How ads work: Emotions, feelings, moods

 

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Paper
1.
Should we forget advertising awareness? Measuring emotions and implicit attitudes
Valérie Morrisson and Pierre Gomy, ESOMAR, Worldwide Multi Media Measurement (WM3), Budapest, June 2008
Advertising awareness, the most used ad efficiency metric, is coming under increasing scrutiny, as it is perceived as being based on old economic theories of consumer behaviour, and no longer useful f ...

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Read: 32 times
Paper
2.
Brandworks University 2008
Carlos Grande, WARC Report, June 2008
In this article, Carlos Grande, of WARC Online, reports on Brandworks University 2008. Among the brands under discussion are Procter & Gamble, Harley Davidson, Philips and the Lindsay, Stone & Briggs ...

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Read: 133 times
Paper
3.
The power of emotions - influence of multisensory marketing strategies
Karla Barajas Portas, ESOMAR, Latin American Conference, Mexico City, May 2008
This paper provides a theoretical framework for exploring how multi-sensory strategies can be used to understand the minds and hearts of consumers. It also assesses how this information can be used to ...

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Read: 69 times
Paper
4.
Enough thinking: we're living in the age of feeling
Brian Millar, Admap, April 2008, Issue 493, pp.11
Why don't we read ads any more? This article argues it is not because this is a post-literate age when people don't want to read anything (as the Harry Potter phenomenon shows), but because we don't w ...

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Read: 26 times
Paper
5.
Beyond neuroscience: engagement and metaphor
David Penn, ESOMAR, Annual Congress, Berlin, September 2007
This paper discusses emotions and brand perceptions in the light of current knowledge from neuroscience etc. In the traditional model of brand communication, the consumer's mind is a blank page on whi ...

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Read: 111 times
Paper
6.
In the mood for advertising
Fred E. Bronner, Jasper R. Bronner and John H. Faasse, International Journal of Advertising, Vol. 26, No. 3, 2007, pp.333-355
From research in the literature, it becomes clear that persuasive impact is greater if the person targeted is in a happy, benevolent mood. In the field of advertising research, this implies that posit ...

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Read: 183 times
Paper
7.
Measuring emotionally 'fuelled' marketing
Jakob de Lemos, Admap, April 2007, Issue 482, pp.40-42
Jakob de Lemos, chief technology officer and co-founder of iMotions-Emotion Technology A/S, looks at the issue of measuring emotional response to communications and describes a proprietary eye trackin ...

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Read: 420 times
Paper
8.
Closer to the truth: emotional insight and market research
Dan Hill, Admap, April 2007, Issue 482, pp.37-39
Starting from the premise that consumers' decision processes rely less on conscious, rational thought and more on subconscious emotional impulse (which cannot be verbalised), Dan Hill, founder and pre ...

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Read: 133 times
Paper
9.
Measures of Engagement: Volume II
Joe Plummer, Bill Cook, Don Diforio, Bert Schachter, Inna Sokolyanskaya, Tara Korde and Robert Heath, Advertising Research Foundation, White Paper, March 2007
Building on the paper 'Measures of Engagement, previously published by the ARF, this paper discusses the measurement of engagement in brand messages. It features a variety of innovative, but empirical ...

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Read: 625 times
Paper
10.
50 years using the wrong model of TV advertising
Robert Heath and Paul Feldwick, Admap, March 2007, Issue 481, pp.36-38
Robert Heath, Bath University School of Management, and Paul Feldwick produce a crushing indictment of traditional information-processing models for how advertising works. They show that theories, suc ...

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Read: 148 times
Paper
11.
A new enlightenment: why the next 50 years will be different
David Penn, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2007
Over the last decade, findings from neuroscience have demonstrated that reason is not separate from the brain, but embodied in it, and is mediated by unconscious emotional influences. As such, if emot ...

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Read: 108 times
Paper
12.
50 years using the wrong model of TV advertising
Robert Heath and Paul Feldwick, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2007
Notions of how advertising works are so deeply embedded in organisational practice that they routinely overrule judgement. While research repeatedly concerns itself with message takeout, product detai ...

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Read: 289 times
Paper
13.
Are viewers 'engaged' with advertising? Does it matter?
Andrew Green, WARC Media FAQ, March 2007
Most media research has traditionally been based around the opportunities the target audience have to see or hear an ad. The opportunity, however, does not mean that they will do so, and new technolog ...

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Read: 140 times
Paper
14.
On the Road to a New Effectiveness Model: Measuring Emotional Responses to Television Advertising
Anca Cristina Micu, Joseph T. Plummer and William A. Cook, Advertising Research Foundation, White Paper, January 2007
Models of advertising have changed dramatically in the last 20 years, as simplistic conceptions of the pattern of consumer behaviour (such as AIDA) have fallen out of favour, and more complex idea com ...

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Read: 204 times
Paper
15.
Comments: Neuroscience and advertising research
John Ford, Erik du Plessis, Graham Page and Jane Raymond, International Journal of Advertising, Vol. 26, No. 1, 2007, pp.129-134
The subject for this issue's Comments section is neuroscience and advertising research. Three researchers who have explored this topic in depth provide their views, showing the benefits that neuroscie ...

