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Advertising
Advertising
from Wikipedia

1948 print advertisement for Rinso laundry soap

Advertising is the practice and techniques employed to bring attention to a product or service. Advertising aims to present a product or service in terms of utility, advantages, and qualities of interest to consumers. It is typically used to promote a specific good or service, but there are a wide range of uses, the most common being commercial advertisement.

Commercial advertisements often seek to generate increased consumption of their products or services through "branding", which associates a product name or image with certain qualities in the minds of consumers. On the other hand, ads that intend to elicit an immediate sale are known as direct-response advertising. Non-commercial entities that advertise more than consumer products or services include political parties, interest groups, religious organizations, and governmental agencies. Non-profit organizations may use free modes of persuasion, such as a public service announcement. Advertising may also help to reassure employees or shareholders that a company is viable or successful.

In the 19th century, soap businesses were among the first to employ large-scale advertising campaigns. Thomas J. Barratt was hired by Pears to be its brand manager—the first of its kind—and in addition to creating slogans and images, he recruited West End stage actress and socialite Lillie Langtry to become the poster girl for Pears, making her the first celebrity to endorse a commercial product.[1] Modern advertising originated with the techniques introduced with tobacco advertising in the 1920s, most significantly with the campaigns of Edward Bernays, considered the founder of modern, "Madison Avenue" advertising.[2][3]

Worldwide spending on advertising in 2015 amounted to an estimated US$529.43 billion.[4] Advertising's projected distribution for 2017 was 40.4% on TV, 33.3% on digital, 9% on newspapers, 6.9% on magazines, 5.8% on outdoor, and 4.3% on radio.[5] Internationally, the largest ("Big Five") advertising agency groups are Omnicom, WPP, Publicis, Interpublic, and Dentsu.[6]

History

[edit]
Bronze plate for printing an advertisement for the Liu family needle shop at Jinan, Song dynasty China. It is the world's earliest identified printed advertising medium.
Edo period LEL flyer from 1806 for a traditional medicine called Kinseitan

Egyptians used papyrus to make sales messages and wall posters.[7] Commercial messages and political campaign displays have been found in the ruins of Pompeii and ancient Arabia. Lost and found advertising on papyrus was common in ancient Greece and ancient Rome. Wall or rock painting for commercial advertising is another manifestation of an ancient advertising form, which is present to this day in many parts of Asia, Africa, and South America. The tradition of wall painting can be traced back to Indian rock art paintings that date back to 4000 BC.[8]

In ancient China, the earliest advertising known was oral, as recorded in the Classic of Poetry (11th to 7th centuries BC) of bamboo flutes played to sell confectionery. Advertisement usually takes the form of calligraphic signboards and inked papers. A copper printing plate dated back to the Song dynasty used to print posters in the form of a square sheet of paper with a rabbit logo with "Jinan Liu's Fine Needle Shop" and "We buy high-quality steel rods and make fine-quality needles, to be ready for use at home in no time" written above and below[9] is considered the world's earliest identified printed advertising medium.[10]

In Europe, as the towns and cities of the Middle Ages began to grow, and the general population was unable to read, instead of signs that read "cobbler", "miller", "tailor", or "blacksmith", images associated with their trade would be used such as a boot, a suit, a hat, a clock, a diamond, a horseshoe, a candle or even a bag of flour. Fruits and vegetables were sold in the city square from the backs of carts and wagons and their proprietors used street callers (town criers) to announce their whereabouts. The first compilation of such advertisements was gathered in "Les Crieries de Paris", a thirteenth-century poem by Guillaume de la Villeneuve.[11]

18th-19th century: Newspaper Advertising

[edit]
Poster for Pears soap created under Thomas J. Barratt's leadership, 1900. Victoria and Albert Museum, London

In the 18th century, advertisements started to appear in weekly newspapers in England. These early print advertisements were used mainly to promote books and newspapers, which became increasingly affordable with advances in the printing press; and medicines, which were increasingly sought after. However, false advertising and so-called "quack" advertisements became a problem, which ushered in the regulation of advertising content.

In the United States, newspapers grew quickly in the first few decades of the 19th century, in part due to advertising. By 1822, the United States had more newspaper readers than any other country. About half of the content of these newspapers consisted of advertising, usually local advertising, with half of the daily newspapers in the 1810s using the word "advertiser" in their name.[12]

"Beechams Pills: Worth a guinea a box", the first advertising slogan from August 1859

In August 1859, British pharmaceutical firm Beechams created a slogan for Beecham's Pills: "Beechams Pills: Worth a guinea a box", which is considered to be the world's first advertising slogan.[13] The Beechams adverts would appear in newspapers all over the world, helping the company become a global brand.[13][14] The phrase was said to be uttered by a satisfied lady purchaser from St Helens, Lancashire, the founder's hometown.[15]

Beecham's slogan in the Los Angeles Herald, July 20, 1893

In June 1836, the French newspaper La Presse was the first to include paid advertising in its pages,[citation needed] allowing it to lower its price, extend its readership and increase its profitability and the formula was soon copied by all titles. Around 1840, Volney B. Palmer established the roots of the modern day advertising agency in Philadelphia. In 1842 Palmer bought large amounts of space in various newspapers at a discounted rate then resold the space at higher rates to advertisers. The actual ad – the copy, layout, and artwork – was still prepared by the company wishing to advertise; in effect, Palmer was a space broker. The situation changed when the first full-service advertising agency of N.W. Ayer & Son was founded in 1869 in Philadelphia. Ayer & Son offered to plan, create, and execute complete advertising campaigns for its customers. By 1900 the advertising agency had become the focal point of creative planning, and advertising was firmly established as a profession. [16] Around the same time, in France, Charles-Louis Havas extended the services of his news agency, Havas to include advertisement brokerage, making it the first French group to organize. At first, agencies were brokers for advertisement space in newspapers.[16]

Late 19th century: Modern Advertising

[edit]

The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw the rise of modern advertising, driven by industrialization and the growth of consumer goods. This era saw the dawn of ad agencies, employing more cunning methods— persuasive diction and psychological tactics.[17] Thomas J. Barratt of London has been called "the father of modern advertising".[18][19][20] Working for the Pears soap company, Barratt created an effective advertising campaign for the company products, which involved the use of targeted slogans, images, and phrases. One of his slogans, "Good morning. Have you used Pears' soap?" was famous in its day and into the 20th century.[21][22] In 1882, Barratt recruited English actress and socialite Lillie Langtry to become the poster girl for Pears, making her the first celebrity to endorse a commercial product.[1][23]

A Coca-Cola advertisement from the 1890s

Becoming the company's brand manager in 1865, listed as the first of its kind by the Guinness Book of Records, Barratt introduced many of the crucial ideas that lie behind successful advertising, and these were widely circulated in his day. He constantly stressed the importance of a strong and exclusive brand image for Pears and of emphasizing the product's availability through saturation campaigns. He also understood the importance of constantly reevaluating the market for changing tastes and mores, stating in 1907 that "tastes change, fashions change, and the advertiser has to change with them. An idea that was effective a generation ago would fall flat, stale, and unprofitable if presented to the public today. Not that the idea of today is always better than the older idea, but it is different – it hits the present taste."[19]

Advertising for Huntley & Palmers wafers c. 1890

Enhanced advertising revenues was one effect of the Industrial Revolution in Britain.[24] Thanks to the revolution and the consumers it created, by the mid-19th century biscuits and chocolate became products for the masses, and British biscuit manufacturers were among the first to introduce branding to distinguish grocery products.[25][26] One the world's first global brands, Huntley & Palmers biscuits were sold in 172 countries in 1900, and their global reach was reflected in their advertisements.[25]

George William Joy's depiction of the interior of a late 19th century omnibus conspicuously shows the advertisements placed overhead.

20th century

[edit]
Advertisement for Guy's Tonic in the 1900s
Advertising revenue as a percent of US GDP shows a rise in audio-visual and digital advertising at the expense of print media.[27]
An Estonian language advertisement about a cruise between Tallinn and Helsinki in the 1930s
A print advertisement for the 1913 issue of the Encyclopædia Britannica

As a result of massive industrialization, advertising increased dramatically in the United States. In 1919 it was 2.5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in the US, and it averaged 2.2 percent of GDP between then and at least 2007, though it may have declined dramatically since the Great Recession.

Industry could not benefit from its increased productivity without a substantial increase in consumer spending. This contributed to the development of mass marketing designed to influence the population's economic behavior on a larger scale.[28] In the 1910s and 1920s, advertisers in the U.S. adopted the doctrine that human instincts could be targeted and harnessed – "sublimated" into the desire to purchase commodities.[29] Edward Bernays, a nephew of Sigmund Freud, became associated with the method and is sometimes called the founder of modern advertising and public relations.[30] Bernays claimed that:

[The] general principle, that men are very largely actuated by motives which they conceal from themselves, is as true of mass as of individual psychology. It is evident that the successful propagandist must understand the true motives and not be content to accept the reasons which men give for what they do.[31]

In other words, selling products by appealing to the rational minds of customers (the main method used prior to Bernays) was much less effective than selling products based on the unconscious desires that Bernays felt were the true motivators of human action. "Sex sells" became a controversial issue, with techniques for titillating and enlarging the audience posing a challenge to conventional morality.[32][33]

In the 1920s, under Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, the American government promoted advertising. Hoover himself delivered an address to the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World in 1925 called 'Advertising Is a Vital Force in Our National Life."[34] In October 1929, the head of the U.S. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Julius Klein, stated "Advertising is the key to world prosperity."[35] This was part of the "unparalleled" collaboration between business and government in the 1920s, according to a 1933 European economic journal.[36]

The tobacco companies became major advertisers in order to sell packaged cigarettes.[37] The tobacco companies pioneered the new advertising techniques when they hired Bernays to create positive associations with tobacco smoking.[2][3]

Advertising was also used as a vehicle for cultural assimilation, encouraging workers to exchange their traditional habits and community structure in favor of a shared "modern" lifestyle.[38] An important tool for influencing immigrant workers was the American Association of Foreign Language Newspapers (AAFLN). The AAFLN was primarily an advertising agency but also gained heavily centralized control over much of the immigrant press.[39][40]

1916 Ladies' Home Journal version of the famous ad by Helen Lansdowne Resor of the J. Walter Thompson Agency

At the turn of the 20th century, advertising was one of the few career choices for women. Since women were responsible for most household purchasing done, advertisers and agencies recognized the value of women's insight during the creative process. In fact, the first American advertising to use a sexual sell was created by a woman – for a soap product. Although tame by today's standards, the advertisement featured a couple with the message "A skin you love to touch".[41]

In the 1920s, psychologists Walter D. Scott and John B. Watson contributed applied psychological theory to the field of advertising. Scott said, "Man has been called the reasoning animal, but he could with greater truthfulness be called the creature of suggestion. He is reasonable, but he is to a greater extent suggestible".[42] He demonstrated this through his advertising technique of a direct command to the consumer.

Radio from the 1920s

[edit]
Advertisement for a live radio broadcast, sponsored by a milk company, Adohr milk, and published in the Los Angeles Times on May 6, 1930

In the early 1920s, the first radio stations were established by radio equipment manufacturers, followed by non-profit organizations such as schools, clubs, and civic groups who also set up their own stations.[43] Retailers and consumer goods manufacturers quickly recognized radio's potential to reach consumers in their homes and soon adopted advertising techniques that would allow their messages to stand out; slogans, mascots, and jingles began to appear on radio in the 1920s and early television in the 1930s.[44]

The rise of mass media communications allowed manufacturers of branded goods to bypass retailers by advertising directly to consumers. This was a major paradigm shift that forced manufacturers to focus on the brand and stimulated the need for superior insights into consumer purchasing, consumption, and usage behavior; their needs, wants, and aspirations.[45] The earliest radio drama series were sponsored by soap manufacturers and the genre became known as a soap opera.[46] Before long, radio station owners realized they could increase advertising revenue by selling 'air-time' in small time allocations, which could be sold to multiple businesses. By the 1930s, these advertising spots, as the packets of time became known, were being sold by the station's geographical sales representatives, ushering in an era of national radio advertising.[47]

By the 1940s, manufacturers began to recognize the way in which consumers were developing personal relationships with their brands in a social/psychological/anthropological sense.[48] Advertisers began to use motivational research and consumer research to gather insights into consumer purchasing. Strong branded campaigns for Chrysler and Exxon/Esso, using insights drawn research methods from psychology and cultural anthropology, led to some of the most enduring campaigns of the 20th century.[49]

Commercial television in the 1950s

[edit]

In the early 1950s, the DuMont Television Network began the modern practice of selling advertisement time to multiple sponsors. Previously, DuMont had trouble finding sponsors for many of their programs and compensated by selling smaller blocks of advertising time to several businesses. This eventually became the standard for the commercial television industry in the United States. However, it was still a common practice to have single sponsor shows, such as The United States Steel Hour. In some instances the sponsors exercised great control over the content of the show – up to and including having one's advertising agency actually writing the show.[50] The single sponsor model is much less prevalent now, a notable exception being the Hallmark Hall of Fame.[51]

Cable television from the 1980s

[edit]

The late 1980s and early 1990s saw the introduction of cable television and particularly MTV. Pioneering the concept of the music video, MTV ushered in a new type of advertising: the consumer tunes in for the advertising message, rather than it being a by-product or afterthought. As cable and satellite television became increasingly prevalent, specialty channels emerged, including channels entirely devoted to advertising, such as QVC, Home Shopping Network, and ShopTV Canada.[52]

Internet from the 1990s

[edit]

With the advent of the ad server, online advertising grew, contributing to the "dot-com" boom of the 1990s.[53] Entire corporations operated solely on advertising revenue, offering everything from coupons to free Internet access. At the turn of the 21st century, some websites, including the search engine Google, changed online advertising by personalizing ads based on web browsing behavior. This has led to other similar efforts and an increase in interactive advertising.[54] Online advertising introduced new opportunities for targeting and engagement, with platforms like Google and Facebook leading the charge. This shift has significantly altered the advertising landscape, making digital advertising a dominant force in the industry.[55]

The share of advertising spending relative to GDP has changed little across large changes in media since 1925. In 1925, the main advertising media in America were newspapers, magazines, signs on streetcars, and outdoor posters. Advertising spending as a share of GDP was about 2.9 percent. By 1998, television and radio had become major advertising media; by 2017, the balance between broadcast and online advertising had shifted, with online spending exceeding broadcast.[56] Nonetheless, advertising spending as a share of GDP was slightly lower – about 2.4 percent.[57]

Guerrilla marketing involves unusual approaches such as staged encounters in public places, giveaways of products such as cars that are covered with brand messages, and interactive advertising where the viewer can respond to become part of the advertising message. This type of advertising is unpredictable, which causes consumers to buy the product or idea.[58] This reflects an increasing trend of interactive and "embedded" ads, such as via product placement, having consumers vote through text messages, and various campaigns utilizing social network services such as Facebook or Twitter.[59]

The advertising business model has also been adapted in recent years.[when?][clarification needed] In media for equity, advertising is not sold, but provided to start-up companies in return for equity. If the company grows and is sold, the media companies receive cash for their shares.

