Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Advertising Analysis Assignment



SUPERBOWL SUNDAY

ADVERTISING ASSIGNMENT


Analyze five (5) advertisements to turn in on Tuesday, February 12.

Respond to each of the following ten (10) prompts for each of the five (5) advertisements you plan to analyze.

1. Knowledge. Describe the advertisement in detail without judgment. What do you see? What do you hear?
2. Knowledge. What product, service, or idea is being advertised? What do you know about the product that might be relevant to your analysis of the advertisement?
3. Knowledge. What appeals or techniques are used in the advertisement? (Advertising techniques are listed on the back.) Explain.
4. Knowledge. What micropropaganda (slogan, logo, jingle) is used in the advertisement? (If necessary draw the logo.) (Micropropanganda techniques are described on the back.)
5. Knowledge. When and where did you view the advertisement? (In other words… In what magazine? On what TV station, during what TV show, and at what time of day?) Answering this question will help you determine the target audience.

6. Analysis. What is the advertisement’s demographic target audience? Explain your answer. (Demographic categories can be found on the back.)
7. Analysis. What is the advertisement’s psychographic target audience? Explain your answer. (Psychographic categories can be found on the back.)
8. Analysis. How does the ad appeal to thinking and reasoning (logos), establishes the trustworthiness of the advertisement and product (ethos), and/or plays on the audience’s emotions and desires (pathos) in order to achieve its purpose. This question has three parts.
9. Analysis. Put it all together. How does the ad work overall? How does all of the above come together in an attempt to persuade you to think, feel, and/or act a particular way? Explain your answer.

10. Evaluation. With the techniques, micropropaganda, target audience, and purpose in mind, explain how the advertisement is effective or ineffective. This is your judgment, but it must be supported with evidence.

Notes:


Information to help you answer question 3.
Appeals to Pathos (Feelings and Desires)
·         Celebrity Endorsement (Associate the product with someone who is famous, well-liked and/or well-respected.)
·         Sex or Beauty Appeal (Associate the product with our desire to be beautiful or to see beautiful people.)
·         Appeal to the audience’s insecurities or fears (Make the audience feel insecure and promise or imply that the product will take away that insecurity.)
·         Snob or Status Appeal (Associate the product with high status. Promise or imply that if the viewer buys the product s/he will be seen as important, powerful, and/or successful.)
·         Lifestyle Appeal (Associate the product with particular lifestyles: raising a family, playing or watching extreme sports, partying, attending sporting events, etc.)
·         Appeal to Nostalgia (Associate the product with the good old days)
·         Bandwagon Technique (Associate the product with the majority. Everyone is doing it, so it must be good. This is also called peer pressure.)
·         Humor Appeal (Associate the product with laughter, with good times; humor is also used to make an ad memorable, to help it stand out against all the other ads.)
Appeals to Logos (Thinking and Reasoning)
·         Expert endorsement (for example “four out of five doctors say this aspirin is better than that one.)
·         Testimonials (for example: before and after pictures or statements like, “This product changed my life; it could change yours too.”)
·         Facts (information about the product; for example: “This car goes from zero to sixty in x seconds.”)
·         Comparisons (This product is bigger, stronger, faster, etc.)
·         Explanations (The ad explains what the product is and what it does.)


Information to help you answer question 4.

Types of Micropropaganda

·         A slogan is a short, catchy phrase. For example: “I’m lovin’ it” is a slogan for McDonalds.
·         A logo is simple, memorable image that is associated with a product or company. For example: The swoosh is Nike’s logo. Sometimes a company’s logo is simply the company’s name written in a particular font with particular colors. This is true of the Dunkin Donuts logo.
·         A jingle is a short, simple, catchy song associated with a product.

Information to help you answer question 6.
The target audience is the group to which an advertisement is directed.
To determine the target audience…
·         Think about gender (Is the ad targeted at men or women or both?)
·         Think about social class (Is the ad targeted at the poor, the working class, the middle class, the rich? Or is the ad targeted at all class groups?)
·         Think about age (Is the ad targeted at children, at tweens (middle schoolers), teens, young adults, adults?)
·         You might also think about geographical location, ethnicity, race, education level, etc.

Information to help you answer question 7.

Psychographic Groups for advertising and marketing


What are psychographics?
v      Psychographics are the descriptions of target audiences according to psychological characteristics as opposed to demographic characteristics (age, gender, ethnicity, region, income, etc.)
v      Values, attitudes, and lifestyles are among the psychological characteristics that marketers and advertisers are most interested in.
v      Psychographic groups are determined by values, attitudes, and lifestyles the way demographic groups are determined by age, gender, ethnicity, region, income, etc.

