagon”. Its message
suggests: "Buying our product will make you
better than everyone else--especially since
other people can't afford it.“
A catchy phrase or statement often used to sell a
service or a product
They’re
GRRRRRRREAT!
The
group of people you are trying to
convince
People who have the same interests, values,
occupation or priorities
Common Audiences
Age groups (teenagers, young professionals, seniors
etc.)
Interest groups (animal rights, techies, sports)
Occupation groups (teachers, business men, bluecollar workers)
GOOD
persuaders think about WHO their audience
is while designing their ads (or essays!)
Name
Calling
Snob Appeal
Bandwagon
Testimonial
Loaded words
Misuse of Statistics
Plain Folks
Avante Guarde
Slogan
Target
audience