Archive for August, 2008

This post concludes my series on types of advertising appeals. You can access each of the prior posts in this series below:

Types of Advertising Appeals 1 – Fear and Humor
Types of Advertising Appeals 2 - Sex and Music
Types of Advertising Appeals 3 - Rational and Emotional

This final post on types of advertising appeals covers scarcity.


Types of Advertising Appeals: Scarcity

As people, we are more inclined to want what’s in limited supply. We are also more inclined to take immediate action if we have limited time to act. Limited supply and time provide scarcity appeals.

The trick in using scarcity appeals is that the time or supply has to really be limited.
Let me give you an example of each type of scarcity appeal.


Types of Advertising Appeals: Time Scarcity

But first some context. I work a split shift in my business. I work from around 8 a.m. until 3 or 5 p.m. depending on what time my husband gets home from his job and what else I have to do that day. Then after he goes to bed around 9 p.m. I work again until midnight or later.

One night while I was working late, I went to a membership site that I considering joining. The sales page offered a number of free days membership if I registered within six hours of first opening the sales page. I was tired and decided to wait until the next morning.

I slept about seven hours then went back. The free days were no longer available to me. I even tried on another computer, but I still couldn’t get the free days. So I had to register for a full 30 days and pay for them all. The owner of this site was serious about scarcity of time to make a decision about joining his membership site. And he had track in place to support it.

That is not always the case. I’ve also gone to sales pages that say I have until midnight to purchase at a discount, but when I go back the next day I’m offered the same discount and again told that I have until midnight to purchase at the discount.

The first site uses real scarcity of time. The second site only tries to make visitors think there’s a time scarcity when there really isn’t. Visitors will tell others when scarcity is real and when it’s fake. So don’t try to fake scarcity. It backfires.


Types of Advertising Appeals: Supply Scarcity

Now let me give you an example of supply scarcity. I’ve sold a textbook through university stores since 2000. The second edition of that book was published in 2005. One of my adopting professors wanted to continue using the first edition, but I only had a few of the first edition left.

I explained this to him, but he’s stuck with the first edition. For this fall’s order, I had to send a couple of books that weren’t in mint condition, but they were the best that I had left. Now all I have are returns that are in even worse condition. The professor will either have to adopt the second edition, adopt another book, or his students will have to buy blemished books. That’s real scarcity because I won’t print anymore of the first edition.

But I’ve seen sales pages that promote a limited number of an e-book. Now e-books aren’t printed, they are digital. So there is no limit to them unless the author decides to sell only a certain number. Some authors do.

But many times when people advertise a limited number of e-books, they are trying to create scarcity when it doesn’t actually exist. If scarcity is faked, it doesn’t work. Instead it causes customers and target market members to loose trust in the publisher.

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Posted 8-28-08: Types of Advertising Appeals 4

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This third post on types of advertising appeals covers rationality and emotions.
If you missed the first two posts, you can access them below:

Types of Advertising Appeals 1
Types of Advertising Appeals 2

People don’t buy based on rational thought. They buy for emotional reasons. Then they justify their purchasing decision with rational thought. However, both are important types of advertising appeals.


Types of Advertising Appeals: Rational

Rationality is an important advertising appeal because advertisements should provide enough information for people to justify what they want emotionally.

But with the Internet, many advertisements only hint at rational reasons for buying. Then they send perspective customers to a Web site to get more information. People who need more rational justification will go to the site and get it.

When people decide to buy a product because they want it, they will often then seek information to decide which brand to buy. Many will also check reviews of products online.

For example, I have several analog cameras so I put off buying a digital one for some time. I finally decided to buy one because I wanted one. But I justified it by telling myself it would be easier to use in my online business.

Once I decided to buy a digital camera, I went online to check reviews and read many. Then I found a site that convinced me to buy a Canon. It showed multiple photos of the same image taken by different cameras. So I was able to actually see the differences in camera quality.

I made the decision based on emotion, justified it with logic, and then sought information to determine the best camera to buy. What you can learn from my experience is that rational thought is a type of advertising appeal. But it’s most effectively used to justify an emotional desire for the product and to provide information that positions your brand.


