There are a
number of specific identifiable techniques that are used in advertising to produce
a message. These include animation, analogy, celebrity sponsorship, contrast,
demonstration, diagrammatic, familiar, nostalgic, participation,
personalization, sequencing, and slice of life. These techniques are primarily
methods of organizing a visual structure, or a form for some content to be presented
to an audience. Although these advertising techniques are ways of delivering a
message, they are not the message itself.
Technique
may seem to be the main influence that determines the personality of a message,
however technique is only the conveyance when it comes to communicating a
mindset in a message. This message viewpoint would include mannerism and
personality, style and aesthetics, as well as a form and method, which combine
to project a meaning. So if advertising technique is not the driving force that
determines the character of a message, what is? Perhaps there is a higher set
of essential elements that influence technique and form a direction for guiding
message content.
Ultimately,
message content in its purest form, is simply factual information about a
product or subject. Information is the raw material that form the elements for
all the other afore mentioned facets that go into preparing a promotional
advertising message for mass consumption. It is these message elements that
become the foundation that all advertising concepts are built upon. For in the
world of advertising, information without adaptation is considered boring and
non-attractive.
Essential Message
Elements
There are
three essential message elements, and at least one of these influencing elements
is present in every example of advertising communication. In fact, these
elements are also in every form of comedy, and for that matter, every other type
of entertainment.
The elements
are the intellectual, the emotional, and the physical. A reasonable definition of each follows.
Definitions
Intellectual
- adjective
Of or
relating to the ability to think in a logical way; involving serious study and
thought; developed or chiefly guided by the intellect rather than by emotion or
experience.
Emotional - adjective
Developed or chiefly guided by emotion or experience rather than the intellect; markedly aroused or agitated in feeling or sensibilities;
likely to show or express emotion, easily upset, excited, happy, etc.
Physical - adjective
Relating to
the body of a person instead of the mind; existing in a form that you can touch
or see; of or relating to physics, characterized or produced by the forces
and operations of physics; having material existence, perceptible especially
through the senses and subject to the laws of nature.
Essential
Elements as Related to Comedy
Before demonstrating
how the three elements are used in advertising, it might be easier to discuss
them as they pertain to another form of communication – comedy. And the best
way to accomplish that is to relate them to the comedians themselves, for
comedians provide excellent examples of the intellectual, emotional, and the
physical. Looking at the Marx Brothers, Groucho was intellectual, Harpo was
physical, Chico was a bit of both, and Zeppo and Gummo were strictly emotional.
Considering the Three Stooges, Larry, Curly, Moe, and Shemp were all physical
comics. Intellect and emotion were in short supply. Lucille Ball was physical
and emotional. Jack Benny was intellectual, very subtly physical, and rarely
emotional. Laurel and Hardy were physical and emotional. WC Fields was
intellectual and physical. The TV show Seinfeld uses all three elements, but
they are divided among the four main characters. Jerry is intellectual, Kramer
is physical, and George and Elaine are both emotional, with George representing
the male side of emotion and Elaine expressing the female side.
Essential
Element Use in Advertising
Intellectual
Ads that
take an intellectual approach tend to craft a thought-provoking message that
may require some form of serendipitous interpretation. With an intellectual
approach, the information requires a reader or viewer to make a mental
connection to fill in a deliberate gap left in a message, i.e., to put two and
two together to add up to four, much like mathematical or left brain thinking. The
use of the intellectual element is dependent on the desire of an audience to be
of an inquisitive nature and to have an interest in problem solving.
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More miles for less. Client: Dorvaling Motos. Agency: 9mm Propaganda Brazil. |
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Lung cancer search. Client: Don't You Care?. Agency: BBDO Moscow. |
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New LG Big-In-Combo. Client: LG. Agency: M&C Saatchi Stockholm. |
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Keep your kids safe online. Client: Durex. Agency: Arrow Advertising Dubai. |
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Eat out. Fried Sago Worms. Client: Land Rover. Agency: Y&R Dubai. |
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Very very blond. Client:Platinum Blond. Agency: Droga5 Australia. |
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Violence leads to violence. Client: Convivencia Sin Violencia. Agency: Alazraki Networks Mexico. |
Emotional
The
essential element of emotion is arguably the most difficult of the three
elements to communicate. It relies on a reader or viewer sympathizing with the
message and the depiction used to present an emotional message. This can only
happen if a viewer or reader has had some prior, personal real life experience
with the situation established in the ad and agrees with the opinion of the
advertiser. The use of the emotional element relies on a common experience of
an audience to register the information put forth in a message.
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Cigarette burns. Client: TSPCA. Agency: BBDO Proximity Thailand. |
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Let's end child slavery. Client: World Vision. Agency: KBS+ Canada. |
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Free happens. Client 1st Bank. Agency: TDA Boulder. |
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It's worth the fight. Client: Food & Beverage Awards. Agency: WCRS London. |
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Instadog. Client: Pet Beauty. Agency: Tuppi Brazil. |
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People not numbers. Client: AVIV. Agency: BBR Saatchi & Saatchi Israel. |
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The new tippee cup. Client: tommee tippee. Agency: Full Contact Boston. |
Physical
Far more prevalent
in advertising than either the emotional element or the intellectual element,
the physical element presents a conspicuous exaggerated display or a
recognizable distortion of the information contained within a message. This
element most successfully reveals its message in a visual, physically
perceivable form. The use of a physical element is not nearly as dependent on
some form of personal engagement by a viewer or reader as an emotional element
or intellectual element.
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Dark drinking chocolate. Client: Cocoa Metro. Agency: Richter7 Salt Lake. |
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Unleash your spirit. Client: Pena. Agency: Hermandad Brazil. |
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Train shaped chicken nuggets for kids. Client: Lezita. Agency: McCann Istanbul. |
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Up to 612 hp. Client: Mercedes-Benz. Agency: Jung von Matt/Donau Austria. |
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Chicken in a bucket. Client Cafe Deli Mart. Agency: Quimba Publicidad Costa Rica. |
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I feel fantastic. I'm falling apart. Client: Samaritans of Singapore. Agency: Publicis Singapore. |
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Apartments waiting for owners. Client: Morton Real Estate. Agency: Media Storm Moscow. |
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