Domain name registrants (usually those who register and renew domains as an investment) sometimes "park" their domains and allow advertising companies to place ads on their sites in return for per-click payments. These ads are typically driven by pay per click search engines like Google or Yahoo, but ads can sometimes be placed directly on targeted domain names through a domain lease or by making contact with the registrant of a domain name that describes a product. Domain name registrants are generally easy to identify through WHOIS records that are publicly available at registrar websites.[60]

Classification

[edit]

Advertising may be categorized in a variety of ways, including by style, target audience, geographic scope, medium, or purpose.[61]: 9–15  For example, in print advertising, classification by style can include display advertising (ads with design elements sold by size) vs. classified advertising (ads without design elements sold by the word or line). Advertising may be local, national or global. An ad campaign may be directed toward consumers or to businesses. The purpose of an ad may be to raise awareness (brand advertising), or to elicit an immediate sale (direct response advertising). The term above the line (ATL) is used for advertising involving mass media; more targeted forms of advertising and promotion are referred to as below the line (BTL).[62][63] The two terms date back to 1954 when Procter & Gamble began paying their advertising agencies differently from other promotional agencies.[64] In the 2010s, as advertising technology developed, a new term, through the line (TTL) began to come into use, referring to integrated advertising campaigns.[65][66]

Traditional media

[edit]
A 1938 cinema advertisement for Esso oil
Advertising man pasting a bill for Madame Tussauds, London in 1877

Virtually any medium can be used for advertising. Commercial advertising media can include wall paintings, billboards, street furniture components, printed flyers and rack cards, radio, cinema and television adverts, web banners, mobile telephone screens, shopping carts, web popups, skywriting, bus stop benches, human billboards and forehead advertising, magazines, newspapers, town criers, sides of buses, banners attached to airplanes ("logojets"), in-flight advertisements on seatback tray tables or overhead storage bins, taxicab doors, roof mounts and passenger screens, musical stage shows, subway platforms and trains, elastic bands on disposable diapers, doors of bathroom stalls, stickers on apples in supermarkets, shopping cart handles (grabertising), the opening section of streaming audio and video, posters, and the backs of event tickets and supermarket receipts. Any situation in which an "identified" sponsor pays to deliver their message through a medium is advertising.[67]

Share of global adspend[68]
Medium 2015 2017 [disputeddiscuss]
Television advertisement 37.7% 34.8%
Desktop online advertising 19.9% 18.2%
Mobile advertising 9.2% 18.4%
Newspaper 12.8% 10.1%
Magazines 6.5% 5.3%
Outdoor advertising 6.8% 6.6%
Radio advertisement 6.5% 5.9%
Cinema 0.6% 0.7%
A television commercial being filmed in 1948
Television
Television advertising is one of the most expensive types of advertising; networks charge large amounts for commercial airtime during popular events. The annual Super Bowl football game in the United States is known as the most prominent advertising event on television – with an audience of over 108 million and studies showing that 50% of those only tuned in to see the advertisements.[69][70] During the 2014 edition of this game, the average thirty-second ad cost US$4 million, and $8 million was charged for a 60-second spot.[69] Virtual advertisements may be inserted into regular programming through computer graphics. It is typically inserted into otherwise blank backdrops[71] or used to replace local billboards that are not relevant to the remote broadcast audience.[72] Virtual billboards may be inserted into the background where none exist in real-life. This technique is especially used in televised sporting events. Virtual product placement is also possible.[73][74] An infomercial is a long-format television commercial, typically five minutes or longer. The name blends the words "information" and "commercial". The main objective in an infomercial is to create an impulse purchase, so that the target sees the presentation and then immediately buys the product through the advertised toll-free telephone number or website. Infomercials describe and often demonstrate products, and commonly have testimonials from customers and industry professionals.[75]
Radio
Radio advertisements are broadcast as radio waves to the air from a transmitter to an antenna and a thus to a receiving device. Airtime is purchased from a station or network in exchange for airing the commercials. While radio has the limitation of being restricted to sound, proponents of radio advertising often cite this as an advantage. Radio is an expanding medium that can be found on air, and also online. According to Arbitron, radio has approximately 241.6 million weekly listeners, or more than 93 percent of the U.S. population.[76]
Online
Online advertising is a form of promotion that uses the Internet and World Wide Web for the expressed purpose of delivering marketing messages to attract customers. Online ads are delivered by an ad server. Examples of online advertising include contextual ads that appear on search engine results pages, banner ads, in pay per click text ads, rich media ads, Social network advertising, online classified advertising, advertising networks and e-mail marketing, including e-mail spam.[77] A newer form of online advertising is Native Ads; they go in a website's news feed and are supposed to improve user experience by being less intrusive. However, some people argue this practice is deceptive.[78]
Domain names
Domain name advertising is most commonly done through pay per click web search engines, however, advertisers often lease space directly on domain names that generically describe their products. When an Internet user visits a website by typing a domain name directly into their web browser, this is known as "direct navigation", or "type in" web traffic. Although many Internet users search for ideas and products using search engines and mobile phones, a large number of users around the world still use the address bar. They will type a keyword into the address bar such as "geraniums" and add ".com" to the end of it. Sometimes they will do the same with ".org" or a country-code Top Level Domain (TLD such as ".co.uk" for the United Kingdom or ".ca" for Canada). When Internet users type in a generic keyword and add .com or another top-level domain (TLD) ending, it produces a targeted sales lead.[79] Domain name advertising was originally developed by Oingo (later known as Applied Semantics), one of Google's early acquisitions.[80]
Product placements
This is when a product or brand is embedded in entertainment and media. For example, in a film, the main character can use an item or other of a definite brand, as in the movie Minority Report, where Tom Cruise's character John Anderton owns a phone with the Nokia logo clearly written in the top corner, or his watch engraved with the Bulgari logo. Another example of advertising in film is in I, Robot, where main character played by Will Smith mentions his Converse shoes several times, calling them "classics", because the film is set far in the future. I, Robot and Spaceballs also showcase futuristic cars with the Audi and Mercedes-Benz logos clearly displayed on the front of the vehicles. Cadillac chose to advertise in the movie The Matrix Reloaded, which as a result contained many scenes in which Cadillac cars were used. Similarly, product placement for Omega Watches, Ford, VAIO, BMW and Aston Martin cars are featured in recent James Bond films, most notably Casino Royale. In "Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer", the main transport vehicle shows a large Dodge logo on the front. Blade Runner includes some of the most obvious product placement; the whole film stops to show a Coca-Cola billboard.[citation needed]
Print
Print advertising describes advertising in a printed medium such as a newspaper, magazine, or trade journal. This encompasses everything from media with a very broad readership base, such as a major national newspaper or magazine, to more narrowly targeted media such as local newspapers and trade journals on very specialized topics. One form of print advertising is classified advertising, which allows private individuals or companies to purchase a small, narrowly targeted ad paid by the word or line. Another form of print advertising is the display ad, which is generally a larger ad with design elements that typically run in an article section of a newspaper.[61]: 14 
Outdoor
Outdoor advertisements, such as Shaftesbury Avenue, London c. 1949 pictured here, are usually placed in busy locations.
Hoardings as seen on commercial buildings in Hyderabad, India
Billboards, also known as hoardings in some parts of the world, are large structures located in public places which display advertisements to passing pedestrians and motorists. Most often, they are located on main roads with a large amount of passing motor and pedestrian traffic; however, they can be placed in any location with large numbers of viewers, such as on mass transit vehicles and in stations, in shopping malls or office buildings, and in stadiums. The form known as street advertising first came to prominence in the UK by Street Advertising Services to create outdoor advertising on street furniture and pavements. Working with products such as Reverse Graffiti, air dancers and 3D pavement advertising, for getting brand messages out into public spaces.[81] Sheltered outdoor advertising combines outdoor with indoor advertisement by placing large mobile, structures (tents) in public places on temporary bases. The large outer advertising space aims to exert a strong pull on the observer, the product is promoted indoors, where the creative decor can intensify the impression.[81] Mobile billboards are generally vehicle mounted billboards or digital screens. These can be on dedicated vehicles built solely for carrying advertisements along routes preselected by clients, they can also be specially equipped cargo trucks or, in some cases, large banners strewn from planes. The billboards are often lighted; some being backlit, and others employing spotlights. Some billboard displays are static, while others change; for example, continuously or periodically rotating among a set of advertisements. Mobile displays are used for various situations in metropolitan areas throughout the world, including: target advertising, one-day and long-term campaigns, conventions, sporting events, store openings and similar promotional events, and big advertisements from smaller companies.[81]
An advertisement for a diner. Such signs are common on storefronts.
Point-of-sale
In-store advertising is any advertisement placed in a retail store. It includes placement of a product in visible locations in a store, such as at eye level, at the ends of aisles and near checkout counters (a.k.a. POP – point of purchase display), eye-catching displays promoting a specific product, and advertisements in such places as shopping carts and in-store video displays.[82]
Novelties
Advertising printed on small tangible items such as coffee mugs, T-shirts, pens, bags, and such is known as novelty advertising. Some printers specialize in printing novelty items, which can then be distributed directly by the advertiser, or items may be distributed as part of a cross-promotion, such as ads on fast food containers. [citation needed]
Celebrity endorsements
Advertising in which a celebrity endorses a product or brand leverages celebrity power, fame, money, and popularity to gain recognition for their products or to promote specific stores' or products. Advertisers often advertise their products, for example, when celebrities share their favorite products or wear clothes by specific brands or designers. Celebrities are often involved in advertising campaigns such as television or print adverts to advertise specific or general products. The use of celebrities to endorse a brand can have its downsides, however; one mistake by a celebrity can be detrimental to the public relations of a brand. For example, following his performance of eight gold medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China, swimmer Michael Phelps' contract with Kellogg's was terminated, as Kellogg's did not want to associate with him after he was photographed smoking marijuana.[83] Celebrities such as Britney Spears have advertised for multiple products including Pepsi, Candies from Kohl's, Twister, NASCAR, and Toyota.[84]
Aerial
Using aircraft, balloons or airships to create or display advertising media. Skywriting is a notable example.[citation needed]
An Allegiant Air aircraft in the special Blue Man Group livery
A Zeppelin NT (D-LZFN) of Friedrichshafen used for advertisement

New media approaches

[edit]

A new advertising approach is known as advanced advertising, which is data-driven advertising, using large quantities of data, precise measuring tools and precise targeting.[85] Advanced advertising also makes it easier for companies which sell ad space to attribute customer purchases to the ads they display or broadcast.[86]

Increasingly, other media are overtaking many of the "traditional" media such as television, radio and newspaper because of a shift toward the usage of the Internet for news and music as well as devices like digital video recorders (DVRs) such as TiVo.[87]

Online advertising began with unsolicited bulk e-mail advertising known as "e-mail spam". Spam has been a problem for e-mail users since 1978.[88] As new online communication channels became available, advertising followed. The first banner ad appeared on the World Wide Web in 1994.[89] Prices of Web-based advertising space are dependent on the "relevance" of the surrounding web content and the traffic that the website receives.[citation needed]

In online display advertising, display ads generate awareness quickly. Unlike search, which requires someone to be aware of a need, display advertising can drive awareness of something new and without previous knowledge. Display works well for direct response. The display is not only used for generating awareness, it is used for direct response campaigns that link to a landing page with a clear 'call to action'.[citation needed]

As the mobile phone became a new mass medium in 1998 when the first paid downloadable content appeared on mobile phones in Finland,[90][citation needed] mobile advertising followed, also first launched in Finland in 2000.[citation needed] By 2007 the value of mobile advertising had reached $2 billion and providers such as Admob delivered billions of mobile ads.[citation needed]

More advanced mobile ads include banner ads, coupons, Multimedia Messaging Service picture and video messages, advergames and various engagement marketing campaigns. A particular feature driving mobile ads is the 2D barcode, which replaces the need to do any typing of web addresses, and uses the camera feature of modern phones to gain immediate access to web content. 83 percent of Japanese mobile phone users already are active users of 2D barcodes.[91]

Some companies have proposed placing messages or corporate logos on the side of booster rockets and the International Space Station.[92]

Unpaid advertising (also called "publicity advertising"), can include personal recommendations ("bring a friend", "sell it"), spreading buzz, or achieving the feat of equating a brand with a common noun (in the United States, "Xerox" = "photocopier", "Kleenex" = tissue, "Vaseline" = petroleum jelly, "Hoover" = vacuum cleaner, and "Band-Aid" = adhesive bandage). However, some companies[which?] oppose the use of their brand name to label an object. Equating a brand with a common noun also risks turning that brand into a generic trademark – turning it into a generic term which means that its legal protection as a trademark is lost.[93] [disputeddiscuss]

Early in its life, The CW aired short programming breaks called "Content Wraps", to advertise one company's product during an entire commercial break. The CW pioneered "content wraps" and some products featured were Herbal Essences, Crest, Guitar Hero II, CoverGirl, and Toyota.[94][95]

A new promotion concept has appeared, "ARvertising", advertising on augmented reality technology.[96]

Controversy exists on the effectiveness of subliminal advertising (see mind control), and the pervasiveness of mass messages (propaganda).

