Top Banner
Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts Developed by Dinesh Poorun © 2013 UWS College. This work is copyright and cannot be used without the permission of UWS College
17

Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

May 26, 2017

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Developed by Dinesh Poorun

© 2013 UWS College. This work is copyright and cannot be used without the

permission of UWS College

Page 2: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Advertising

• Advertisers have come under attack for influencing people to spend money to chase an often unrealistic aspiration.

• In fact advertisers have increasingly turned to psychologists to find out how to hit the right buttons in people in order to make them buy products and services.

• Is this right? Are audiences vulnerable or discerning?

Page 3: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Appeals to instincts and emotions

• Television commercials and magazine advertisements aim to create the feeling that an instinct can be satisfied or an emotion soothed through the use of a sponsor’s product.

Page 4: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Acquisitive Instinct

• The acquisitive instinct causes us to save, collect and hoard all kinds of possessions.

• From this instinct we get a satisfying feeling of ownership.

Page 5: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Sexual Instinct

• The sexual instinct is most strongly catered to in television advertisements. Sex appeal is used to sell almost any product.

Page 6: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Herd Instinct

• The herd instinct draws people together and makes them want to be part of a group or crowd.

• Eg McDonalds stress the family aspect of togetherness while Coke and Pepsi stress peer togetherness and acceptance.

Page 7: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Love Instinct

• Love is the most important human emotion. Lover’s shown using a product, associates the feeling of love with the product.

Page 8: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Maternal Love

• Maternal love is another important emotion. According to some advertisements a mother can only show true love by using these products.

• In a sense you are making a parent guilty if they don’t use the product. Infant formula is an example of this. How ethical is this?

Page 9: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Fear

• Fears are also exploited in advertising. People are frightened of loneliness and rejection.

Page 10: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Fear

• Sometimes Advertisers make us believe that if we don’t use a product our lives will be immeasurably worse.

Page 11: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

The demographics of social class.

• Women are the most sought after group by advertisers, even more important is the spending power across genders.

• Advertisers have devised a scale according to spending power.

Page 12: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Quintile Groups

• A households are successful upper professionals like doctor and lawyers. Only 2 percent of the population are in this category.

• B households are below the top but are still well off. University lecturers, pharmacists and directors of small companies are included here. These households comprise 11 percent of population

Page 13: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Quintile Groups

• C households are lower middle class and make up 23 percent of the population. Tradespeople, and various white collar workers are included in this group.

• D households are general clerical staff, apprentices and semi skilled workers

Page 14: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Quintile Groups

• E households are manual workers, labourers, factory workers, truck drivers etc.

• FG households are people receiving welfare payments, including unemployed and retired pensioners.

Page 15: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

Attitudes and beliefs

• The Stanford Research Institute’s Values and Lifestyles Programme (VALS) has organised peoples attitudes and beliefs into five groupings. (Stewart and Kowaltzke, p159, 1997)

Page 16: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

5 groupings

• 1. Belongers are traditional, conservative and conformist, Advertisers may show family values.

• 2. Emulators are young people searching for identity. Advertisers may show aspirational images, heroes and heroines.

Page 17: Ethics in Advertising and Types of Instincts

5 groupings

• 3. Emulator-achievers are successful, enjoy acquiring things and buy brand names. Advertisers focus on success and taste.

• 4. Socially conscious achievers believe inner peace and the environment are more important than financial success.

• 5. Needs directed are survivors on incomes that allow only needs and not wants to be fulfilled.