Creative approaches: Entertainment, soft sell

 

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Paper
1.
Attributes of Likeable Television Commercials in Asia
Kim-Shyan Fam, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 48, No. 3, Sept 2008, pp.418-432
Many advertisers aim to present advertisements that will at least be liked by those who see them, as it has been suggested that advertising likeability can lead to advertising recall, favorable brand ...

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Paper
2.
The Consumer Heisman Move
Futures Company, Yankelovich MONITOR Minute, January 2008
This 2008 article discusses the "personal boundaries" that have been set up by US consumers, in response to brand messages they find excessive or annoying. Technological advances, specifically the adv

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Paper
3.
The big picture
Mark Egmon, The Advertiser, October 2006, pp.30-32
Marketing communication is changing from a sales pitch to an informative, entertaining experience (or `pull' instead of `push'). Merging marketing and entertainment is the approach that offers the bes ...

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Paper
4.
The need for brand humility
Russ Lidstone, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2005
Argues that the use of exaggeration and hyperbole in marketing and advertising is often excessive and counter-productive.

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Paper
5.
If only for our own sakes, let's take pity on the cowering consumer
Jeremy Bullmore, Market Leader, Issue 28, Spring 2005, pp.14-16
As competitive conditions become apparently ever harder, marketing language (e.g. in presentations to the board) becomes increasingly aggressive. Merely pursuing an objective, unless one does it aggre ...

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Paper
6.
Is advertising dead?
Seth Godin, The Advertiser, June 2004, pp.68-69
Argues that mass-market advertising is no longer, as it used to be, a safe engine of growth. The mass market is breaking up, and is no longer propelled by advertising to buy average products. Advertis ...

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Paper
7.
The advertising invasion: drawing the line in a new media age
Paul Feldwick, Market Leader, Issue 23, Winter 2003, pp.20-23
When network TV was the dominant advertising medium, we all got used to believing that advertising was safely controlled, both in quantity and content, by someone else. Now that mainstream TV is takin ...

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