Rise in new media

[edit]
US newspaper advertising revenue, Newspaper Association of America published data[97]

With the Internet came many new advertising opportunities. Pop-up, Flash, banner, pop-under, advergaming, and email advertisements (all of which are often unwanted or spam in the case of email) are now commonplace. Particularly since the rise of "entertaining" advertising, some people may like an advertisement enough to wish to watch it later or show a friend.[citation needed] In general, the advertising community has not yet made this easy, although some have used the Internet to widely distribute their ads to anyone willing to see or hear them. In the last three quarters of 2009, mobile and Internet advertising grew by 18% and 9% respectively, while older media advertising saw declines: −10.1% (TV), −11.7% (radio), −14.8% (magazines) and −18.7% (newspapers).[citation needed] Between 2008 and 2014, U.S. newspapers lost more than half their print advertising revenue.[98]

Niche marketing

[edit]

Another significant trend regarding future of advertising is the growing importance of the niche market using niche or targeted ads. Also brought about by the Internet and the theory of the long tail, advertisers will have an increasing ability to reach specific audiences. In the past, the most efficient way to deliver a message was to blanket the largest mass market audience possible.[citation needed] However, usage tracking, customer profiles and the growing popularity of niche content brought about by everything from blogs to social networking sites, provide advertisers with audiences that are smaller but much better defined,[citation needed] leading to ads that are more relevant to viewers and more effective for companies' marketing products. Among others, Comcast Spotlight is one such advertiser employing this method in their video on demand menus. These advertisements are targeted to a specific group and can be viewed by anyone wishing to find out more about a particular business or practice, from their home. This causes the viewer to become proactive and actually choose what advertisements they want to view.[99] Niche marketing could also be helped by bringing the issue of color into advertisements. Different colors play major roles when it comes to marketing strategies, for example, seeing the blue can promote a sense of calmness and gives a sense of security which is why many social networks such as Facebook use blue in their logos. Google AdSense is an example of niche marketing. Google calculates the primary purpose of a website and adjusts ads accordingly; it uses keywords on the page (or even in emails) to find the general ideas of topics disused and places ads that will most likely be clicked on by viewers of the email account or website visitors.

Crowdsourcing

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The concept of crowdsourcing has given way to the trend of user-generated advertisements. User-generated ads are created by people, as opposed to an advertising agency or the company themselves, often resulting from brand sponsored advertising competitions. For the 2007 Super Bowl, the Frito-Lays division of PepsiCo held the "Crash the Super Bowl" contest, allowing people to create their own Doritos commercials.[100] Chevrolet held a similar competition for their Tahoe line of SUVs.[100] Due to the success of the Doritos user-generated ads in the 2007 Super Bowl, Frito-Lays relaunched the competition for the 2009 and 2010 Super Bowl. The resulting ads were among the most-watched and most-liked Super Bowl ads. In fact, the winning ad that aired in the 2009 Super Bowl was ranked by the USA Today Super Bowl Ad Meter as the top ad for the year while the winning ads that aired in the 2010 Super Bowl were found by Nielsen's BuzzMetrics to be the "most buzzed-about".[101][102] Another example of companies using crowdsourcing successfully is the beverage company Jones Soda that encourages consumers to participate in the label design themselves.[103]

This trend has given rise to several online platforms that host user-generated advertising competitions on behalf of a company. Founded in 2007, Zooppa has launched ad competitions for brands such as Google, Nike, Hershey's, General Mills, Microsoft, NBC Universal, Zinio, and Mini Cooper.[104] Crowdsourcing remains controversial, as the long-term impact on the advertising industry is still unclear.[105]

Globalization

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Advertising has gone through five major stages of development: domestic, export, international, multi-national, and global. For global advertisers, there are four, potentially competing, business objectives that must be balanced when developing worldwide advertising: building a brand while speaking with one voice, developing economies of scale in the creative process, maximizing local effectiveness of ads, and increasing the company's speed of implementation. Born from the evolutionary stages of global marketing are the three primary and fundamentally different approaches to the development of global advertising executions: exporting executions, producing local executions, and importing ideas that travel.[106]

Advertising research is key to determining the success of an ad in any country or region. The ability to identify which elements and/or moments of an ad contribute to its success is how economies of scale are maximized. Once one knows what works in an ad, that idea or ideas can be imported by any other market. Market research measures, such as Flow of Attention, Flow of Emotion and branding moments provide insight into what is working in an ad in any country or region because the measures are based on the visual, not verbal, elements of the ad.[107]

Foreign public messaging

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Foreign governments,[which?] particularly those that own marketable commercial products or services, often promote their interests and positions through the advertising of those goods because the target audience is not only largely unaware of the forum as a vehicle for foreign messaging but also willing to receive the message while in a mental state of absorbing information from advertisements during television commercial breaks, while reading a periodical, or while passing by billboards in public spaces. A prime example of this messaging technique is advertising campaigns to promote international travel. While advertising foreign destinations and services may stem from the typical goal of increasing revenue by drawing more tourism, some travel campaigns carry the additional or alternative intended purpose of promoting good sentiments or improving existing ones among the target audience towards a given nation or region. It is common for advertising promoting foreign countries to be produced and distributed by the tourism ministries of those countries, so these ads often carry political statements and/or depictions of the foreign government's desired international public perception. Additionally, a wide range of foreign airlines and travel-related services which advertise separately from the destinations, themselves, are owned by their respective governments; examples include, though are not limited to, the Emirates airline (Dubai), Singapore Airlines (Singapore), Qatar Airways (Qatar), China Airlines (Taiwan/Republic of China), and Air China (People's Republic of China). By depicting their destinations, airlines, and other services in a favorable and pleasant light, countries market themselves to populations abroad in a manner that could mitigate prior public impressions.

Diversification

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In the realm of advertising agencies, continued industry diversification has seen observers note that "big global clients don't need big global agencies any more".[108] This is reflected by the growth of non-traditional agencies in various global markets, such as Canadian business TAXI and SMART in Australia and has been referred to as "a revolution in the ad world".[109]

New technology

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The ability to record shows on digital video recorders (such as TiVo) allow watchers to record the programs for later viewing, enabling them to fast forward through commercials. Additionally, as more seasons of pre-recorded box sets are offered for sale of television programs; fewer people watch the shows on TV. However, the fact that these sets are sold, means the company will receive additional profits from these sets.

To counter this effect, a variety of strategies have been employed. Many advertisers have opted for product placement on TV shows like Survivor. Other strategies include integrating advertising with internet-connected program guidess (EPGs), advertising on companion devices (like smartphones and tablets) during the show, and creating mobile apps for TV programs. Additionally, some like brands have opted for social television sponsorship.[110]

The emerging technology of drone displays has recently been used for advertising purposes.[111]

Education

[edit]

In recent years there have been several media literacy initiatives, and more specifically concerning advertising, that seek to empower citizens in the face of media advertising campaigns.[112]

Advertising education has become popular with bachelor, master and doctorate degrees becoming available in the emphasis.[citation needed] A surge in advertising interest is typically attributed to the strong relationship advertising plays in cultural and technological changes, such as the advance of online social networking.[citation needed] A unique model for teaching advertising is the student-run advertising agency, where advertising students create campaigns for real companies.[113] Organizations such as the American Advertising Federation establish companies with students to create these campaigns.[citation needed]

Purposes

[edit]

Advertising is at the front of delivering the proper message to customers and prospective customers. The purpose of advertising is to inform the consumers about their product and convince customers that a company's services or products are the best, enhance the image of the company, point out and create a need for products or services, demonstrate new uses for established products, announce new products and programs, reinforce the salespeople's individual messages, draw customers to the business, and to hold existing customers.[114]

Sales promotions and brand loyalty

[edit]

Sales promotions are another way to advertise. Sales promotions are double purposed because they are used to gather information about what type of customers one draws in and where they are, and to jump start sales. Sales promotions include things like contests and games, sweepstakes, product giveaways, samples coupons, loyalty programs, and discounts. The ultimate goal of sales promotions is to stimulate potential customers to action.[115]

Criticisms

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"More Doctors Smoke Camels than Any Other Cigarette" advertisement for Camel cigarettes in the 1940s

While advertising can be seen as necessary for economic growth,[35] it is not without social costs. Unsolicited commercial e-mail and other forms of spam have become so prevalent as to have become a major nuisance to users of these services, as well as being a financial burden on internet service providers.[116] Advertising is increasingly invading public spaces, such as schools, which some critics argue is a form of child exploitation.[117] This increasing difficulty in limiting exposure to specific audiences can result in negative backlash for advertisers.[118] In tandem with these criticisms, the advertising industry has seen low approval rates in surveys and negative cultural portrayals.[119] A 2021 study of TV advertising found that for more than 80% of brands, advertising had a negative return on investment.[120] Unsolicited ads have been criticized as attention theft.[121]

One of the most controversial criticisms of advertisement in the present day is that of the predominance of advertising of foods high in sugar, fat, and salt specifically to children. Critics claim that food advertisements targeting children are exploitive and are not sufficiently balanced with proper nutritional education to help children understand the consequences of their food choices. Additionally, children may not understand that they are being sold something, and are therefore more impressionable.[122] Michelle Obama has criticized large food companies for advertising unhealthy foods largely towards children and has requested that food companies either limit their advertising to children or advertise foods that are more in line with dietary guidelines.[123] The other criticisms include the change that are brought by those advertisements on the society and also the deceiving ads that are aired and published by the corporations. Cosmetic and health industry are the ones which exploited the highest and created reasons of concern.[124] Political advertisement and their regulations have been scrutinized for misinformation, ethics and political bias.[125]

Regulation

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There have been increasing efforts to protect the public interest by regulating the content and the influence of advertising. Some examples include restrictions for advertising alcohol, tobacco or gambling imposed in many countries, as well as the bans around advertising to children, which exist in parts of Europe. Advertising regulation focuses heavily on the veracity of the claims and as such, there are often tighter restrictions placed around advertisements for food and healthcare products.[126]

The advertising industries within some countries rely less on laws and more on systems of self-regulation.[126][127][128] Advertisers and the media agree on a code of advertising standards that they attempt to uphold. The general aim of such codes is to ensure that any advertising is 'legal, decent, honest and truthful'. Some self-regulatory organizations are funded by the industry, but remain independent, with the intent of upholding the standards or codes like the Advertising Standards Authority in the UK.[129]

In the UK, most forms of outdoor advertising, such as the display of billboards, are regulated by the UK Town and County Planning system. The display of an advertisement without consent from the Planning Authority is a criminal offense liable to a fine of £2,500 per offense.[130] In the US, where some communities believe that outdoor advertising are a blight on landscapes, attempts to ban billboard advertising in the open countryside occurred in the 1960s, leading to the Highway Beautification Act.[131] Cities such as São Paulo have introduced an outright ban,[132] with London also having specific legislation to control unlawful displays.[133]

Some governments restrict the languages that can be used in advertisements, but advertisers may employ tricks to try avoiding them. In France for instance, advertisers sometimes print English words in bold and French translations in fine print to deal with Article 120 of the 1994 Toubon Law limiting the use of English.[134]

The advertising of pricing information is another topic of concern for governments. In the United States for instance, it is common for businesses to only mention the existence and amount of applicable taxes at a later stage of a transaction.[135] In Canada and New Zealand, taxes can be listed as separate items, as long as they are quoted up-front.[136][137] In most other countries, the advertised price must include all applicable taxes, enabling customers to easily know how much it will cost them.[138][139][140]

Theory

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Hierarchy-of-effects models

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Various competing models of hierarchies of effects attempt to provide a theoretical underpinning to advertising practice.[clarification needed][141]

  • The model of Clow and Baack[142] clarifies the objectives of an advertising campaign and for each individual advertisement. The model postulates six steps a buyer moves through when making a purchase:
    1. Awareness
    2. Knowledge
    3. Liking
    4. Preference
    5. Conviction
    6. Purchase
  • Means-end theory suggests that an advertisement should contain a message or means that leads the consumer to a desired end-state.[143]
  • Leverage points aim to move the consumer from understanding a product's benefits to linking those benefits with personal values.[144]

Marketing mix

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The marketing mix was proposed by professor E. Jerome McCarthy in the 1960s.[145] It consists of four basic elements called the "four Ps". Product is the first P representing the actual product. Price represents the process of determining the value of a product. Place represents the variables of getting the product to the consumer such as distribution channels, market coverage and movement organization. The last P stands for Promotion which is the process of reaching the target market and convincing them to buy the product.

In the 1990s, the concept of four Cs was introduced as a more customer-driven replacement of four P's.[146] There are two theories based on four Cs: Lauterborn's four Cs (consumer, cost, communication, convenience) [147] and Shimizu's four Cs (commodity, cost, communication, channel) in the 7Cs Compass Model (Co-marketing). Communications can include advertising, sales promotion, public relations, publicity, personal selling, corporate identity, internal communication, SNS, and MIS.[148][149][150][151]

Research

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Advertising research is a specialized form of research that works to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of advertising. It entails numerous forms of research which employ different methodologies. Advertising research includes pre-testing (also known as copy testing) and post-testing of ads and/or campaigns.

Pre-testing includes a wide range of qualitative and quantitative techniques, including: focus groups, in-depth target audience interviews (one-on-one interviews), small-scale quantitative studies and physiological measurement. The goal of these investigations is to better understand how different groups respond to various messages and visual prompts, thereby providing an assessment of how well the advertisement meets its communications goals.[152]

Post-testing employs many of the same techniques as pre-testing, usually with a focus on understanding the change in awareness or attitude attributable to the advertisement.[153] With the emergence of digital advertising technologies, many firms have begun to continuously post-test ads using real-time data. This may take the form of A/B split-testing or multivariate testing.