Here are two different ways of grouping target audiences using psychographics, in other words two different ways of grouping consumers based on values, attitudes, and lifestyles.

1. Cross-cultural consumer characterization (4Cs)

Origin: Young and Rubicam, Inc., an advertising and marketing company based in London, UK.
Purpose: Use Maslow’s hierarchy of needs to identify the primary (and secondary) needs of consumer groups; understand the relationship between particular human motivations and consumers’ feelings about brands; create psychographic groups that transcend national and cultural groups.
Discoveries:
  • The levels of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs correspond with consumer motivations and consumer motivations correspond with psychographic groups:
    • Maslow’s levels of transcendence, self-actualization, and aesthetic needs correspond with a consumer’s desire for enlightenment. People who are primarily motivated by a search for enlightenment are called reformers.
    • Maslow’s need to know and understand corresponds with a consumer’s desire for discovery. People who are motivated by a need to discover are called explorers.
    • Maslow’s esteem needs can be broken down into two types of esteem: self-esteem and esteem from others.
      • Those who are motivated by self-esteem seek forms of control and are called succeeders.
      • Those who are motivated by esteem from others seek status and are called aspirers.
    • Maslow’s need for love and belonging corresponds with a consumer’s desire for security. People who are primarily motivated by security are called mainstreamers.
    • Maslow’s need for safety corresponds with a consumer’s desire for escape from the bad situation of his or her life. People who are primarily motivated by the desire to escape are called strugglers.
    • Maslow’s physiological needs corresponds with a consumer’s desire for survival within a bad situation. People primarily motivated by the struggle to survive are said to be resigned to their situations.
  • The Young and Rubicam researchers discovered that by “segmenting” mankind into these seven groups—based on the core (or primary) motivations (or needs) of the members of that group—they could successfully market particular brands to the particular groups regardless of nationality and cultural background.
  • Young and Rubicam researchers also discovered that advertisers and marketers could sharpen their approach to the psychographic groups by considering secondary motivations as well as core (or primary) motivations.
Groups:

Reformer: A reformer seeks freedom from restriction in order to pursue personal growth and social awareness. A reformer makes independent judgments, tolerates complexity, and is anti-materialistic but is intolerant of bad taste. A reformer is curious about innovations that are substantive rather than flashy. A reformer selects brands for their intrinsic quality, as opposed to what those brands “say” to others. (Higher education) Motivation: ENLIGHTENMENT

Explorer: Explorers value energy, freedom, new challenges, and exciting experiences. Explorers will choose brands that highlight their uniqueness and independence, their need for new sensations and adventures, and/or their desire for instant gratification. Explorers may be the first to try new brands. (Younger - student) Motivation: DISCOVERY
               
Succeeder: Succeeders are driven by goals. They tend to be confident, well-organized, and hardworking.  They tend to be conservative in the sense that they support status quo and seek stability. Their brand choices tend to be based on reward and prestige. They want to be seen as consuming and possessing “the very best.” (Top management) Motivation: CONTROL
               
Aspirer: Aspirers tend to be materialistic. They like to buy things that help them become members—or seem to be members—of the social groups they aspire to belong to. They are interested primarily in image, appearance, charisma, persona and fashion. Attractive packaging is more important than the quality of the contents. (Younger, clerical/sales type occupation) Motivation: STATUS
               
Mainstreamer: Mainstreamers tend to be home-oriented, conformist, conventional, sentimental, passive, habitual. They prefer not to stand out and, therefore, favor big and well-known value-for-money 'family' brands. Mainstreamers are usually the largest 4Cs group. Motivation: SECURITY
               
Struggler: Strugglers live for today. They see themselves as victims of the system. They have few tangible resources but often have physical skills. Strugglers are often heavy consumers of alcohol, junk food and lotteries. They choose brands that seem to promise an escape—even if only temporary—from their lives. Motivation: ESCAPE
               
Resigned:  This group is rigid, strict, authoritarian and chauvinist in its values. The resigned group is oriented to the past and to established roles. They choose brands that are safe, familiar, and economical. (Older) Motivation: SURVIVAL

Works Cited:

“Psychographic Segmentation”. Exams Tutor. 4Feb09. http://www.examstutor.com/business/resources/studyroom/marketing/market_analysis/8_psychographic_segmentation.php,

“There are Seven Kinds of People in the World”. Young & Rubicam’s 4Cs. 4Feb09. http://www.4cs.yr.com/global/default.asp?tid=b0c57e2f-6b8f-4e32-8b20-5bcf74124349.