Types of Advertising Appeals: Emotional

Most types of advertising appeals are based on emotions. For example, of the appeals covered in my first and second posts on “types of advertising appeals”, all four are emotional:

  • Fear is an emotion. We all fear something and spend time and money to lesson our fears.
  • Humor relates to the emotional need to have fun and to enjoy life. Laughing is more than physiological. It’s an emotional release that we all need in order to stay healthy.
  • Sex is a basic physiological and emotional need. Itinvolves many emotions from the need for love and intimacy to self-esteem.
  • Music fills an aesthetic and emotional need for beauty and pleasure. The type of music that we prefer relates to the emotion of belonging.
  • Scarcity, which I’ll cover in tomorrow’s post, appeals to our emotional need to be included and not to miss out on something good.
  • Outside of the rational appeal, most types of advertising appeals are emotional.

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    Posted 8-28-08: Types of Advertising Appeals 3

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    Yesterday, I introduced a series on types of advertising appeals, and covered two types – fear and humor. You can link to that post below:

    Types of Advertising Appeals 1

    Today I’m covering two other types of advertising appeals – sex and music.

    Types of Advertising Appeals - Sex


    Types of Advertising Appeals 3: Sex

    Sex sells, but it can also offend. So whether sex is effective in an advertising campaign depends much upon whether it is blatant, suggestive, or symbolic.

    Here’s a good example of blatant sex in advertising: a scantily clad model stroking an automobile. Such an advertisement is designed to appeal to men.

    But women buy as many automobiles as men. And many women consider such commercials offensive. “Feminist women consider any advertisement demeaning if it portrays women as sex objects . Women and men, with strong religious ties, consider such advertising sinful.

    So blatant sexual advertising may appeal to a target market while turning off others, who are not in the target market. This works if the message is delivered through a medium that reaches the target market, but not so well when it’s distributed through mass media.

    Suggestive advertising doesn’t actually show scantily clad men or women, but leaves a sexual feeling that many people recognize. For instance, shots of a woman gently touching or stroking a man’s hand, or vice versa, is suggestive. A margarine company used this very effectively a few years ago.

    Symbolic advertising uses symbols to suggest sex. Phallic symbols are the most popular. Have you seen the liquor commercial where everyone is dancing as the bartender grinds herbs in a glass. When he stops grinding, they stop dancing. When he starts again, they do too. This advertisement uses symbolic advertising effectively.



    Types of Advertising Appeals 4: Music

    Different types of people prefer different types of music. So if you choose to use music as a type of advertising appeal, you need to know the music preferred by your target market. Choose wrong, and you can destroy an advertising campaign.

    You need to consider the generation, social class and lifestyle of your target market because each provides insights into your potential customers’ music preferences. You can get information on these demographics and many more in my e-book : Know ‘em Sell ‘em: How To Discover The Best Appeals For Your Target Market.

    If you are creating a radio advertisement, most radio sales people can provide demographic characteristics of their listeners. Talk to one for each radio format and ask for this information. Select the format that best attracts your target market. Then use that kind of music in your advertisement and run your advertisement on stations with that music format.

    Another choice is to use generic music or music that crosses radio formats. This can be a good choice for advertisements intended for mass audiences. But it’s not as effective as catering to your target market’s music preference.

    Tomorrow’s post will cover two more types of advertising appeals – rational and emotional. So come back tomorrow to learn more about types of advertising appeals or you can link to it below:
    Types of Advertising Appeals 3

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    Posted 8-27-08: Types of Advertising Appeals 2

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    Types of advertising appeals” is a search that provides little relevant information through Google search results.

    I’ve read pages listed through the search results covering cultural differences in advertising appeals to a site promoting different types of signs as “types of advertising appeals.” Of course, the latter site belongs to a sign company.

    I found only one search result that was anywhere close to what I know about different types of advertising appeals. It was a PowerPoint presentation, apparently for an advertising course lecture. It provided no details, but merely listed the types of advertising appeals.

    Furthermore, an LSI search provided none of the words generally considered types of advertising appeals by scholars and educators. So I decided to write this post to add to the online body of knowledge on “types of advertising appeals.”