Continuous ad tracking and the Communicus System are competing examples of post-testing advertising research types.[154]

Semiotics

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Meanings between consumers and marketers depict signs and symbols that are encoded in everyday objects.[155] Semiotics is the study of signs and how they are interpreted. Advertising has many hidden signs and meanings within brand names, logos, package designs, print advertisements, and television advertisements. Semiotics aims to study and interpret the message being conveyed in (for example) advertisements. Logos and advertisements can be interpreted at two levels – known as the surface level and the underlying level. The surface level uses signs creatively to create an image or personality for a product.[citation needed] These signs can be images, words, fonts, colors, or slogans. The underlying level is made up of hidden meanings. The combination of images, words, colors, and slogans must be interpreted by the audience or consumer.[156] The "key to advertising analysis" is the signifier and the signified. The signifier is the object and the signified is the mental concept.[157] A product has a signifier and a signified. The signifier is the color, brand name, logo design, and technology. The signified has two meanings known as denotative and connotative. The denotative meaning is the meaning of the product. A television's denotative meaning might be that it is high definition. The connotative meaning is the product's deep and hidden meaning. A connotative meaning of a television would be that it is top-of-the-line.[158]

Apple's commercials[when?] used a black silhouette of a person that was the age of Apple's target market. They placed the silhouette in front of a blue screen so that the picture behind the silhouette could be constantly changing. However, the one thing that stays the same in these ads is that there is music in the background and the silhouette is listening to that music on a white iPod through white headphones. Through advertising, the white color on a set of earphones now signifies that the music device is an iPod. The white color signifies almost all of Apple's products.[159]

The semiotics of gender plays a key influence on the way in which signs are interpreted. When considering gender roles in advertising, individuals are influenced by three categories. Certain characteristics of stimuli may enhance or decrease the elaboration of the message (if the product is perceived as feminine or masculine). Second, the characteristics of individuals can affect attention and elaboration of the message (traditional or non-traditional gender role orientation). Lastly, situational factors may be important to influence the elaboration of the message.[citation needed]

There are two types of marketing communication claims-objective and subjective.[160] Objective claims stem from the extent to which the claim associates the brand with a tangible product or service feature. For instance, a camera may have auto-focus features. Subjective claims convey emotional, subjective, impressions of intangible aspects of a product or service. They are non-physical features of a product or service that cannot be directly perceived, as they have no physical reality. For instance the brochure has a beautiful design.[161] Males tend to respond better to objective marketing-communications claims while females tend to respond better to subjective marketing communications claims.[162]

Voiceovers are commonly used in advertising. Most voiceovers are done by men, with figures of up to 94% having been reported.[163] There have been more female voiceovers in recent years,[when?] but mainly for food, household products, and feminine-care products.[164]

Gender effects on comprehension

[edit]

According to a 1977 study by David Statt, females process information comprehensively, while males process information through heuristic devices such as procedures, methods or strategies for solving problems, which could have an effect on how they interpret advertising.[165][need quotation to verify] According to this study, men prefer to have available and apparent cues to interpret the message, whereas females engage in more creative, associative, imagery-laced interpretation. Later research by a Danish team[166] found that advertising attempts to persuade men to improve their appearance or performance, whereas its approach to women aims at transformation toward an impossible ideal of female presentation. In Paul Suggett's article "The Objectification of Women in Advertising" he discusses the negative impact that these women in advertisements, who are too perfect to be real, have on women, as well as men, in real life.[167] Advertising's manipulation of women's aspiration to these ideal types as portrayed in film, in erotic art, in advertising, on stage, within music videos and through other media exposures requires at least a conditioned rejection of female reality and thereby takes on a highly ideological cast. Studies show that these expectations of women and young girls negatively affect their views about their bodies and appearances. These advertisements are directed towards men. Not everyone agrees: one critic viewed this monologic, gender-specific interpretation of advertising as excessively skewed and politicized.[168][need quotation to verify] There are some companies like Dove and aerie that are creating commercials to portray more natural women, with less post production manipulation, so more women and young girls are able to relate to them.[citation needed]

More recent research by Martin (2003) reveals that males and females differ in how they react to advertising depending on their mood at the time of exposure to the ads and on the affective tone of the advertising. When feeling sad, males prefer happy ads to boost their mood. In contrast, females prefer happy ads when they are feeling happy. The television programs in which ads are embedded influence a viewer's mood state.[169] Susan Wojcicki, author of the article "Ads that Empower Women don't just Break Stereotypes—They're also Effective" discusses how advertising to women has changed since the first Barbie commercial, where a little girl tells the doll that, she wants to be just like her. Little girls grow up watching advertisements of scantily clad women advertising things from trucks to burgers and Wojcicki states that this shows girls that they are either arm candy or eye candy.[170]

Alternatives

[edit]

Other approaches to revenue include donations, paid subscriptions, microtransactions, and data monetization. Websites and applications are "ad-free" when not using advertisements at all for revenue. For example, the online encyclopedia Wikipedia provides free[171] content by receiving funding from charitable donations.[172]

"Fathers" of advertising

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  • Late 1700s – Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) – "father of advertising in America"[173]
  • Late 1800s – Thomas J. Barratt (1841–1914) of London – called "the father of modern advertising" by T.F.G. Coates[174]
  • Early 1900s – J. Henry ("Slogan") Smythe Jr of Philadelphia – "world's best known slogan writer"[173]
  • Early 1900s – Albert Lasker (1880–1952) – the "father of modern advertising"; defined advertising as "salesmanship in print, driven by a reason why"[175]

Influential thinkers in advertising theory and practice

[edit]
  • N. W. Ayer & Son – probably the first advertising agency to use mass media (i.e. telegraph) in a promotional campaign
  • Claude C. Hopkins (1866–1932) – popularised the use of test campaigns, especially coupons in direct mail, to track the efficiency of marketing spend
  • Ernest Dichter (1907–1991) – developed the field of motivational research, used extensively in advertising
  • E. St. Elmo Lewis (1872–1948) – developed the first hierarchy of effects model (AIDA) used in sales and advertising
  • Arthur Nielsen (1897–1980) – founded one of the earliest international advertising agencies and developed ratings for radio & TV
  • David Ogilvy (1911–1999) – pioneered the positioning concept and advocated of the use of brand image in advertising
  • Charles Coolidge Parlin (1872–1942) – regarded as the pioneer of the use of marketing research in advertising
  • Rosser Reeves (1910–1984) – developed the concept of the unique selling proposition (USP) and advocated the use of repetition in advertising
  • Al Ries (1926–2022) – advertising executive, author and credited with coining the term "positioning" in the late 1960s
  • Daniel Starch (1883–1979) – developed the Starch score method of measuring print media effectiveness (still in use)
  • J Walter Thompson – one of the earliest advertising agencies

See also

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References

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Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Advertising is the structured dissemination of persuasive, paid messages by identified sponsors through diverse media channels to inform, influence, or induce audiences toward specific actions, such as purchasing products or adopting ideas. Its origins trace to ancient civilizations, with the earliest documented written advertisement—a papyrus notice from circa 3000 BC offering rewards for a runaway slave—marking rudimentary commercial promotion. Over millennia, advertising advanced with innovations like printed broadsides in 15th-century , mass-circulation newspapers in the , and in the 20th, culminating in digital platforms that now dominate delivery. In contemporary economies, it underpins market by reducing consumer search costs, fostering , and signaling product , with empirical analyses linking higher advertising intensity to lower prices and broader . Global spending surpassed $1 trillion in 2024, reflecting its scale and integration into GDP, where U.S. advertising alone supports nearly 20% of economic output and tens of millions of jobs through stimulated sales and downstream effects. Cross-country further demonstrate advertising's positive with long-term GDP growth, as expenditures expand demand and innovation incentives. Defining controversies center on deceptive or unsubstantiated claims, which have prompted rigorous regulations—such as U.S. mandates for truthful, evidence-based assertions—to curb while preserving informational benefits. Despite critiques of excess or manipulation, causal evidence underscores advertising's net role in over artificial demand creation, distinguishing it from mere hype through verifiable sales elasticities.

Fundamentals

Definition and Core Principles

Advertising constitutes the paid dissemination of communications designed to inform or persuade an regarding products, services, ideas, or causes, typically from an identifiable sponsor, with the intent of influencing attitudes or behaviors such as purchasing decisions. This distinguishes it from unpaid forms of promotion like or organic word-of-mouth, emphasizing the commercial transaction where the sponsor compensates channels—such as print, broadcast, or digital platforms—for message placement. In economic terms, advertising functions as a mechanism to reduce information asymmetries between producers and consumers, conveying details on availability, features, and pricing that might otherwise require costly individual searches. At its core, advertising operates on principles of targeted communication and behavioral influence, structured around objectives to inform (awareness of offerings), persuade (convincing of superiority or value), and remind (reinforcing brand recall amid competition). These align with models like —Attention, Interest, Desire, Action—which guide message crafting to capture notice, build engagement, evoke preference, and prompt response. Effectiveness hinges on , where claims must be substantiated to avoid , and differentiation, positioning the sponsor's offering against rivals by highlighting unique benefits or quality signals, such as willingness to invest in promotion as an indicator of reliability. Repetition reinforces familiarity, leveraging psychological principles of mere exposure to foster positive associations, though overexposure risks or . From a causal standpoint, advertising's value emerges when it expands beyond what organic discovery could achieve, particularly in markets with high consumer search costs or , as evidenced by firms' optimal spending where marginal ad-generated revenue equals . It does not inherently create needs but amplifies and perceived , enabling scale economies for producers while providing consumers indirect benefits like competitive signals through promotional . Empirical assessments, such as econometric analyses of responses, underscore that successful campaigns yield returns via measurable lifts in consumption, though returns diminish with saturation and vary by industry—higher in experience goods like consumer packaged items than search goods like commodities. Critiques positing advertising as resource waste overlook these dynamics, as voluntary expenditures reflect profit-maximizing behavior rather than inefficiency, with weeding out ineffective efforts.

Economic Role and Value Creation

Advertising serves a core economic function by disseminating about , thereby reducing consumers' search costs and mitigating information asymmetries between buyers and sellers. This informational role enhances market efficiency by enabling better matching of , as consumers can discover products that align with their preferences without exhaustive personal effort. Empirical analyses indicate that such information provision generates consumer surplus through lowered transaction costs and increased competition, which pressures firms to innovate and reduce prices. For instance, studies modeling advertising's impact on media-financed goods demonstrate that it fosters price competition and expands access to free or low-cost content, yielding net welfare gains for consumers. Direct expenditures on advertising represent approximately 1-2% of (GDP) in advanced economies, reflecting its scale as an input to broader economic activity. , historical data show advertising revenue stabilizing around 2% of GDP from the onward, with total global ad spending reaching nearly $792 billion in 2024. These outlays fund production, distribution, and media infrastructure, but their direct share understates the induced effects, as advertising amplifies and downstream . Economic models estimate that each dollar spent on advertising generates multiple dollars in additional economic output by stimulating demand and supporting related industries. Beyond direct spending, advertising catalyzes significant value creation through multiplier effects, contributing to roughly 19-20% of U.S. GDP via induced sales, jobs, and wages, according to input-output analyses conducted by economic consultancies. These models, while commissioned by industry groups such as the American Association of Advertising Agencies, rely on established econometric techniques tracing advertising's ripple through supply chains, supporting nearly 29 million jobs and $7.1 trillion in annual sales as of recent estimates. Such impacts arise causally from advertising's capacity to scale markets, build brands that signal quality, and enable in production, though critics argue portions may represent persuasive rather than purely informational expenditures; however, net empirical contributions affirm positive growth effects comparable to investments in R&D or software. In sustaining media ecosystems, advertising underwrites that would otherwise require direct payments, democratizing access to and while indirectly boosting productivity through an informed populace. This funding mechanism, evident in the shift to digital platforms, has preserved low barriers to , with studies quantifying billions in from ad-supported services. Overall, advertising's economic role lies in its capacity to lower barriers to market entry for producers and enhance , fostering and growth without the distortions of pure monopoly pricing.

Historical Development

Ancient Origins to Early Modern Period

The earliest evidence of advertising appears in around 3000 BC, where merchants used to create posters promoting sales, political campaigns, and lost items, such as a notable fragment from Thebes offering a reward for a runaway slave. Wall paintings and carvings served as outdoor advertisements in , , and , with sellers inscribing product details or services on buildings, rocks, and monuments to attract passersby in marketplaces. In , notices for lost-and-found items were common, while Roman towns like Pompeii featured tituli picti—painted wall ads for taverns, gladiatorial events, and goods—demonstrating early use of visual branding and endorsements to build vendor reputation through word-of-mouth reinforcement. Shop signs, often pictorial for illiterate populations, persisted across these civilizations, functioning as rudimentary trademarks to signal availability and quality without reliance on mass . During the medieval period, advertising remained localized and non-printed, relying on town criers who announced goods in public squares, heralds for royal proclamations, and guild-regulated shop signs in European towns, where economic constraints limited scale beyond direct trade. The transition to the (circa 1400–1800) accelerated with Johannes Gutenberg's invention of movable-type around , enabling the of handbills and flyers distributed in streets and nailed to church doors to promote books, medicines, and events. In , William printed one of the first known book advertisements in 1477 at his Westminster press, targeting readers with details of The Sarum Ordinal—a —marking the shift toward reproducible, text-based promotion. By the , the rise of newspapers integrated advertising into regular print media; Dutch gazettes from 1621 included notices for auctions and imports, while English weeklies like the London Gazette (established 1665) carried ads primarily for books, patents, and lost property, reflecting growing commercial literacy and urban markets. These early print ads emphasized factual listings over persuasion, often featuring illustrations for remedies like pills or tonics, with credibility tied to verifiable claims amid skepticism toward unproven cures. Trade cards—small engraved cards distributed by merchants—emerged in 17th-century and , serving dual purposes as receipts and subtle promotions with addresses and specialties, prefiguring modern branding without the volume of later mass production. In non-Western contexts, such as Japan's (1603–1868), woodblock prints and shop signs advertised consumer goods like textiles in urban centers, adapting local printing techniques to similar informational ends. This era's advertising was constrained by low literacy rates (under 20% in most of until the 1700s), regulatory oversight on false claims, and economies oriented toward necessity rather than consumption, prioritizing direct information over psychological manipulation. Empirical records from surviving confirm effectiveness was measured by immediate transactions, not long-term loyalty, with print's causal impact evident in rising book sales and import notices amid expanding Atlantic trade.

