May 28, 2004

UM LIVRO QUE TEM DADO QUE FALAR

The Hidden Power of Advertising, Robert Heath


Há quem considere o The Hidden Power of Advertising (por ex: Jeremy Bullmore| WPP; Robert Deutsch| DDB) como um dos mais importantes desenvolvimentos da teoria publicitária desde a introdução do conceito AIDA: Awareness-Interest-Desire-Action


"In a highly readable 124-page Admap monograph entitled The Hidden Power of Advertising, Heath contends that conventional advertising research methods, based on measures of awareness and recall, are to a large extent useless. This is because of the inadequacy of what he calls the Cartesian model of advertising in which ads work by persuading the conscious mind of the merits of the things advertised."

The subtitle of his book is how low involvement processing influences the way we choose brands, and it sums up Heath's view of how much advertising, especially on TV, achieves its effect. He puts forward 17 rules for how the Low Involvement Processing Model works. They are, in abbreviated form, as follows.

1. Most consumers believe most reputable brands perform similarly.
2. Consequently they choose brands not on rational grounds but according to subconscious "markers".
3. They pay little conscious attention to advertising.
4. Active learning, or high involvement processing, produces enduring attitude changes.
5. However, most of us tend to process most media passively.
6. Despite appearances TV is a relatively low attention medium.
7. Advertisers try to get around this with attention-getting devices.
8. However, consumers' perceptual filtering blocks these except where they are integrated with the message of the ad.
9. Information can be acquired passively by implicit learning, a subsconscious process that uses automatic processing and feeds into implicit memory.
10. Such memory stores perceptions and simple concepts only.
11. Info can also be acquired semi-consciously via shallow processing. Together shallow and automatic processing make up low involvement processing.
12. Most ads are processed using low involvement processing.
13. Implicitly learned perceptual and conceptual elements are stored as associations with the brand.
14. Implicit learning is used every time you see or hear an ad irrespective of how much conscious attenion you give it or whether you love or loathe it.
15. Ads processed with high involvement are outnumbered by up to 50 times by low involvement ads.
16. Implicit memory, though building more slowly than explicit memory, it is more durable.
17. If a brand association triggers an emotional marker, consumers can be strongly influenced towards the brand without realising it.


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