MediaMedicKit.com
The Open Source in Media Knowledge. Decades now, we are trying to find out "How Advertising Works". MediaMedicKit soul purpose is to unlock this mystery.
Frequency of 1, 2, 3+ ?
One Size Does Not Fit All
"How Advertising Works" is the billion dollar question. With a lot of research hopefully we can one day break the code.
Upcoming Seminars & Events
Digital & Social Media Conference (ANA)
15 July, 2010
Grand Hyatt New York, Park Avenue At Grand Central USA
The first-ever ANA Digital Conference is a must-attend event for
anyone who is trying to navigate their brands through this
ever-changing media landscape. Digital media has become a part
of consumer’s daily lives and they have become accustomed to
viewing content and connecting with people wherever and whenever
they want. Social media and viral videos have especially
exploded in the last few years. Despite this rapid growth,
clients have many questions and their issues include
measurement, agency selection, internal org structure, and
relinquishing control to the consumer while trying to influence
the dialogue.
Email: registration@ana.net
Web: ana.net
INMA South Asia Conference (INMA)
5 - 6 August, 2010
Mumbai India
The INMA South Asia Conference is a market-leading event
designed to capture strategic best practices and the
practicalities of newspaper advertising sales for newspaper
executives from the leading companies in India, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and others interested in this region.
Web: inma.org
Summer Marketing Educator's Conference (AMA)
13 - 16 August, 2010
Boston, MA USA
Web: marketingpower.com
Agency/Client Forum (ANA)
15 September, 2010
583 Park Avenue, New York USA
Business today is under extreme short-term pressure. For clients
and agencies alike, Wall Street quarterly profit expectations
are overwhelming longer-term decision making. The conference
will explore ways to enhance and improve the client/agency
relationship dynamic to help lead to the best possible work and
optimal business results.
Email: registration@ana.net
Web: ana.net
Congress - Odyssey 2010 (ESOMAR)
12 - 15 September, 2010
Athens Greece
The move from transactional to relational research is at the
forefront of change in the Market Research industry.
Technological advancements, societal changes and the current
economic crisis are creating new dynamics – challenges to the
"traditional" wisdom of market research and marketing. There is
an increasing emphasis on the need to continually seek and
demonstrate new value propositions. The face of market research
is changing and with it so are many of the approaches and
methodologies we employ. Through the use of collaborative
relations, active listening, increased dialogue and observation,
market research is assessing its position and developing a
diverse set of skills both traditional and new to meet these
latest demands and to ensure that market research advances and
adapts to this new marketplace. As we enter a new decade, we as
an industry must stop and take stock - to reflect on our
research and approaches from the past, differentiate between
perception and reality and determine what the future holds.
ESOMAR is therefore proud to announce Odyssey 2010 – The
Changing Face of Market Research to be held in Athens, the
birthplace of critical thought and the foundation of modern
culture.
Email: customerservce@esomar.org
Web: esomar.org
ad:tech London (ad:tech)
21 - 22 September, 2010
Olympia - National Hall, London UK
Email:christopheasselin@dmgworldmedia.com
Web: ad-tech.com/london
Advertising Research 2010 (Warc)
23 September, 2010
The King's Fund, London UK
The field of advertising research continues to embrace a period
of rapid change as new research tools offer both greater
insights and challenges to advertisers. In addition, a richer
media landscape is driving the need for brand communications
professionals to have a clearer understanding of which research
methods should be used as the science of advertising analysis
comes of age. One of the biggest challenges is how advertisers
can better manage increasing amounts of data and make sense of
far more complex findings to learn exactly which messages -
across which medium - are producing maximum ROI. The conference
will examine in depth the best research tools and methodologies,
helping you decide where to invest advertising spend most wisely
using the optimum mix of traditional and emerging research
methods.
Email: clare.beveridge@warc.com
Outlook 2011: INMA Europe Conference (INMA)
29 September, 2010 - 1 October, 2010
Krakow Poland
Over the course of this prestigious three-day event, hundreds of
newsmedia professionals from all over Europe will gather in
Krakow to take part in a range of networking, lectures, debates
and workshops about the latest media trends and the challenges.
Keynote presentations will be followed by thought-provoking
roundtable discussions that will involve the audience and
stimulate networking. This conference is all about sharing ideas
and inspiring change! It will be a unique experience because it
will offer surprise, debate, drama, engagement, memories, and
excitement!
Web: inma.org
A Theory of "How Advertising Works"
Effective
Advertising = Delivering the Right Message to the Right Consumer
at the Right Time to 1) make a sale or 2) increase awareness of
the brand. Because all of these components of advertising need
to work or the process will break now, we can rewrite this
formula as : A = E (exposure) x M (message) x C (consumer) x
T (time). Learn more
Krugman's Three Hit Theory
Below
is what Krugman actually wrote :
"Let me try to explain the special qualities of one, two and three exposures. I stop at three because as you shall see there is no such thing as a fourth exposure psychologically; rather fours, fives, etc., are repeats of the third exposure effect. Learn more
Media Planning: Recency Planning
Want to fluster
an advertising agency? Just ask 'How does advertising work?'.