Industrial Revolution and Mass Production Era

The Industrial Revolution, commencing in Britain around 1760 and extending to the United States by the early 1800s, transformed production from craft-based to mechanized, generating surpluses of standardized goods that outstripped local demand. This shift necessitated advertising to cultivate broader consumer awareness and demand, evolving from rudimentary local notices to systematic promotion via print media enabled by steam-powered presses and improved literacy rates. Manufacturers increasingly relied on newspapers and posters to inform distant markets about product availability, quality, and novelty, as transportation advancements like railways facilitated wider distribution. By the mid-19th century, the proliferation of branded consumer goods underscored advertising's role in amid homogeneous mass outputs. Pioneering examples included Beecham's Pills, promoted in 1859 as "worth a guinea a box" through bold claims of for digestive ailments, and Bass Brewery's red triangle trademark, in use since 1777 and registered in 1876 under Britain's first Trade Marks Act to signify consistent quality. Advertising agencies emerged to professionalize these efforts; Volney B. Palmer established the first in in 1841, initially brokering space in newspapers before evolving into creative services by firms like N.W. Ayer & Son in 1869. In the era of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, advertising expenditures surged to match output scales, with U.S. spending rising from approximately $200 million in 1880 to nearly $3 billion by 1920, reflecting intensified competition and consumer culture growth. Thomas J. Barratt of A&F Pears elevated , commissioning the iconic "Bubbles" artwork reproduction in and allocating substantial budgets—up to a third of sales—to illustrated ads emphasizing purity and imperial associations, establishing precedents for visual branding and celebrity endorsements like actress . These strategies not only drove sales of commoditized items but also shaped public perceptions, prioritizing empirical appeals to utility over mere information.

20th Century Mass Media Expansion

The witnessed the acceleration of advertising through the proliferation of , building on print foundations while introducing broadcast technologies that enabled simultaneous national reach. , and advertising revenues expanded with rising and literacy rates, supporting branded goods promotion amid post-World War I. By the mid-1920s, total U.S. advertising expenditures reached $2.7 billion, up from lower levels in the prior decade, as media outlets competed for commercial support. Radio broadcasting revolutionized advertising starting in the early 1920s, shifting from philanthropy-funded stations to commercial models. The first paid aired on August 22, 1922, on WEAF in , featuring a 10-minute promotional talk by the Queensboro for its apartment developments, marking the inception of direct sponsorship. This format evolved into sponsored programs, including the "soap operas" backed by companies like , which dominated airwaves by the 1930s. Radio penetration grew rapidly, with 80% of U.S. households owning sets by 1939, enabling advertisers to target homogeneous mass audiences cost-effectively compared to print distribution. Television extended this broadcast paradigm after , with the inaugural paid commercial airing on July 1, 1941, as a 10-second Watch spot on WNBT in New York, broadcast before a baseball game to roughly 4,000 receivers for $4. Adopting radio's sponsorship model initially, TV transitioned to spot advertising by the late , coinciding with set ownership exploding from under 1% of households in 1948 to widespread adoption by the , which funneled billions in expenditures toward visual product demonstrations and celebrity endorsements. U.S. advertising spending climbed to over $5 billion by 1950, with television capturing a growing share as networks like and scaled programming to maximize viewer engagement for sponsors. These media expansions correlated with advertising's share of U.S. GDP stabilizing around 2-3% through the century, underscoring its role in funding content creation and consumer information dissemination amid industrial output surges. While print retained volume in classifieds and local ads, broadcast media's auditory and visual immediacy enhanced persuasion, though regulatory scrutiny over content influence emerged, as seen in the 1927 Radio Act establishing federal oversight to balance commercial interests with public airwaves.

Digital and Internet Era from 1990s Onward

The advent of the internet in the 1990s introduced new advertising formats, beginning with the first web banner ad displayed on October 27, 1994, on HotWired.com, a site affiliated with Wired magazine, purchased by AT&T for an undisclosed sum; this ad featured the slogan "Have you ever clicked your mouse right here? YOU WILL" and achieved a 44% click-through rate over four months, far exceeding expectations for the nascent medium. Early internet ads relied on cost-per-mille (CPM) pricing, with limited targeting capabilities due to rudimentary tracking technologies like cookies introduced around 1994, enabling basic audience segmentation but raising initial privacy concerns among users. The dot-com boom of the late fueled rapid expansion, as ad networks emerged in 1996 to aggregate inventory from publishers and sell it to advertisers, streamlining what had been manual negotiations; however, the bust led to a contraction, with online ad dropping sharply before recovery. advertising marked a pivotal shift with Google's launch of AdWords on , , introducing a (PPC) model that prioritized relevance and bidder , starting with just 350 advertisers but quickly dominating due to its performance-based efficiency over flat-rate banners. By 2003, Google's AdSense extended this to content sites, automating ad placement via contextual matching, which boosted publisher revenues while enabling precise intent-based targeting. Social media platforms amplified digital reach from the mid-2000s, with introducing targeted ads in 2007 leveraging user profiles for demographic and interest-based delivery, generating billions in revenue by capitalizing on network effects; (now X) followed in 2010 with promoted tweets, emphasizing real-time engagement. surged post-2010 alongside smartphone penetration, with apps and in-app formats like interstitials and rewarded videos comprising a growing share, driven by location and behavioral signals. Programmatic advertising, automating ad buys via algorithms and (RTB) protocols originating around 2007-2009, further transformed the ecosystem by replacing manual trades with data-driven auctions, accounting for over 80% of digital display ad transactions by the mid-2010s. Digital ad spending evolved from negligible shares in the —less than 1% of global totals—to dominance, comprising approximately 65% of worldwide ad expenditure by 2023, with U.S. ad reaching $258.6 billion in 2024 alone, fueled by scalable targeting but tempered by issues like ad estimated at $80 billion annually. Challenges intensified with ad blockers, adopted by over 40% of users by 2020 to evade intrusive formats and tracking, eroding publisher ; privacy regulations, including the EU's GDPR in 2018, restricted cookie-based profiling, prompting shifts to first-party and contextual alternatives amid signal loss from browser deprecations like Apple's Intelligent Tracking Prevention in 2017. These developments underscore digital advertising's efficiency in matching via auctions and , yet highlight causal tensions between gains and user backlash against surveillance-like practices.

Techniques and Methods

Traditional Media Channels

Traditional media channels in advertising include print publications, broadcast , radio, and out-of-home displays such as billboards, which disseminate messages to audiences via established physical and broadcast infrastructures rather than data-driven . These channels prioritize broad reach and frequency over precise targeting, leveraging habitual consumer exposure patterns for impact. In the United States, traditional media accounted for approximately 48% of local advertising spend in 2025, totaling $82 billion, underscoring their enduring economic role despite digital shifts. Print Media, encompassing newspapers and magazines, employs techniques like display advertisements, classified listings, and promotional inserts to convey product details and calls to action. Ads in this format benefit from tactile engagement and longer dwell times, with studies indicating print triggers 20% stronger purchase motivation and 77% higher brand recall compared to digital equivalents, alongside requiring 21% less cognitive effort for processing. inserts, for instance, influence 78% of readers' plans and aid cost savings for 76%, demonstrating informational utility. Effectiveness amplifies when integrated with digital efforts, tripling overall campaign performance through complementary reinforcement. Broadcast Television utilizes 30-second commercials aired during programs, measured via Gross Rating Points (GRPs) that combine reach (percentage of exposed) and (average exposures per viewer). The first sponsored TV ad aired on July 1, 1941, in the U.S., marking the onset of this channel's commercial viability. TV excels in brand-building, delivering efficient large-audience exposure where per-GRP efficacy persists despite audience fragmentation, with 30-second spots maintaining potency for awareness and . Reach metrics track unique viewers, while guards against ad fatigue, contributing to sales lifts in empirical assessments. Radio Advertising features audio spots, endorsements, and jingles broadcast on AM/FM stations, often localized for geographic targeting. Techniques emphasize concise scripting, clear messaging, and repetition to capitalize on listeners' multitasking habits, yielding high ROI through affordability and 71% weekly U.S. adult reach. When paired with digital channels, radio amplifies outcomes via a multiplier effect on traffic and conversions. Impact metrics include lift in web visits or sales, with local campaigns driving measurable small-business growth in and . Out-of-Home Advertising, primarily billboards and , deploys static or digital visuals in high-traffic areas for passive, repeated exposure. Effectiveness stems from ubiquity, generating up to 497% ROI with $6 returns per $1 invested, and 68% of viewers reporting subsequent purchases. reach hundreds of thousands daily per placement, with 55% brand recall, outperforming other media in cost-per-thousand (CPM) at $2–$7. These channels' causal influence on arises from unavoidable environmental integration, fostering familiarity and impulse decisions without active consumer opt-in.

Digital and Programmatic Advertising

Digital advertising encompasses the placement of promotional content across online platforms, including websites, search engines, social media, mobile apps, and email, to reach targeted audiences through digital channels. This form of advertising leverages internet connectivity to deliver messages via formats such as display banners, video ads, search listings, and native integrations. The practice originated with the first web banner advertisement on October 27, 1994, when AT&T sponsored a HotWired page promoting its "You Will" campaign, marking the shift from static print and broadcast media to interactive digital formats. By enabling measurable interactions like clicks and conversions, digital advertising facilitates data-driven refinements in campaign performance. Global digital ad spending reached approximately $694 billion in 2024, reflecting sustained growth driven by mobile penetration and e-commerce expansion. In the United States, internet advertising revenue hit $258.6 billion in 2024, a 14.9% increase from 2023, with search ads at $102.9 billion and digital video growing 19.2% year-over-year. Programmatic advertising represents the automation of digital ad transactions, utilizing software, algorithms, and to purchase and sell ad inventory without human . This method dominates modern digital ecosystems, accounting for 91.3% of U.S. digital display ad spending in and an estimated $595 billion globally in programmatic ad spend for the same year. Introduced in the mid-2000s, programmatic evolved from ad networks and exchanges, incorporating (RTB) auctions where advertisers bid on in milliseconds as users load pages. Key components include demand-side platforms (DSPs) for buyers to access inventory, supply-side platforms (SSP) for publishers to offer space, and ad exchanges facilitating transactions. optimizes bids based on user data like demographics, behavior, and location, enabling precise targeting across devices. The efficiency of programmatic stems from its scalability and reduced manual intervention, allowing advertisers to access vast inventories and adjust strategies dynamically. Empirical analyses indicate improved through granular targeting, with enabling higher volume sales for publishers lacking dedicated sales teams. However, challenges persist, including ad fraud—estimated to siphon billions annually—and diminished brand control, as ads may appear on low-quality or unsafe sites due to opaque supply chains. Studies highlight consumer privacy erosion from extensive tracking, with programmatic's reliance on and identifiers amplifying concerns, though regulatory shifts like cookie deprecation aim to mitigate this. Brand safety risks arise from algorithmic mismatches, where premium ads inadvertently fund controversial content, prompting calls for greater transparency in bidding processes. Despite these, programmatic's data-centric approach has propelled digital advertising's dominance, projected to exceed 80% of global ad revenue by 2029 as non-digital formats stagnate.

Creative Strategies and Targeting Mechanisms

Creative strategies in advertising encompass the development of persuasive messages designed to capture attention, evoke emotional responses, and drive behavioral change, often through appeals such as humor, , , or . These strategies typically include factual presentations highlighting product benefits, slice-of-life scenarios depicting everyday use, or endorsements from credible figures, with empirical studies showing that highly creative executions—characterized by , elaboration, and synthesis—generate greater and more favorable attitudes toward advertised products compared to conventional approaches. For instance, experiments have demonstrated that creative ads outperform non-creative ones in immediate and metrics, though their long-term sales impact varies by product category and execution quality. A core element of creative strategy is the (USP), which identifies a distinct benefit differentiating the product from competitors, as pioneered by Rosser Reeves in the and applied in campaigns like Schlitz beer's "filters the filters" ads that boosted by emphasizing purity through a novel production process. Other strategies leverage emotional appeals, such as Red Bull's association with extreme sports to build an adventurous image since the early , correlating with growth from under 1% to over 40% in energy drinks by 2010. Humor-based strategies, evident in campaigns like Old Spice's 2010 "The Man Your Man Could Smell Like" series, have measurably increased brand recall by 27% and by 107% in the following year, underscoring how unexpected elements enhance memorability without diluting core messaging. Targeting mechanisms in advertising refine message delivery to specific audience segments, minimizing waste and maximizing relevance through data-driven segmentation. Demographic targeting, based on variables like age, gender, income, and education, originated in print and broadcast eras—for example, magazines like in the early targeted homemakers with tailored content—but proved inefficient due to broad reach. Psychographic targeting incorporates lifestyle, values, attitudes, and personality traits, enabling deeper resonance; studies indicate it predicts purchase intent more accurately than demographics alone in categories like . Behavioral targeting, utilizing past actions such as purchase history, website visits, and search queries, emerged with digital ad servers in and advanced via and tracking pixels, allowing real-time personalization that has lifted click-through rates by up to 2-3 times in display ads. In the digital era, programmatic advertising automates targeting by auctioning ad impressions based on combined demographic, psychographic, and behavioral , with platforms processing over 10 trillion points daily as of 2023 to optimize delivery. Geographic targeting layers location , from IP addresses to GPS, refining reach for local campaigns, while contextual targeting aligns ads with content themes without , gaining traction post-2018 privacy regulations like GDPR that curtailed reliance. Empirical evidence from meta-analyses confirms behavioral and psychographic methods yield higher return on ad spend (ROAS), often 20-50% above demographic-only approaches, though effectiveness hinges on accuracy and consumer consent, with over-targeting risking ad fatigue and diminished returns.

Objectives and Effects

Informational and Competitive Functions

Advertising performs an informational function by conveying details about product availability, attributes, prices, and quality to potential consumers, thereby addressing information asymmetries in markets. Economic theory posits that such disclosure facilitates matching between buyers and sellers, particularly for search and experience goods where consumers lack full prior knowledge. Empirical analyses of over-the-counter advertisements, for instance, demonstrate that they primarily supply data on inherent product features like and side effects, supporting the view that advertising serves as a mechanism for disseminating verifiable attributes rather than mere . This informational role reduces consumer search costs, which encompass time and effort expended in evaluating alternatives. George Stigler's 1961 model frames advertising as a tool that lowers these costs by signaling product locations and characteristics, enabling more efficient market participation. Field experiments and econometric studies corroborate this, showing that targeted advertising effectively diminishes search friction, as consumers encounter relevant options without exhaustive personal investigation; for example, sponsored search implementations have been observed to shorten search durations by approximately 1% while marginally increasing engagement. In competitive contexts, advertising enables firms to differentiate offerings and signal superior or value, intensifying among sellers. In oligopolistic settings with free entry and homogeneous , advertising primarily transmits signals, prompting rivals to match or undercut, which enhances overall market . Higher- producers disproportionately invest in advertising because it yields greater returns through satisfied repeat purchases, as evidenced by models where differentiation amplifies advertising's signaling power. Competitive advertising further stimulates informational flows by compelling disclosures that benefit consumers, such as comparative claims on performance or pricing, which can erode informational barriers and foster price discipline. Longitudinal data from sectors indicate that advertising expenditures correlate with revenue growth through heightened visibility and rivalry, without necessitating monopolistic dominance. However, while these functions promote , empirical scrutiny reveals variability; in concentrated digital markets, competitive dynamics may consolidate rather than disperse information if dominant platforms control ad distribution.

