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Paper
1.
Brand placement in novels: a test of the generation effect
Ian Brennan, International Journal of Advertising, Vol. 27, No. 4, 2008, pp.495-509
A key proposition of resource matching theory is that the cognitive challenge presented by a message execution should meet rather than exceed (or fall short of) the level of cognitive resources that t ...

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Read: 21 times
Paper
2.
Exploring the Audience's Role: A Decoding Model for the 21st Century
Alexandra J. Kenyon, Anthony Parsons and Emma H. Wood, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 48, No. 2, June 2008, pp.276-286
This article uses empirical research, with young (aged 16-21) advertising audiences, to build upon existing communication theory in a number of ways. First, it summarizes meaning-based models that hav ...

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Read: 35 times
Paper
3.
Sources of product information for Chinese rural consumers
Qimei Chen, Yi He, Xinshu Zhao and David Griffith, International Journal of Advertising, Vol. 27, No. 1, 2008, pp.67-97
This paper reports findings from a recent survey of 1115 respondents from 34 rural counties/villages in 11 Chinese provinces. It investigates consumers' reaction towards the advertising market by inco ...

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Read: 51 times
Paper
4.
Research beyond reason: filter maps and emotional connections
Annett Pecher, Admap, December 2007, Issue 489, pp.34-36
Individuals, when processing information, apply a set of 'filters' to weed out what is unimportant. These filters include memories, values, beliefs, decisions and attitudes, emotional as well as logic ...

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Read: 94 times
Paper
5.
New models of communication for the digital age
Terry Willie, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.48-50
The advent of the digital age has changed the way many advertisers perceive how advertising works. In 1991, Mike Hall conducted research among creative agencies and clients and postulated four models ...

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Read: 319 times
Paper
6.
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: 499 times
Paper
7.
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: 326 times
Paper
8.
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: 101 times
Paper
9.
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: 524 times
Paper
10.
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: 200 times
Paper
11.
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: 255 times
Paper
12.
The death of the big idea
Brian Millar, Admap, October 2007, Issue 487, pp.12
Many people scan media and ignore advertisements, precisely because they look like advertisements. So what can we do about it? One answer may be the 'big idea', not based on a single concept, but on a ...

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Read: 129 times   |   User rating:
Paper
13.
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: 162 times
Paper
14.
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: 103 times
Paper
15.
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: 172 times
Paper
16.
The implicit and explicit role of ad memory in ad persuasion: rethinking the hidden persuaders
Alastair Goode, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 49, No. 1, 2007, pp.95-116
In 1957 Vance Packard wrote The Hidden Persuaders arguing how ads could persuade at a sub-conscious level. However, since Freud first popularised the concept of the ‘sub-conscious’, psychologists have ...

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Read: 78 times
Paper
17.
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: 57 times
Paper
18.
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: 230 times
Paper
19.
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: 135 times
Paper
20.
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: 92 times
Paper
21.
Examining Effects of Advertising Campaign Publicity in a Field Study
Hyun Seung Jin, Xinshu Zhao, and Soontae An, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 2, June 2006, pp.171-182
Previous experimental research found that the pre-exposure of publicity about advertisements has two distinct but related effects in advertised brand recall: (a) a facilitative effect on publicized br ...

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Read: 55 times
Paper
22.
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: 167 times
Paper
23.
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: 51 times
Paper
24.
Motivation to Media: Bridging the Gap between Research and Media Planning
Simon Barker and Malcolm Hunter, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2006
Consumers increasingly control the dialogue with brands. This means the old intrusion/interruption model upon which communication planning has been historically based is increasingly less effective. W ...

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Read: 71 times
Paper
25.
Memory Change: An Intimate Measure of Persuasion
Kathryn Braun-LaTour and Gerald Zaltman, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 46, No. 1, Mar 2006, pp.57-72
A major goal for advertising is to have an enduring emotional impact on an audience by facilitating their creation of personally relevant understandings of an advertisement. This is achieved through a ...

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Read: 65 times
Paper
26.
Attitude formation onlin - how the consumer's need for cognition affects the relationship between attitude towards the website and attitude towards the brand
Maria Sicilia, Salvador Ruiz and Nina Reynolds, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 48, No. 2, 2006, pp.139-154
This paper applies traditional models of attitude formation, based on the elaboration likelihood model, to the internet. Specifically, the dual mediation hypothesis and the affect transfer hypothesis ...

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Read: 55 times
Paper
27.
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: 24 times
Paper
28.
Predicting advertising efficiency - panel, neuromarketing, or theory-driven message analysis?
Bruno Poyet and Olivier Koenig, ESOMAR, Annual Congress, Cannes, September 2005
To anticipate and understand the impact of an advertising message, marketing professionals are looking for new solutions. This paper presents the IM! (Impact Memoire) Method, which is particularly use ...

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Read: 41 times
Paper
29.
Measuring Affective Advertising: Implications of Low Attention Processing on Recall
Robert Heath and Agnes Nairn, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 45, No. 2, June 2005, pp.269-281
This article is about affective advertising, defined as that which works more on our emotions and feelings than on our knowledge and beliefs. This sort of advertising can be processed effectively at r ...

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Read: 111 times
Classic paper - a key, timeless read
30.
Linking marketing decisions with consumer decision making. Closing the gap between feelings and behaviour
Alastair Gordon, ESOMAR, Annual Congress, Lisbon, Sept 2004
Modelling the drivers of brand equity can improve insights into brand consideration, brand use and brand commitment measures. Consumers tend to distinguish between brands on a few general criteria ra ...

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Read: 167 times


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