It's like asking a platoon of Green Berets to stop shooting and
consider the meaning of life.
But it is a good
question. Why should clients spend money if agencies don't have
a sensible theory about how to spend it?
Learn more
Media Directory by Country
1.
Cyprus Media
2. Greek Media
3. Russian Media
Soon to come
Beyond Effective Frequency : Evaluating Media Schedules Using Frequency Value Planning
The
practice of effective frequency planning (EFP) presents an
enormous paradox. On one hand, research suggests that it is used
by the majority of media planners. On the other hand, it also
suggests that the method makes little sense. This paper
discusses possible reasons for the paradox and offers frequency
value planning (FVP) as a practical solution. It discusses the
steps involved in implementing the frequency value method, the
practical problems involved, and approaches to overcoming them.
Finally, it uses the logic of the frequency value model to
suggest practical areas for future research.
Learn more
Joseph Ostrow Frequency Factors
Ostrow
(1982) suggests a number of factors that might be used to help
estimate this need. In order to use the framework, the planner
must weight the various factors according to their relevance,
and then rate them according to the degree to which they
characterize the advertising situation.
Learn more
Marketing Tools Explained
a)
What is Marketing?
b) How to Write a Marketing Plan
c) Marketing Planning and Strategy
d) Marketing Research
e) Preparing a Market Study. Learn more
How Many Exposures Are Enough?
In 1966 Colin McDonald, then working for the British Market Research Bureau in London, carried out a research project for J. Walter Thompson . This was a study of the relationship between advertising exposure and buying behavior in a number of packaged goods markets, using a single source diary panel. (A 'single source' panel, in this sense, collects detailed information for each individual both on what brands were bought, and what ads were seen, each day.) This study was not intended, at the time, to address the questions of ‘effective frequency’, but the more fundamental issue of whether short term advertising effects on purchasing behavior could be proven to exist. The most famous finding of this study (as reported at the time) was that one exposure to advertising between two purchase occasions had no positive effect on brand choice; that two exposures did have an effect, that three had a little more; and that above three exposures there were no increased effects.
The McDonald Study, after its brief moment of glory, was unjustly neglected by many advertising agency people; they were not very interested in effects which appeared to be very short term and rather small, and they preferred talking to their clients about the long term effects of advertising on brand image. But the study was leapt on enthusiastically by media planners who had been asking questions about effective frequency. Nothing like the McDonald study had ever been done before. Now the data appeared to show that a ‘threshold’ of two exposures did exist, and also that the effect of advertising peaked at three exposures. The implication for media planners was that they should maximize the number of people receiving two exposures in a purchase interval, and minimize the number receiving more than three. (This is actually very difficult to put into practice, but in theory, at least, it became an established principle.)
This ‘three exposure’ principle received apparent confirmation when it was matched to a psychological theory developed independently by Dr Herbert Krugman, then head of market research at General Electric in the USA. Krugman argued that consumer response to an ad went through three stages. The first time it was seen, the respondent would just ask ‘what is it?’. On the ‘second exposure’ the viewer was able to evaluate the communication - ‘what of it?’. Having made sense of the message, the ‘third exposure’ would merely be a repetition and after this the subject would begin to ‘disengage’. Krugman developed this argument in various papers published during the 1970's.
In 1979 the Association of National Advertisers in New York produced a book authored by Mike Naples, called Effective Frequency. This reviewed the complex issues involved, and all the relevant experimental findings, starting from Ebbinghaus' research into memory decay in the 1890's. In pride of place was the McDonald Study, and McDonald's own paper about it from the 1970 ESOMAR Congress was included in full as an appendix. The book drew a number of conclusions, and was widely understood to endorse the ‘three exposure theory’ (Dr Krugman contributed the foreword to the volume). The first conclusion of Effective Frequency began, in fact, with the words: ‘One exposure of an advertisement to a target group consumer within a purchase cycle has little or no effect in all but a minority of circumstances...’
When Colin McDonald accepted a brief from the ANA in 1993 to update Effective Frequency he was already becoming uneasy with this conclusion, which was also being challenged by more recent research. In particular he was aware of work being done by Professor John Philip Jones in the USA (published in 1995 as a book, When Ads Work). Using data from the Nielsen single source panel and a similar conceptual approach to the McDonald Study (though not identical), Jones claimed decisive evidence for an advertising effect on behavior after one exposure, with strongly diminishing returns above two.
The result is a substantial rewrite of the earlier book, with some significantly different conclusions. The new book follows much of the original structure, and like the original it reviews a wide body of published evidence. But at the core of the book is a detailed re-examination by McDonald of his 1966 study, which makes it very clear that the ‘two exposure threshold’ was, in fact, an illusion - an artifact of one particular type of analysis which was thereafter extensively quoted out of context. The findings of Jones and McDonald are therefore consistent with each other, and with other single source studies which are referred to in the book.
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