Persuasion, Branding, and Consumer Behavior

Advertising leverages techniques to shape consumer attitudes toward products and services, primarily through emotional and rational appeals. Emotional appeals target feelings such as desire, fear, or affiliation to forge associations between the advertised item and positive outcomes, often outperforming purely informational content in driving short-term behavioral changes. Rational appeals, by contrast, emphasize verifiable attributes like price, efficacy, or performance data, proving more effective for high-involvement purchases where consumers deliberate extensively. Empirical meta-analyses confirm that strategies rooted in principles like —demonstrating widespread use—and —highlighting limited availability—elevate ad effectiveness by increasing perceived value and urgency, with effect sizes varying by context but consistently linked to higher rates. Branding extends persuasion by constructing enduring identities that differentiate products in competitive markets, fostering loyalty independent of immediate utility. Strong brands signal reliability and quality, influencing consumer evaluations such that branded goods command premium prices even when functionally equivalent to generics. Research demonstrates that branding impacts buying behavior through emotional bonds and social signaling, where consumers select brands aligning with self-image or group affiliations, as evidenced by studies showing brand consistency boosting repurchase intentions by reinforcing perceived authenticity. For example, brand trust mediates image effects on purchases, with longitudinal data indicating that sustained exposure to cohesive branding elevates loyalty metrics by 20-30% in mature markets. Consumer under advertising influence follows a from to action, modulated by and branding cues that alter decision heuristics. Ads heighten salience, shifting preferences and accelerating purchase cycles, with empirical models attributing 10-20% of variance in buying to ad-induced and . In experimental settings, personalized ads amplify this by tailoring messages to individual , yielding up to 15% higher conversion rates compared to generic formats, though effects diminish when consumers activate of manipulative intent—that prompts . Point-of-sale further reveals that 59% of shoppers adjust decisions based on in-store ads, underscoring how integrated tactics—combining branding visuals with urgency prompts—nudge impulse buys while long-term campaigns embed habits via repeated exposure. Overall, these elements causally link advertising inputs to behavioral outputs, as econometric analyses disentangle ad spend from factors like to isolate sales lifts of 1-5% per campaign intensity unit.

Measurement of Impact and Return on Investment

Measuring the impact of advertising involves quantifying its contribution to sales, brand awareness, and long-term profitability, often through return on investment (ROI) calculations that compare incremental revenue or profit against campaign costs. Basic ROI is computed as (net revenue from advertising minus advertising cost) divided by advertising cost, expressed as a percentage or ratio; for instance, a 5:1 ROI indicates $5 in net revenue per $1 spent, a benchmark considered strong across industries. Return on ad spend (ROAS), a related metric, focuses on gross revenue per dollar spent, calculated as revenue from the campaign divided by cost, and is particularly useful for direct-response advertising. These formulas require isolating advertising's causal effect, typically via controlled experiments like A/B testing or econometric models that adjust for external factors such as seasonality and economic conditions. Key performance indicators extend beyond financial returns to include click-through rates (CTR), conversion rates, cost per acquisition (CPA), and customer lifetime value (CLV), which help assess efficiency and sustainability. CTR measures ad engagement as clicks divided by impressions, while CPA tracks the cost to acquire a customer or lead; low CPA relative to CLV signals positive long-term ROI. Attribution models assign credit across touchpoints, ranging from simple last-click (crediting the final interaction) to multi-touch models like linear or time-decay, which distribute value proportionally. Advanced approaches, such as (MMM), use statistical regression to estimate advertising's elasticity on sales while controlling for variables like pricing and distribution. Challenges in accurate measurement arise from multi-channel customer journeys, where interactions span devices and privacy restrictions like cookie deprecation complicate tracking. Signal loss from ad blockers and data silos leads to incomplete views, often resulting in over-attribution to recent channels and underestimation of upper-funnel efforts like branding. is further hampered by unobserved factors, such as organic word-of-mouth or competitive responses, making randomized controlled trials rare at scale; observational risks confounding with causation. Industry reports note that siloed platforms exacerbate these issues, with incomplete insights preventing holistic effectiveness assessment. Empirical studies confirm advertising's net positive impact but highlight variability and time horizons. A 2024 found that advertising yields £2-3 in long-term ROI per £1 invested, more than double short-term returns, with effects persisting up to three years via brand building. Cross-product on social advertising showed heterogeneous effectiveness, with ROI ranging from negative for low-involvement to positive for durables, underscoring the need for product-specific modeling. Channel-specific data reveals at $42 ROI per $1 spent, at $22, and paid search at $2, while direct mail averaged 161% in 2023, outperforming some digital formats due to tangible attribution via unique codes. Overall averages hover around 200% for PPC but decline with saturation; successful campaigns saw median profit ROI rise to 2.43:1 by 2023, though self-reported industry data may inflate figures absent rigorous controls.
ChannelAverage ROI per $1 SpentSource
Email Marketing$42
SEO$22
Google Ads/PPC$2
Direct Mail (2023)161%
Social Advertising (variable)1.091.09-2.18

Economic and Market Impacts

Contributions to Growth and Employment

Advertising expenditures directly account for approximately 1.3% to 2% of U.S. (GDP) over the past two decades, reflecting the sector's foundational role in funding media and informing choices. However, economic modeling of multiplier effects—where advertising stimulates , leading to increased production across supply chains—indicates broader impacts, with total advertising spend and resultant activity comprising 21.9% of U.S. economic output in , equivalent to $10.4 out of $47.5 total. These effects arise from advertising's capacity to expand markets by reducing information asymmetries between producers and consumers, thereby accelerating transactions and efficiency. In terms of employment, the U.S. advertising, , and related services sector employed about 496,100 workers as of 2024, with projections for modest growth in roles at 6% through 2034. Accounting for indirect jobs in stimulated industries such as and retail, advertising supported nearly 29 million positions in 2024, representing a key driver of labor demand through heightened sales volumes. Globally, the advertising market reached $792 billion in spending in 2024, forecasted to grow amid digital shifts, underscoring its role in sustaining media ecosystems and ancillary employment in creative and technical fields. Empirical analyses affirm that advertising fosters long-term growth by enabling scale economies and diffusion, as firms invest in promotion to capture larger shares of expanding bases. For instance, a posits that advertising interacts with to enhance firm entry and , contributing to aggregate output beyond mere short-term sales lifts. While industry-sponsored studies may emphasize optimistic multipliers, federal data on consistent ad-to-GDP ratios provide a baseline for causal attribution, highlighting advertising's integral, non-discretionary place in modern economies.

Enhancement of Competition and Efficiency

Advertising disseminates information about product availability, prices, and attributes, thereby reducing consumers' search costs and enabling more informed choices that intensify price and among sellers. Economist formalized this mechanism in , arguing that advertising matches buyers and sellers efficiently, lowering the time and effort required to compare alternatives and thereby enhancing overall market utility. Empirical evidence from online markets supports this, as sponsored has been shown to decrease search duration by approximately 1% while facilitating quicker matches between consumers and preferred options. By broadening consumer awareness, advertising lowers entry barriers for new firms, allowing challengers to erode incumbents' market shares through visibility and differentiation, which promotes dynamic . A study of U.S. industries from 1974 to 1981 found a positive and statistically significant relationship between advertising intensity and instability, indicating that higher advertising expenditures correlate with greater turnover and rivalry among firms. Similarly, analyses of brand-level data across economic cycles reveal that competitive advertising responses amplify market contestability, as firms adjust expenditures to counter rivals, ultimately pressuring improvements in or . This informational and competitive role contributes to by signaling preferences more accurately, directing resources toward with higher revealed demand rather than relying on producer guesses or inertia. , in particular, minimizes mismatched exposures, effectively cutting search frictions and aligning supply with utility-maximizing consumption patterns. Cross-industry evidence, including from sectors, demonstrates that advertising investments yield positive effects on firm performance metrics like growth, which reflect resource reallocation under competitive pressures. While some critiques emphasize potential barriers from persuasive advertising, the preponderance of causal evidence from randomized field experiments and econometric models underscores net gains in where flows dominate.

Empirical Studies on Sales and GDP Stimulation

A meta-analysis of 872 short-term brand-level advertising elasticities from 57 studies published between 1960 and 2008 found an average elasticity of 0.12, indicating that a 10% increase in advertising expenditure correlates with a 1.2% increase in sales. Long-term elasticities in similar analyses average 0.24, reflecting carryover effects where initial sales boosts lead to repeat purchases and brand loyalty. These estimates vary by product category, with higher elasticities for durables (0.17) than nondurables (0.09), and diminish over time due to improved econometric methods accounting for endogeneity and competition. Empirical models incorporating advertising as an input in production functions demonstrate positive responses, though short-run effects are often modest compared to or distribution levers. For instance, studies on online display and show incremental lifts of 0.5-2% per increase in ad exposure, with stronger effects when targeting reduces waste. Cross-industry panels confirm that advertising expenditures predict firm-level growth, particularly for established brands where builds inelasticity. On GDP stimulation, input-output models estimate advertising's total economic impact through direct expenditures, induced , supplier chains, and interindustry multipliers. A projected advertising supported 18.5% of U.S. GDP via $1.8 in enabled and 28 million jobs, with multipliers of 2.5-3.0 times direct spend. Updated 2025 projections attribute 20% of U.S. economic output to advertising, equating to $5.5 in activity and one in five jobs, driven by demand stimulation across sectors. Panel data from 64 countries link higher advertising-to-GDP ratios (averaging 1-2%) to sustained growth rates, with Granger causality tests supporting advertising as a predictor of output expansion beyond mere correlation. However, models reveal bidirectional , where GDP growth also drives ad budgets, suggesting advertising amplifies rather than initiates booms. Marketing intangibles, including advertising, contribute 0.18 percentage points annually to U.S. output growth from 1987-2020, comparable to software and R&D investments, by enhancing firm and competitive . Firm-level studies further show advertising boosts inputs, leading to growth and aggregate productivity gains that propagate to GDP. These effects stem from reduced search costs and informed , though estimates from industry-funded models warrant scrutiny for assuming full attribution of downstream activity to upstream ad spend.

Psychological and Sociological Dimensions

Mechanisms of Influence and Decision-Making

Advertising employs psychological mechanisms that leverage cognitive heuristics and emotional responses to influence consumer attention, memory, and preferences, often bypassing exhaustive rational analysis. Consumers frequently rely on , using mental shortcuts such as the —where repeated ad exposure increases perceived product salience and likelihood of recall during purchase decisions—rather than evaluating all alternatives comprehensively. Empirical studies confirm that ad repetition enhances brand familiarity and positive associations through the , leading to higher choice probabilities in low-involvement decisions. Emotional appeals constitute a core mechanism, activating the wherein current feelings evoked by ads—such as joy from humorous content or trust from celebrity endorsements—shape judgments more than factual attributes. For instance, ad-induced positive emotions correlate with improved brand attitudes and purchase intentions, as feelings transfer to product evaluations via associative learning akin to . This pathway operates predominantly through the peripheral route of , where peripheral cues like attractive visuals or claims prompt quick endorsements without deep scrutiny, particularly under time constraints or . Field experiments demonstrate causal impacts, with variations in ad content altering demand sensitivity comparably to price changes, underscoring how such tactics directly sway choices. In , advertising exploits biases like anchoring—setting initial price or quality expectations via prominent claims—and , where testimonials imply widespread approval to reduce perceived risk. These heuristics facilitate faster resolutions in complex markets, but indicates mixed efficacy: while rises with ad volume, translation to or selection occurs mainly for differentiated products, not commodities. Attitudes toward advertising moderate effects; positive predispositions amplify and can foster compulsive tendencies by lowering self-regulatory barriers, whereas invokes persuasion knowledge that attenuates influence. Neural and behavioral further reveals that concrete, emotionally charged ad elements enhance processing fluency and retention, prioritizing intuitive over analytical in habitual buys. Overall, these mechanisms yield incremental shifts in , with meta-analyses showing modest but consistent correlations between exposure, attitudes, and across contexts.

Cultural Transmission and Societal Norms

Advertising transmits cultural elements by embedding prevailing values, symbols, and lifestyles into promotional messages, thereby disseminating them across populations. In the early , particularly the in the United States, advertising campaigns shifted societal norms toward , portraying goods like automobiles and household appliances as essential markers of modern success and , coinciding with and . This era marked a transition from production-driven economies to demand stimulation, where ads normalized the idea of consumption as a pathway to personal fulfillment, influencing behaviors such as increased household spending on non-essentials. Empirical research reveals a bidirectional relationship: advertising often reinforces existing norms while occasionally accelerating their evolution through repetitive exposure. For example, television commercials in the late have been analyzed for their impact on viewer perceptions of roles and expectations, with studies finding that portrayals of traditional nuclear families in ads correlated with audience reinforcement of those structures, though perceptions varied by cultural context. Scholars the extent of causation versus reflection, with one view positing that ads mirror inherent cultural trends and the other arguing for active shaping via aspirational narratives; evidence from field experiments on media suggests that widespread dissemination creates "" of norms, enhancing coordination and adherence. However, academic analyses, which frequently originate from institutions prone to critiquing commercial influences, may overstate manipulative effects while underemphasizing how market incentives align ads with consumer-preferred norms. In contemporary settings, advertising has facilitated norm shifts in domains, such as anti-smoking campaigns in the and that depicted use as socially undesirable, contributing to a decline in U.S. prevalence from 42% in 1965 to 19% by 2010 through norm reinforcement rather than mere provision. Conversely, promotions of idealized body types have been linked to heightened body dissatisfaction, with longitudinal studies showing correlations between ad exposure and attitudes among adolescents, though isolating advertising's causal role proves challenging amid broader media influences. Globally, advertising exports Western consumer norms to emerging markets, accelerating urbanization-linked behaviors like branded adoption, yet local adaptations often blend with indigenous values, suggesting over wholesale creation. Overall, advertising's role in norm transmission hinges on its scale and resonance, amplifying causal pathways from individual preferences to collective behaviors without overriding deeper cultural substrates.

