How ads work: High and low involvement

 

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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: 74 times
Paper
2.
Measuring the immeasurable - new ways of capturing the hidden power of advertising
John Faasse, Andy Santegoeds and Nicole Scheibenreif, ESOMAR, Worldwide Multi Media Measurement (WM3), Budapest, June 2008
The effectiveness of advertising is diminishing. A fragmenting audience, increasing advertising overload and the consumer's growing possibilities of avoiding commercial threaten the relevance of 'abov ...

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Read: 47 times
Paper
3.
How effectively can ad research predict sales?
Dominic Twose and Dale Smith, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.42-44
Based on 872 cases from across the globe, this study looks at the relationship between ads that experienced a rise in sales (market share), and their Millward Brown Link™ scores in terms of persuasion ...

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Read: 484 times
Paper
4.
Multi-platforming engagement - an MTV case history
Charles Young and Amy Shea Hall, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.35-38
There are a number of ways that a TV viewer can be 'engaged' with a programme. As a programme supplier, MTV needed to understand this 'engagement' better and how it affects embedded advertising. This ...

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Read: 318 times
Paper
5.
C-MEEs: cross-media engagement evaluations
Robert Passikoff and Don E Schultz, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.31-34
In view of the proliferation and ubiquity of media platforms, it is critical that marketers be able to measure cross-media consumption and its effect on consumer engagement, brand development and sale ...

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Read: 95 times
Paper
6.
Case study: differentiating a brand through direct engagement
Carole Lowe and Jasmine Skee, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.28-30
In just five years, O2 has become the largest mobile brand in the UK, with over 18 million customers. Its strategy has been to put customers, not technology, at the heart of its message, promising 'en ...

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Read: 474 times
Paper
7.
Consumer engagement: crossing the barrier
Graham Ellor, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.25-27
Today it is harder than ever for a brand to stand out from the crowd and make its mark. But consumer engagement offers a lifeline for brands to (re-)establish relevance. Smart brands realise that bran ...

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Read: 179 times
Paper
8.
Engagement, involvement and attention
Roderick White, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.23-24
This introduction to Admap's report on consumer engagement (October 2007) considers some of the factors that influence what happens between seeing an ad and its message being stored in the memory. The ...

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Read: 222 times
Paper
9.
Press advertising: equal to TV in building brands
Robert Heath and Stuart McDonald, Admap, April 2007, Issue 482, pp.34-36
Dr Robert Heath, Bath University School of Management, and Stuart McDonald, head of advertising insight at News International, present some new research that shows that press advertising is as effecti ...

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Read: 186 times
Paper
10.
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: 682 times
Paper
11.
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: 113 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: 230 times
Paper
13.
Researching mere exposure effects to advertising - theoretical foundations and methodological implications
Anthony Grimes and Philip Kitchen, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 49, No. 2, 2007, pp.191-219
This paper concerns a potentially under-researched area of great relevance to the discipline of market research – namely, low-attention processing of marketing communications. Given the accelerating c ...

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Read: 135 times
Paper
14.
Marketers Who Measure the Wrong Thing Get Faulty Answers
Rex Briggs, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 4, Dec 2006, pp.462-468
The purpose of this article is to address why older advertising measurement systems (based on outdated theories of how consumers process information) are specifically leading to some marketers getting ...

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Read: 68 times
Paper
15.
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: 69 times
Paper
16.
Advertising Engagement: A Driver of Message Involvement on Message Effects
Alex Wang, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 4, Dec 2006, pp.355-368
Engagement plays a contingent role in the effectiveness of advertising processing that corresponds to the message effects created during the process. Such message effects are advertising recall, messa ...

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Read: 139 times
Paper
17.
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: 138 times
Paper
18.
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: 285 times
Paper
19.
The challenge of ad avoidance
Andrew Ingram, Admap, May 2006, Issue 472, pp.30-32
Andrew Ingram, director of the Aerials Foundation at the UK Radio Advertising Bureau, describes a new research study to investigate the implications of advertising avoidance for 'outreach' media plann ...

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Read: 47 times
Paper
20.
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: 182 times
Paper
21.
Meeting the emotional needs of healthcare consumers
Alan Branthwaite, ESOMAR, Healthcare Conference, New York, February 2006
Visual imagery is a powerful tool for brand communication, going well beyond simply attracting attention to implanting ideas, changing ways of thinking, and reframing perceptions. This paper describes ...

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Read: 74 times
Paper
22.
Does invisible mean ineffective?
Jon Howard-Spink, Admap, December 2005, Issue 467, pp.41-43
Jon Howard-Spink, planning director of Mustoes, argues that, in today's complex market and media environment, the issue over the role of advertising awareness (as a measure of advertising success) mus ...

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Read: 28 times
Classic paper - a key, timeless read
23.
Measuring the hidden power of emotive advertising
Robert Heath and Pam Hyder, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 47, No. 5, 2005, pp.467-486
This paper is about advertising that works on our emotions without necessarily achieving high levels of attention or recall. We compare the most popular recallbased metric - claimed ad awareness - aga ...

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Read: 257 times
Paper
24.
Communicating with the fragmented consumer
Chris Hackley, Admap, March 2005, Issue 459, pp.41-43
Chris Hackley, professor of marketing at Royal Holloway College, London University, argues that today social identity is a 'pick'n'mix stall', where consumers express their identity through a range of ...

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Read: 93 times
Paper
25.
Out with the new, in with the old
Wendy Gordon, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2005
Between 1980 and 1990, radical new thinking emerged about how advertising `works’, yet it failed to take root. The first part of the paper re-visits the key hypotheses and analyses why they were rejec ...

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Read: 40 times
Paper
26.
How to measure brand emotion
Larry Percy, Rolf Randrup and Flemming Hansen, Admap, November 2004, Issue 455, pp.32-34
Larry Percy and Flemming Hansen, from Copenhagen Business School, and Rolf Randrup, TNS/Gallup, contend that by measuring the emotional associations that consumers have with brands, managers will have ...

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Read: 55 times
Classic paper - a key, timeless read
27.
Advertising and the seven sins of memory
Larry Percy, International Journal of Advertising, Vol. 23, No. 4, 2004, pp.413-427
A positive intention may be formed as a result of exposure to an advertisement, but if a memory malfunction interferes with that intention, the advertising will be ineffective. This paper considers th ...

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Read: 1785 times   |   User rating:
Paper
28.
Emotional advertising works
Robert Heath, Market Leader, Issue 26, Autumn 2004, pp.60-62
Recent press articles have revived interest in low attention processing, the way in which advertising can influence us even when little attention is paid to it. Here Robert Heath advises what actions ...

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Read: 182 times
Classic paper - a key, timeless read
29.
Measuring the hidden power of emotive advertising
Robert Heath and Pam Hyder, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2004
This paper is about advertising which works on our emotions without necessarily achieving high levels of attention or recall. We compare the most popular recallbased metric – claimed ad awareness – ag ...

Summary | Full Text | More Like This
Read: 57 times
Classic paper - a key, timeless read
30.
Brand dreams and brain trash
Mark Oldridge, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2004
Argues (in some detail) that the model which underpins all current theories of the brand, that it is a representational image or memory inside the heads of individuals which is modified by information ...

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Read: 42 times


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