Thursday, October 30, 2014

Advertising Project Ideas

Advertising Project Ideas

  • advertise something NEW with LU football
    • emphasize football games are new and better
    • link to coach's new vision for the team, or for a statement by one of the players
  • emphasize football players - our FLAMES need to be FANNED
    • link to videos of the players getting pumped up
  • create a theme for the next football game and encourage students to dress up and participate for cash prizes
    • boast other popular things like a raffle, discounts in the bookstore, 
Other Ideas: 
-tailgating
-food vendors 
-THE social event of the weekend 
-stay at the games
-rewards! - link to social media
-clicker interaction
-themed tailgate - continue on to games 

Monday, October 27, 2014

Exercise 10.1 - 80's Zales Ad

Name: Zales Diamonds
Advertisement: Lost

1. The promise of the benefit being offered by this headline is that if you, the consumer, are lost and confused, that Zales: The Diamond Store will have all your answers. Even if you don't know the difference between a carat and a carrot, Zales is all you need to know.

2. The illustration artfully guides the reader's eyes from the bold text of "Lost." to the Zales logo by an intricate and beautiful path of sparkling diamond rings. The text is the central focus of this ad, but the jewelry dramatically enhances the visual appeal, and sort of follows in the whimsical fashion in which the text was written. The rings stand as proof for what the ad claims about how Zales selects their diamond, even including the price range in the fine print assuming that some readers will want to buy one of the pieces from the ad.

3. The headline of this ad reads "Lost," assuming that the audience is lacking direction on their jewelry purchase. The body copy strives to affirm to the audience that the Zales representatives are trustworthy, professional and truly the masters in their field.

4. This ad provokes readers to take their all their jewelry questions to the Zales "experts" because they are the masters of diamonds. Even the simplicity of their subtitle "The Diamond Store" leaves no room for confusion on what Zales specializes in; it's not "a" diamond store but it is "the" diamond store.


Monday, October 20, 2014

Christians in the Field of Persuastion

     As ambassadors for Christ, it is absolutely essential for Christians to dive into the field of persuasion and advertising.

     In an industry that entices the world with promises of beauty, status, peace, clarity, and ultimately fullness of joy, followers of Christ can view this work environment not merely as a showcase for their own creativity but also as their mission field.

     However, this is no simple task by any means because of the pull between financial success and the way we ought to live and communicate truth as defined by the Bible.

     Christians in the advertising world reach a moral dilemma when their companies and the nature of the industry expect near-idolatrous devotion and promotion to a product or cause that the Christian knows will not make any consumer truly happy forever. That cup of coffee, those shoes, that vacation, or whatever it may be produces a satisfaction that is temporary at best!

     However, Christians in advertising can use their persuasive powers for good. In a skillful and still highly persuasive way, the creative Christian can capture their audiences attention by emphasizing the goodness and enjoyment of their product in a wholesome setting (which drives consumers to praise God), rather than taking the easy cop-out for grabbing attention by emphasizing a product’s sensuality.

     First Timothy 4:3-5 says that, "[Some] forbid marriage and advocate abstaining from foods which God has created to be gratefully shared in by those who believe and know the truth. For everything created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with gratitude; for it is sanctified by means of the word of God and prayer."

     Not only can Christians enter the field and thrive because of the Holy Spirit inside them (Who can provide them with vision as to how to success in business and simultaneously glorify God), but Christians can also use visual rhetoric to promote non-profits that seek to help others and glorify God as well. Advertisers can use their abilities to promote self-sacrificing nonprofits, and even link them up with larger, more lucrative corporations and donors.

     Rather than enticing consumers with unrealistic claims and misleading prices, the Christian persuader can be convicted by truth to use their abilities to send out messages for the genuine good of their audiences. 

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Response to The Persuaders

Response to The Persuaders


The Persuaders, a FRONTLINE documentary about the philosophy of advertising, sought to highlight the heights and depths that advertisers will venture in order to facilitate a “brand experience” for a sleepless consumer market.

The amount of time, research, rhetoric, psychology, ingenuity, and immense funding that is pumped into the advertising business is astounding. In this documentary, I was particularly struck by:
The constant pull by advertisers for our emotions in order to foster brand loyalty
The work of Clotaire Rapaille
& The intrusive collection of information by Acxiom

First, the advertising industry is endless and all-encompassing; there are ads in nearly every corner of our 24-hour-day.

I was intrigued when the documentary discussed the impacts of “emotional branding,” and how a positive brand experience can breed a literal “cult-like devotion.” Market researchers picked up on this in such a way that they actually study cults and apply those emotional principles to the way that they construct their advertisements.

Second, Clotaire Rapaille, a phenomenally successful market research guru, was perhaps the most interesting part of this video to me. Formerly a child psychologist, Rapaille applies his Freudian background to marketing and teaches that consumers are driven by unconscious impulses and associations.

Rapaille calls this his “code” on luxury, and he teaches seminars where he helps clients to unlock their own past and to apply the principles of object-emotion association to reach consumers. I loved the three stages of his creative sessions and the way that he coaxed the participants into a new way of thinking.

Thirdly, the video mentioned Acxiom, a massive data base that not only tracks most details of a person’s life and spending habits, but also projects where they will be in the future based on their current lifestyle. This data base and others track internet searches, vacation spots, hobbies, demographics, and goes on to sell this information to other advertising companies so that they can advertise exactly what we like exactly where we are.

The Persuaders mentioned how commercials tell us that we come first, immediately appealing to our self-centered human nature. Ads tell us they want us to live better, longer and happier, and to splurge on ourselves because we’re worth it. This technique of elevated flattery extends beyond advertising into most other spheres of life, from politics to relationships. I liked how the documentary concluded with the true statement that “we are all persuaders.”






(398 words)

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

CNA #5 - Pop Culture

CNA #5


1. ‘Exodus’ star Christian Bale on playing Moses: ‘You can’t out-Heston Charlton Heston’


Christian Bale will play Moses in the newest Biblical film, "Exodus: Gods and Kings," set to come out in December this year. Producer Jenno Topping emphasizes the complexity of the production, complete with epic battles and aerial panoramas of ancient cities, all in 3D CGI. Bale studied Moses from sources spreading from Jonathan Kirsh (a Jewish author) to the Koran.


2. Carrie Underwood dishes about 'weird' pregnancy and 'uplifting' new song


Earlier this month, Carrie Underwood tweeted her pregnancy announcement and continued to express her excitement when she appeared on the TODAY Show Friday. Underwood will also perform Saturday at a Global Citizen Festival in New York put on by the Global Poverty Project, which aimes to end extreme poverty by 2030. Underwood also mentioned her new, uplifting song, "Something in the Water," which will be released Monday.


3. Hollywood’s attack on men: Will the industry change its gender stereotyping following UN summit?


Ivy League graduate and a U.N. Goodwill Ambassador, actress Emma Watson called out Hollywood for portraying men as "lazy, clueless, emasculated idiots" in a speech at the United Nations last week. Watson advocates for men's and women's equality with the HeForShe initiative, which recognizes that men suffer from stereotypes as well. Current new movies, commercials, and TV shows more frequently portray men as "dingdongs" and Watson says that, “women have to wake up and start switching on that ‘equality’ we supposedly score so high at.”