Gender and Demographic Response Variations

Empirical studies reveal systematic gender differences in advertising response, with males generally favoring informational and objective content while females respond more to emotional and entertaining elements. In evaluations of web advertisements, informativeness generated more positive attitudes among males than females, whereas entertainment value elicited stronger favorable responses from females, supported by a laboratory experiment analyzing ad value dimensions via partial least squares modeling. A separate investigation confirmed that rational appeals, emphasizing product attributes, proved more effective for males, while emotional appeals succeeded better with females, with statistical significance in consumer attitude shifts across age cohorts. Sexual content in ads elicits divergent reactions by , rooted in attitudinal disparities: males often perceive it as an independent motivator, enhancing and recall for the ad scene but sometimes impairing product memory, whereas females link it to relational contexts, yielding mixed effectiveness unless aligned with commitment cues. portrayals, analyzed in a meta-review of 64 studies on television and radio ads, show enduring —such as females depicted in domestic roles more frequently—but gradual shifts toward equality, influencing purchase intentions differently by viewer , with stereotypical depictions reducing buy willingness among exposed females. Beyond , age demographics modulate advertising impact, with younger adults (18-39) exhibiting broader sets, higher self-reported category , and less narrowing in purchase decisions compared to seniors (75+), who display up to 20% lower mental for brands in categories like and mobile phones. Ethnic minorities evince heightened positivity toward ads featuring similar models, per socio-linguistic accommodation theory, bolstering attitudes and intentions in empirical tests. A highlights ethnic identity's role in response variance, with stronger identification correlating to preferential processing of culturally congruent ads amid rising minority market shares. Adolescent responses further vary by through involvement levels, where higher amplifies claim differently between sexes.

Criticisms and Counterarguments

Claims of Manipulation and Deception

Critics contend that advertising frequently employs deceptive tactics, such as about product efficacy, to mislead consumers into purchases they would otherwise avoid. Historical instances abound, particularly in the 19th and early 20th centuries with patent medicines like Beecham's Pills, which advertised cures for ailments ranging from to headaches without scientific backing, contributing to widespread consumer harm before regulatory interventions. In modern contexts, the (FTC) has pursued numerous cases against deceptive advertising, including health and safety claims; for example, between 2012 and 2013, the agency challenged unsubstantiated assertions in product promotions across media, resulting in settlements and corrective actions. Empirical studies indicate that exposure to such deception can erode trust in advertising broadly, prompting defensive consumer responses and reduced persuasion from future claims. Beyond outright falsehoods, claims of psychological manipulation assert that advertisers exploit cognitive biases and emotional triggers to bypass rational evaluation, fostering irrational preferences. Techniques purportedly include emotional appeals that prioritize feelings over facts, as critiqued in analyses of marketing's invasion of mental privacy through methods popularized mid-20th century. Subliminal messaging has been a focal point of such accusations since the , with proponents claiming hidden stimuli influence decisions; however, meta-analyses of 23 studies reveal minimal to no impact on , suggesting these claims often lack robust empirical support despite persistent public belief. Recent examples include the 2015 , where ads implied cleaner vehicles than reality warranted, leading to $15 billion in penalties and highlighting how omission or implication can deceive. High-profile cases underscore the scale of alleged deception, such as Red Bull's "gives you wings" campaign, settled for $13 million in 2014 after failing to substantiate energy-boosting claims beyond , and Airborne supplements, fined for false immunity assertions. The FTC's ongoing enforcement, including warnings to nearly 700 brands in 2023 for misleading health ads, reflects systemic concerns, though critics note that academic and media sources may amplify manipulation narratives without proportionate evidence of widespread causal harm. Studies on advertising's demonstrate that even brief misleading exposures can alter product perceptions, like memory for packaging details, potentially sustaining deceptive influences. These claims persist amid debates over intent, with some research finding spillovers where deceptive ads indirectly boost related behaviors, such as , complicating attributions of pure manipulation.

Social and Environmental Objections

Critics argue that advertising promotes excessive and , correlating with reduced and pro-social behaviors. Experimental studies have shown that brief exposure to consumer-oriented advertisements can temporarily increase materialistic values and decrease willingness to engage in charitable acts, with participants rating prestige and status appeals more favorably if they score high on scales. Such effects are attributed to advertising's emphasis on acquisition as a path to , though longitudinal establishing causation remains limited and often confounded by broader cultural factors. Advertising has faced objections for contributing to negative body image perceptions, particularly among women and children, through idealized portrayals. A of studies found that exposure to thin-ideal images in advertisements heightens body dissatisfaction and drive for thinness in female viewers, with effects persisting post-exposure in some cases. For children, media advertisements, including those for toys and , have been linked to distorted self-perceptions, with reports indicating that frequent exposure correlates with lower tied to appearance standards not reflective of diverse body types or abilities. Critics, often from perspectives, contend this fosters eating disorders and reinforces stereotypes, though meta-analyses reveal effect sizes vary by age and pre-existing vulnerabilities, with stronger impacts in adolescents than adults. On environmental grounds, advertising is accused of accelerating overconsumption, thereby exacerbating resource depletion and waste generation. By stimulating demand for non-essential goods, it indirectly contributes to higher emissions from production and disposal; for instance, the industry's promotion of fast fashion and electronics has been tied to annual global waste volumes exceeding 2 billion tons, much of it non-recyclable. Digital advertising alone accounts for approximately 3.5% of global carbon emissions as of 2024, driven by data center energy use and device impacts. A related objection is greenwashing, where advertisements make unsubstantiated environmental claims to exploit consumer preferences for . European Commission research from 2020 identified misleading sustainability information on 53% of sampled products, including vague terms like "eco-friendly" without verifiable metrics. Notable cases include Volkswagen's 2015 emissions scandal, involving software to falsify diesel vehicle tests, and H&M's 2019 accusations of overstating recycled content in garment ads despite limited actual implementation. Such practices undermine genuine environmental efforts, as surveys show consumers struggle to distinguish legitimate claims, with only partial regulatory enforcement mitigating the issue.

Evidence-Based Defenses and Achievements

Advertising has demonstrably contributed to substantial economic growth in the United States, supporting nearly 29 million jobs and driving $10.4 trillion in annual economic activity as of 2023, equivalent to approximately 20% of the nation's gross domestic product. Projections indicate this influence will expand to $12.7 trillion in sales and 32.1 million jobs by 2029, underscoring advertising's role in sustaining employment across sectors from media production to retail. In 2020, advertising underpinned $2.1 trillion in salaries and wages, comprising 18.2% of total U.S. labor income. Empirical analyses affirm advertising's informative function, which reduces search costs by signaling product availability, quality, and , thereby facilitating efficient market matching without excessive effort. Studies measuring advertisement content reveal a where informative elements, such as or feature disclosures, enhance decision-making and correlate with outcomes, countering claims of pure by demonstrating tangible informational value. This mechanism lowers expected search expenses, as evidenced in models where advertising directs to preferred options, improving welfare in competitive settings. By fostering competition, advertising has been linked to lower consumer prices, as firms use it to attract price-sensitive buyers and differentiate offerings, prompting rivals to match or undercut costs. A seminal examination by Steiner in found that national advertising for branded goods spills over to increase demand for retailers' private labels, exerting downward pressure on prices across categories. Broader economic surveys confirm a positive association between advertising intensity and market efficiency, where heightened promotional activity correlates with reduced markups and broader product variety. Return on investment metrics from advertising campaigns provide quantifiable evidence of efficacy, with numerous empirical studies documenting positive correlations between expenditures and revenue. High-quality creative advertising, in particular, yields over four times the profit compared to average efforts, as validated by cross-industry . These findings defend advertising against inefficiency critiques, illustrating its capacity to generate verifiable economic returns while stimulating broader consumption and .

Regulation and Ethical Standards

The regulation of advertising emerged in response to widespread deceptive practices, particularly exaggerated claims for patent medicines and consumer goods in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In the United States, initial controls relied on remedies for and state-level statutes, but federal intervention began with the of 1906, which prohibited false or misleading labeling on food and drugs to address risks from unsubstantiated curative claims. The (FTC) was established in 1914 under the FTC Act primarily for antitrust enforcement, with limited initial authority over advertising until the Wheeler-Lea Act of 1938 expanded its powers to target "unfair or deceptive acts or practices," including advertisements that misled consumers about product efficacy or safety. The of 1946 further strengthened protections by allowing private lawsuits under Section 43(a) against in interstate commerce, emphasizing competitor harm from unsubstantiated superiority claims. In , advertising regulation developed later through harmonized directives to facilitate cross-border . The European Union's Misleading Advertising Directive originated in 1984 (84/450/EEC) to prohibit advertisements that deceived or were likely to deceive consumers regarding product characteristics, and was amended in 1997 (97/55/EC) to permit comparative advertising under strict conditions, such as objective verifiability and non-denigration of competitors. This framework was codified in Directive 2006/114/EC, which member states must transpose into national law, focusing on truthful presentation without omitting material information that could alter consumer decisions. Complementing this, the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (2005/29/EC) broadly addresses misleading actions or omissions in commercial communications, including advertising, by requiring practices to be fair and substantiated, with enforcement by national authorities. Current U.S. frameworks center on the FTC's enforcement of Section 5 of the FTC Act, mandating that advertisements be truthful, non-deceptive, and backed by competent scientific evidence for material claims, particularly in health, environmental, or performance assertions. The FTC issues guidelines on endorsements, testimonials, and online disclosures (e.g., requiring clear "#ad" labels for sponsored content), with violations leading to cease-and-desist orders, civil penalties up to $50,120 per violation as of 2023 adjustments, or injunctive relief. Sector-specific rules apply, such as FDA oversight for drug ads requiring balanced risk-benefit disclosures since 1969 regulations. In the , the 2006 Misleading Advertising Directive remains foundational, enforced alongside the broader acquis, with recent emphases on digital transparency under the (2022), which mandates ad labeling and prohibits targeted ads exploiting vulnerabilities. Proposals like the Green Claims Directive, aimed at substantiating environmental assertions to combat greenwashing, advanced through committee approval in early 2024 but faced delays in plenary adoption by mid-2025, reflecting ongoing debates over evidentiary burdens. No comprehensive international governs advertising content, with frameworks varying by jurisdiction and relying on bilateral agreements or self-regulatory codes like those from the for voluntary compliance. Enforcement disparities persist, particularly in developing markets with weaker institutions, underscoring the primacy of national laws over global harmonization.

Self-Regulation and Industry Practices

The advertising industry maintains self-regulation through independent bodies and voluntary codes aimed at ensuring claims are truthful, substantiated, and non-deceptive, thereby fostering consumer trust and averting stricter governmental oversight. These mechanisms operate alongside legal frameworks, focusing on preemptive , complaint , and compliance monitoring without coercive penalties, relying instead on reputational incentives and for adherence. In the United States, the National Advertising Division (NAD), administered by BBB National Programs, exemplifies core self-regulatory practices by scrutinizing national advertising across media platforms for substantiation of performance, health, and comparative claims. NAD initiates monitoring reviews or responds to challenges from competitors and consumers, issuing decisions that recommend claim modifications, discontinuance, or further evidence provision; non-compliant advertisers face potential referral to the only after repeated refusal. This system, evolved from earlier structures like the Advertising Self-Regulatory Council, processed over 100 cases annually in recent years, emphasizing swift resolution to minimize litigation costs. Globally, the (ICC) Advertising and Code, revised on September 14, 2024, establishes principles requiring marketing communications to be legal, decent, honest, and truthful, with specific guidelines on endorsements, data privacy, and environmental claims. Adopted as the benchmark by over 50 national self-regulatory organizations, the code promotes to ease cross-border while mandating for superiority assertions and clear disclosures for promotional content. Industry codes reinforce these efforts through binding commitments among members. The American Association of Advertising Agencies (4As) , updated January 30, 2024, mandates ethical procurement, conflict avoidance, and fair dealings with clients and vendors, prohibiting practices like undisclosed rebates. Similarly, the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) Ethics Code outlines best practices for claim substantiation, influencer transparency, and avoidance of misleading visuals, with resources for in data-driven targeting. Effectiveness varies, with self-regulation enabling faster, lower-cost interventions than courts—resolving disputes in months versus years—but constrained by voluntary participation and absence of fines, leading to occasional non-compliance. Empirical analyses, including reviews of clearance processes, affirm benefits in reducing pre-market but highlight shortfalls in digital realms, where limited studies show inconsistent deterrence of deceptive practices due to jurisdictional gaps and constraints. Proponents argue it preempts through proactive monitoring, yet critics, drawing from cross-disciplinary , note systemic leniency favoring industry interests over rigorous public safeguards.