    Advertising appeals are based on human needs and persuasion theories and research. There are as many types of advertising appeals as there are human needs, but advertisers primarily organize these appeals into seven categories:


    7 Types Of Advertising Appeals

  • Fear
  • Humor
  • Sex
  • Music
  • Rational
  • Emotional
  • Scarcity
  • I’ll cover each with a brief definition of that type of advertising appeal. Then I’ll provide my thoughts or experiences regarding each type. But in order not to overload you with information, I’ll cover this information over several consecutive posts. Today’s post covers fear and humor.


    Types of Advertising Appeals: Fear

    Fear is generally not considered a good type of advertising appeal. However, it is frequently promoted as a good one among Internet marketing gurus.

    If you agree with the gurus, choose your fear appeals carefully. It appears to me that this appeal works best when it’s related to lesser fears like having bad breath or losing out on a money-making opportunity.

    When it relates to the big fears like dying or loosing a loved one, people are more inclined to block the message. They move into denial mode and ignore the rest of the advertising message.


    Types of Advertising Appeals: Humor

    Humor is an effective type of advertising appeal, but it must be used carefully. What one person finds funny, another considers appalling.

    For example, the people who create most advertising campaigns for television are creatives at large marketing agencies. The burn-out in those positions is great. So advertising employees in these positions tend to be young – Generation Yers and Xers.

    As a Boomer, most of their humor totally leaves me cold. Of course, I’m frequently not in the target market for the advertisement, but sometimes I am. I’ve discussed the problems of trying to market across generations before in this blog. Those problems increase when using humor.

    For my posts on sex and music as types of advertising appeals, click the link below:

    Types of Advertising Appeals 2

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    Posted 8-26-08: Types of Advertising Appeals 1

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    Want a free tool that enables you to buy ads on sites that reach your target market? Well Google is getting ready to provide you one – Google Ad Planner.

    I just learned about Google Ad Planner and conducted some online research. I believe it to be a great asset to small business owners like you because it eliminates the need for a marketing or advertising agency. So Google Ad Planner can make running your own target marketing campaign easy, and save you money because you don’t have to pay a marketing or advertising agency.

    Now in Beta, Google Ad Planner is “an audience definition tool, where you define your audience by language, age, and other criteria.” In other words, it will enable you to buy on-line and off-line ads by your target market characteristics.


    Google Ad Planner Enables Target Marketing Rather Than Key Word Marketing

    I’ve discussed before my concerns about Internet marketers targeting by keywords rather than by demographic, psychographic and buying behavior characteristics. You can link to that post below:

    Marketing Research: How Do Internet Marketers Do It?

    With Google Ad Planner, now you’ll be able to target a market and then advertise on sites that members of your target market visit.

    Instead of developing ad word campaigns around keywords to appear on Google search results, you develop them around your target market and advertise across sites in the Google content network.


    Google Ad Planner Enhances Marketing Research

    You can visit the sites and eliminate those that you don’t like. But don’t eliminate them just because they’re not in your niche. Your target market has multiple interests. For example, your niche may be rose gardening, but your target market may also frequent a craft site.

    You can learn something about your target market member’s interest by looking at the topics of sites. You can also research the design style, structure and content of sites that appeal to your target market.


    Google Ad Planner Will Enhance Target Marketing

    Then you can use my simple market segmentation process manually or automatically. You can get the ebook Know ‘em Sell ‘em: How To Discover The Best Appeals For Your Target Market. Or you can get a one-time free trial of the automatic program at AutoMarketAnalysis.com.

    The combination of my research and Google Ad Planner makes it a breeze to do your own advertising.


    Google Ad Planner May Make Ad Sense Profitable Again

    Google Ad Planner will spread more of the growing Internet advertising income across more Web sites.

    However, to earn your share, your Web site has to get 3000 visitors per month, and you have to be an Ad Sense site. If your site qualifies, you may start earning more Ad Sense revenue. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised to see Google Ad Planner revolutionize Ad Sense.

    You can read what other bloggers are saying about Google Ad Planner through the links below:

    http://www.tribbleagency.com/?p=1195

    http://searchengineland.com/080624-104519.php
    http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/23/google-to-unveil-new-ad-planning-tool/
    http://blog.domaintools.com/2008/07/google-ad-planner/
    http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/2008/08/competitive-intelligence-analysis-google-ad-planner.html

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    Posted 8-25-08: Google Ad Planner Free Tool Boosts Small Business Advertising

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