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Read: 90 times
Paper
16.
'Sad-vertising'
David Bonney, Admap, December 2006, Issue 478, pp.16-18
David Bonney, a strategic planner at McCann Erickson London, makes the case for advertising that taps into sad emotions, and rails against the endlessly happy and up-beat communications so often used. ...

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Read: 74 times
Paper
17.
Brand Relationships: Strengthened by Emotion, Weakened by Attention
Robert Heath, David Brandt, and Agnes Nairn, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 4, Dec 2006, pp.410-419
This article explores the way in which advertising builds brand relationships. Behavioral research by Watzlawick, Bavelas, and Jackson (1967) suggests it is the emotional not the rational content in c ...

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Read: 305 times
Paper
18.
A Biologically Based Measure of Emotional Engagement: Context Matters
Carl D. Marci, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 4, Dec 2006, pp.381-387
The present study presents a biologically based measure of audience engagement. The measure is based on a neuroscience informed combination of signal processing methods that yield a continuous time-lo ...

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Read: 42 times
Paper
19.
The Advertising Magnifier Effect: An MTV Study
Todd Cunningham, Amy Shea Hall, and Charles Young, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 4, Dec 2006, pp.369-380
This article uses a case history from MTV to examine the role that engagement with programming plays in the performance of embedded advertising. A standard technique for measuring emotional engagement ...

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Read: 82 times
Paper
20.
All you need is love - sustainable brand management
Ilan Lechter, Georgia Phillips and Michael Cramphorn, ESOMAR, Latin American Conference, Rio de Janeiro, October 2006
In the past, behaviour was presumed as conscious, sequential and rational, and hierarchy-of-effects (HOE) models of advertising, like AIDA, reflected this thinking. However, recent studies show that e ...

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Read: 131 times
Paper
21.
The secret ingredient
Todd Wilkinson, The Advertiser, October 2006, pp.65-68
This paper discusses how brand advertising can engage with consumers emotionally (for example, by appealing to nostalgia). A case study is provided of Campbell's Soups to demonstrate this. Emotive adv ...

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Read: 88 times
Paper
22.
Is Mr C really Mr K or only Sunny D? Should we blame marketing for political spin?
Jeremy Bullmore, Market Leader, Autumn 2006, Issue 34, pp.16-18
Increasingly, political parties market themselves by appealing to the emotions rather than on their policies. This technique seems to have been lifted from commercial marketing of brands. Yet we conde ...

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Read: 11 times
Paper
23.
Looking for the emotional unconscious in advertising
David Penn, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 48, No. 5, 2006, pp.515-524
This paper proposes a new model of advertising research based on the new understanding of the mind provided by brain science. It hypothesises that much advertising nowadays works implicitly – either b ...

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Read: 130 times
Paper
24.
High attention processing: the real power of advertising
James Mundell, John Hallward and Dave Walker, Admap, July/August 2006, Issue 474, pp.40-42
James Mundell, John Hallward and Dave Walker, from Ipsos-ASI, use their company's pre-test and tracking study results to contest the popular belief in low-attention processing (LAP). They argue that t ...

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Read: 148 times
Paper
25.
Emotional persuasion
Robert Heath, Admap, July/August 2006, Issue 474, pp.37-39
Using a wealth of academic sources, Robert Heath, author of The Hidden Power of Advertising, defines two different types of persuasion: rational and emotional. He argues that it is emotional persuasio ...

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Read: 313 times
Paper
26.
Measures of Engagement
Joe Plummer, Bill Cook, Don Diforio, Inna Sokolyanskaya and Maria Ovchinnikova, Advertising Research Foundation, White Paper, June 2006
This paper aims to summarise some of the leading efforts to measure engagement by synthesising a wide range of research previously undertaken into the topic. It focuses on the importance of measuring ...

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Read: 137 times
Paper
27.
Interconnectivity is not the same as enlightenment
David Penn, Admap, May 2006, Issue 472, pp.37-38
David Penn, managing director of Conquest Research, says we should distinguish between brain science, which is a new way of understanding the consumer mind, and neuromarketing, which through observing ...

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Read: 26 times
Paper
28.
How to use advertising to build brands: in search of the philosopher's stone
Spike Cramphorn, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 48, No. 3, 2006, pp.255-275
In the past, it was presumed that behaviour was conscious, sequential and rational. The hierarchy-of-effects (HOE) models of advertising, like AIDA, reflect this ‘old world’ thinking, where ‘emotional ...

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Read: 211 times
Paper
29.
Aesthetic emotion and long-term ad effects
Chuck Young, Admap, April 2006, Issue 471, pp.38-40
Chuck Young, founder and CEO of Ameritest, argues that the debate about emotional versus rational advertising is a red herring. Both rational and emotional responses are generated simultaneously as 'm ...

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Read: 80 times
Paper
30.
PVR's: Why Ads Work on Fast Forward and the Implications for Accessing TV Campaigns
Dr Alastair Goode and Julian Dobinson, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2006
This paper will outline a research project commissioned by Sky media to investigate what happened when viewers watch ads at x30 fast forward (as if they were fast forwarding through an ad break on a P ...

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Read: 69 times


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