Challenges from Privacy and Global Disparities

Digital advertising's reliance on user data for targeting has encountered substantial obstacles from privacy regulations, which restrict tracking and personalization. The European Union's (GDPR), implemented on May 25, 2018, mandates explicit consent for data processing, resulting in a 5.7% decline in revenue per click for display ads in affected markets. Similarly, Apple's App Tracking Transparency (ATT) framework, introduced in iOS 14.5 on April 26, 2021, requires user opt-in for cross-app tracking, with only about 25% of users consenting, leading to a 37.1% drop in ad click-through rates due to reduced relevance. These measures have compelled advertisers to pivot toward contextual and first-party data strategies, though they have elevated compliance costs and diminished return on ad spend for data-dependent models. Ad blocking exacerbates these privacy-driven challenges, with 42% of global users employing blockers in 2024, projecting $54 billion in lost publisher revenue worldwide. This trend stems from user aversion to intrusive tracking and poor ad experiences, disproportionately affecting mobile and desktop display formats in privacy-sensitive regions. Industry responses include server-side tagging and consent management platforms, yet persistent evasion tactics highlight a causal tension: enhanced erodes the surveillance-based efficiency that fueled digital ad growth, potentially stifling smaller advertisers unable to afford alternatives. Global disparities compound privacy hurdles by creating uneven regulatory landscapes and market maturities. In 2023, digital ad spend reached $263.89 billion in the United States and $136.1 billion in , dwarfing figures in developing economies where penetration lags due to limited and lower disposable incomes. For instance, India's digital ad market grew 14% that year amid rapid , yet total spend remains fractional compared to mature markets, reflecting economic constraints that hinder scaled targeting. Regulatory fragmentation poses additional barriers: stringent rules like GDPR contrast with laxer frameworks in parts of and , complicating multinational campaigns and risking extraterritorial fines up to 4% of global revenue. In emerging markets, such as the with $1.87 billion in digital ad spend in 2024, low access and cultural preferences for traditional media amplify disparities, limiting advertisers' ability to achieve uniform global reach or adapt privacy-compliant tech equitably. These imbalances foster inefficiencies, as capital flows toward high-yield, low-regulation zones, potentially widening economic divides in ad development.

Theoretical and Research Foundations

Hierarchy-of-Effects and Marketing Models

The hierarchy-of-effects model posits that advertising influences behavior through a sequential progression of cognitive, affective, and conative stages, culminating in purchase. Developed by Robert J. Lavidge and Gary A. Steiner in their article "A Model for Predictive Measurements of Advertising Effectiveness," the model delineates six steps: (initial recognition of the brand or product), (understanding its features and benefits), liking (developing a favorable attitude), preference (favoring it over alternatives), conviction (forming a strong belief in its superiority), and purchase (behavioral action). This framework assumes a linear path where advertising must first build mental before fostering emotional attachment and, finally, driving action, reflecting a view of decision-making as a deliberate, staged process. Preceding the Lavidge-Steiner model, the framework—formulated by E. St. Elmo Lewis in —laid foundational groundwork for such hierarchical approaches in advertising. outlines four phases: (capturing the audience's focus), (sustaining engagement through relevant information), desire (evoking emotional want via benefits), and action (prompting purchase or commitment). Lewis, an advertising advocate, drew from principles to emphasize as a funnel-like progression, influencing early 20th-century campaigns reliant on print and personal selling. Similarly, the DAGMAR (Defining Advertising Goals for Measured Advertising Results) approach, introduced by Russell Colley in , refines hierarchical thinking by linking specific, measurable objectives to stages of awareness, comprehension, conviction, and action, aiming to quantify advertising's role in shifting consumer states toward defined goals. These models underpin strategies by guiding campaign design, budgeting, and evaluation, with practitioners using them to allocate resources—for instance, prioritizing awareness-building in for low-involvement products. However, empirical scrutiny reveals limited support for strict sequential hierarchies. Analyses of consumer packaged goods data indicate that advertising often triggers simultaneous cognitive and affective responses rather than rigid progression, challenging the linearity assumption amid fragmented . Critics further argue the models oversimplify , ignoring non-linear paths, habitual buying, or reverse effects where precedes attitude formation, as evidenced in reviews finding scant confirmation of the full in controlled studies. Despite this, variants like Vaughn's (involving learn-feel-do or feel-learn-do sequences based on product involvement) adapt the core idea, offering pragmatic utility in planning while acknowledging contextual deviations from pure linearity. Overall, while influential in structuring advertising theory, these models serve more as tools than causally proven mechanisms, with causal realism favoring integrated, data-tested applications over dogmatic adherence.

Semiotics, Economics, and Empirical Analysis


Semiotics in advertising examines how signs, symbols, and codes construct meaning to influence consumer perceptions and desires. Rooted in theories from Ferdinand de Saussure's distinction between signifier and signified, and Charles Peirce's triadic model of sign, object, and interpretant, advertising deploys denotative (literal) and connotative (cultural) elements to encode messages. For example, visual motifs like aspirational lifestyles or archetypal figures evoke emotional responses, shaping brand associations independent of product attributes. Empirical applications in marketing research decode these layers to assess cultural resonance, revealing how symbols reinforce social norms or hierarchies.
Economically, advertising functions as both an disseminator and a influencer, with global expenditures equating to approximately 1% of GDP as of 2025. , advertising supported $3.9 trillion or 18.5% of the $20.9 trillion GDP in through direct spending and multiplier effects on related industries. Theoretical models debate its efficiency: informative advertising lowers search costs and fosters competition, while persuasive variants may inflate prices or concentrate markets by favoring incumbents with scale advantages. indicates advertising correlates with higher firm profitability in goods sectors, yet remains contested due to endogeneity in observational . Empirical analyses quantify advertising's impact via elasticities and (ROI) metrics, often revealing diminishing marginal returns. A of 751 short-term and 402 long-term brand advertising elasticities across 56 studies found averages of 0.12 and 0.24, respectively, implying a 1% ad spend increase boosts by 0.12% short-term and 0.24% long-term, with elasticities declining over decades due to saturation and media fragmentation. ROI assessments face attribution challenges, including multi-channel interactions and unobserved confounders; one study of TV advertising reported negative marginal ROIs for over 80% of brands, suggesting over-investment. Recent digital-era analyses confirm low average elasticities (around 0.1-0.2), underscoring the need for targeted strategies to achieve positive causal effects amid noisy measurement environments.

Key Thinkers and Evolving Paradigms

pioneered a scientific approach to advertising in his 1923 book Scientific Advertising, advocating for testable claims, specific benefits, and treating ads as "salesmanship in print" through empirical testing of headlines, offers, and copy variations to maximize response rates. His methods, applied at agencies like Lord & Thomas, shifted paradigms from intuitive artistry to data-driven experimentation, emphasizing measurable sales results over vague appeals. Edward Bernays extended psychological principles into advertising, drawing from Freudian theories to engineer consumer desires for non-essential goods, as in his 1929 "Torches of Freedom" campaign linking women's cigarette smoking to emancipation, which boosted sales by associating products with social identities rather than mere utility. This influenced a toward subconscious persuasion, prioritizing engineered demand over factual enumeration, though critics note its roots in repurposed for commerce. Rosser Reeves formalized the hard-sell paradigm in his 1961 book Reality in Advertising, introducing the (USP)—a singular, consumer-relevant benefit promised repeatedly across media to drive purchases, as in M&M's "melts in your mouth, not in your hand" campaign launched in 1954, which increased from 4% to 7% by 1956. Reeves' approach reinforced ' rational, benefit-focused testing but critiqued overly creative deviations, insisting ads must demonstrably sell by addressing unmet needs explicitly. David Ogilvy built on these foundations with research-intensive strategies, as outlined in his 1983 book Ogilvy on Advertising, stressing "big ideas" grounded in consumer facts, long copy for complex products, and headlines promising benefits, evidenced by his 1950s Rolls-Royce campaign ("At 60 miles an hour the loudest noise... comes from the electric clock") that boosted U.S. sales from 192 to over 6,000 annually by the 1960s. His principles—do homework on audiences, avoid hype, test rigorously—evolved the paradigm toward informed storytelling, blending hard-sell specificity with subtle persuasion. The 1960s creative revolution, led by at Doyle Dane Bernbach, marked a pivot to soft-sell paradigms, favoring wit, honesty, and visual irony over repetitive claims, as in the 1959 "" campaign that defied U.S. car culture norms and propelled VW imports from 2,500 to 150,000 units yearly by 1960 through self-deprecating candor. Bernbach's ethos—"good taste, good art, and good writing can be good selling"—challenged hard-sell dominance, ushering empirical validation of emotional resonance, though data shows hybrid approaches (USP with creative execution) yielded superior long-term in tests. This evolution reflected causal shifts: post-war affluence favored aspirational narratives, yet effectiveness hinged on underlying truths, not abstraction alone.

AI, Retail Media, and Technological Integration

Artificial intelligence enables advertisers to analyze vast datasets for predictive consumer behavior modeling, optimizing ad placements and creatives in real time through machine learning. Applications include automated personalization, where algorithms tailor messages based on user history, and generative AI for dynamic content creation, such as variant ad copies or visuals. The global AI in marketing market reached USD 20.4 billion in 2024 and is forecasted to grow to USD 27 billion in 2025, driven by efficiencies in targeting that reduce waste compared to traditional methods. Retail media networks (RMNs), owned and operated by retailers like Amazon and , integrate advertising directly into ecosystems, using first-party purchase data for precise, intent-based targeting unavailable in open-web channels. Global RMN ad spend exceeded USD 150 billion in , with U.S. digital retail media alone hitting USD 52 billion, reflecting a surpassing broader digital advertising due to verifiable ROI from closed-loop attribution linking ads to sales. Approximately two-thirds of marketers boosted RMN investments in , prioritizing platforms where data signals—such as browsing and buying patterns—yield higher conversion rates than inferred third-party demographics. U.S. RMN growth is projected at 20% for 2025, outpacing total ad market expansion of 4.3%, as retailers monetize proprietary data amid . Technological integration fuses AI with programmatic advertising, automating via demand-side platforms that process billions of impressions daily for optimal and placement. AI enhances this by predicting auction outcomes and adjusting bids based on contextual relevance, reducing human oversight while improving yield—programmatic now accounts for over 80% of digital display ad buys in mature markets. Cross-channel orchestration, powered by unified AI models, synchronizes campaigns across CTV, social, and search, minimizing and enabling causal attribution of revenue lifts. By 2025, 88% of marketers report daily AI use for tasks like detection and creative optimization, though challenges persist in and model transparency, necessitating robust validation against empirical metrics.

Privacy Shifts and Data-Driven Adaptations

The enforcement of the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) on May 25, 2018, mandated explicit consent for personal data processing in advertising, resulting in reduced deployment of online trackers and modest declines in ad performance metrics such as click-through rates and publisher revenues. Compliance costs included potential fines up to 4% of global annual revenue, prompting advertisers to limit personalized targeting in the EU and contributing to fragmented data practices across borders. Apple's App Tracking Transparency (ATT) framework, rolled out in iOS 14.5 on April 26, 2021, required apps to obtain user permission for cross-app tracking via the (IDFA), with opt-in rates stabilizing around 25-30% globally. This led to a 54.7% drop in cross-app and cross-site tracking signals, disproportionately affecting small businesses and platforms reliant on mobile ad networks like Meta, which reported revenue pressures from diminished audience segmentation. Conversely, Apple's own advertising ecosystem expanded, capturing 35% of iOS app install ad spend by 2024, up from 25% in 2021, as it leveraged proprietary data. Google's repeated delays in deprecating third-party in Chrome—initially announced for 2022, postponed to 2023, then , and targeted for early 2025—culminated in a policy shift toward user-controlled privacy options rather than outright elimination, amid regulatory scrutiny from bodies like the UK's . This evolution preserved some cross-site tracking capabilities while accelerating tests of alternatives like the APIs, though subsequent phaseouts of certain Sandbox technologies in 2025 highlighted ongoing uncertainties in cookieless transitions. In response, advertisers pivoted to first-party data collected directly from user interactions on owned properties, such as loyalty programs and websites, which offers higher accuracy and compliance with consent models under regulations like GDPR and . Zero-party data, voluntarily shared by users via quizzes or preferences, emerged as a complementary strategy to enable without inference risks. Contextual advertising, which targets based on page content rather than user history, saw renewed investment, with AI-driven enabling precise placements; a survey indicated 42% of brands planned budget increases for contextual approaches amid cookie constraints. This method avoids personal data reliance, aligning with mandates, though it demands advanced to match behavioral intent without historical profiles. Broader adaptations included retail media networks leveraging transactional first-party from platforms like Amazon, and probabilistic modeling with aggregated signals to approximate targeting; however, data clean rooms faced declining relevance post- as hybrid cookie-user choice models stabilized. By late , these shifts emphasized consented, privacy-preserving technologies, with industry forecasts projecting sustained growth in AI-optimized, non-intrusive ad formats despite initial revenue dips from signal loss.

Predictions on Ad Spend and Consumer Attitudes

Global advertising expenditure is forecasted to reach approximately $1.08 trillion in 2025, reflecting a growth rate of around 6% year-over-year, driven primarily by digital channels amid economic uncertainties. Alternative projections from industry analysts anticipate slightly higher figures, with total spend climbing 7.4% to $1.17 trillion, as digital platforms capture an increasing share due to algorithmic targeting efficiencies. By 2030, longer-term compound annual growth rates are expected to stabilize at 5.4%, with retail media networks emerging as a high-growth segment, projected to expand from $184 billion in 2025 to $312 billion, fueled by integration and first-party data advantages. Digital advertising is predicted to dominate, comprising 68.4% to 75.2% of total spend by , with revenues nearing $679 billion to $777 billion, outpacing traditional media's stagnant or declining trajectory. In the U.S., digital ad spend alone is expected to hit $324.9 billion, underscoring a shift where precision targeting via platforms like and search engines yields higher returns on investment compared to linear TV or print. This bifurcation arises from measurable ROI in digital formats, where ad tech enables real-time optimization, contrasting with traditional media's reliance on broader reach without granular attribution. Consumer attitudes toward advertising are shifting toward greater selectivity, with exposure to daily ads rising, prompting demands for and authenticity to combat . Surveys indicate 81% of consumers disregard irrelevant messaging, favoring personalized, one-to-one experiences that align with individual preferences over generic blasts. emerges as a key filter, with 62% expecting brands to demonstrate environmental responsibility and 45% willing to premium-price products from compliant advertisers, reflecting a causal link between perceived ethical alignment and purchase intent. Ad-supported streaming and are anticipated to bolster tolerance for intrusive formats, as consumers increasingly accept ads in exchange for free or low-cost content access, with platforms leveraging AI for non-disruptive integrations. However, erosions and over-personalization risks may heighten skepticism, particularly among younger demographics like Gen Z, who prioritize influencer authenticity and over polished campaigns, potentially eroding trust in algorithmically generated ads lacking human elements. Overall, attitudes predict a premium on value-adding advertising—such as educational or entertaining content—over persuasive interruptions, with non-compliance risking boycotts amid amplified backlash.

References

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