2. VALS (Values and Lifestyles)
Origin: 1978, Standford Research Institute.
Purpose: Identify target audiences, uncover the consumer and personal behavior of target audiences, identify how to communicate with a target audiences, gain insight into why target audiences act the way they do.
Discoveries:
  • People pursue and acquire products, services, and experiences that provide satisfaction and give shape, substance, and character to their identities.
  • They are motivated by one of three powerful self-orientations: principle, status, and action.
    • Principle-oriented consumers are guided in their choices by abstract, idealized criteria, rather than by feelings, events, or desire for approval and opinions of others.
    • Status-oriented consumers look for products and services that demonstrate the consumers' success to their peers.
    • Action-oriented consumers are guided by a desire for social or physical activity, variety, and risk taking.
Groups:
Actualizers- Actualizers are successful, sophisticated, active, "take-charge" people with high self-esteem and abundant resources. They are interested in growth and seek to develop, explore, and express themselves in a variety of ways--sometimes guided by principle, and sometimes by a desire to have an effect, to make a change. Image is important to Actualizers, not as evidence of status or power but as an expression of their taste, independence, and character. Actualizers are among the established and emerging leaders in business and government, yet they continue to seek challenges. They have a wide range of interests, are concerned with social issues, and are open to change. Their lives are characterized by richness and diversity. Their possessions and recreation reflect a cultivated taste for the finer things in life. They are more likely to have; Membership in Arts Association, Visited Art Museum in Past Year, Own Electronic Espresso / Cappuccino Maker, Foreign Travel in Past 3 years, Cruise Ship Vacation in Past 3 Years, Own Import/Foreign Car, Play Golf, Own Personal Computer at Home.
Fulfilleds - Fulfilleds are mature, satisfied, comfortable, reflective people who value order, knowledge, and responsibility. Most are well educated and in (or recently retired from) professional occupations. They are well-informed about world and national events and are alert to opportunities to broaden their knowledge. Content with their career, families, and station in life, their leisure activities tend to center around the home. Fulfilleds have a moderate respect for the status quo institutions of authority and social decorum, but are open-minded to new ideas and social change. Fulfilleds tend to base their decisions on firmly held principles and consequently appear calm and self-assured. While their incomes allow them many choices, Fulfilleds are conservative, practical consumers; they look for durability, functionality and value in the products they buy. They are more likely to; Have a Swimming Pool/In Ground, Membership in Church Board, Stayed in Ski Resort in Last 12 Mo's, Belong to a Book Club, Own Backpacking Equipment, Foreign Travel in Last 3 years. (PRINCIPLE)
Achievers - Achievers are successful career and work-oriented people who like to, and generally do, feel in control of their lives. They value consensus, predictability, and stability over risk, intimacy and self-discovery. They are deeply committed to work and family. Work provides them with a sense of duty, material rewards, and prestige. Their social lives reflect this focus and are structured around family, church, and career. Achievers live conventional lives, are politically conservative, and respect authority and the status quo. Image is important to them; they favor established, prestige products and services that demonstrate success to their peers. They are more likely to; Have Sun/Moon Roof in Car, Own Video Camera, Membership in PTA. (STATUS)
Experiencers - Experiencers are young, vital, enthusiastic, impulsive and rebellious. They seek variety and excitement, savoring the new, the offbeat, and the risky. Still in the process of formulating life values and patterns of behavior, they quickly become enthusiastic about new possibilities but are equally quick to cool. At this stage in their lives, they are politically uncommitted, uninformed, and highly ambivalent about what they believe. Experiencers combine an abstract disdain for conformity with an outsider's awe of others' wealth, prestige, and power. Their energy finds an outlet in exercise, sports, outdoor recreation and social activities. Experiencers are avid consumers and spend much of their income on clothing, fast food, music, movies, and video. they are more likely to; Play Pool 10+ Days in Past Year, Attend Rock/Pop Concert in Past Year, Own Weight Training Equipment. (ACTION)
Believers - Believers are conservative, conventional people with concrete beliefs based on traditional, established codes: family, church, community, and the nation. Many Believers express moral codes that are deeply rooted and literally interpreted. They follow established routines, organized in large part around home, family, and social or religious organizations to which they belong. As consumers, Believers are conservative and predictable, favoring American products and established brands. Their income, education, and energy are modest but sufficient to meet their needs. (PRINCIPLE)
Strivers - Strivers seek motivation, self-definition, and approval from the world around them. They are striving to find a secure place in life. Unsure of themselves and low on economic, social and psychological resources, Strivers are concerned about the opinions and approval of others. Money defines success for Strivers, who don't have enough of it, and often feel that life has given them a raw deal. Strivers are impulsive and easily bored. Many of them seek to be stylish. They emulate those who own more impressive possessions, but what they wish to obtain is often beyond their reach. (STATUS)
Makers - Makers are practical people who have constructive skills and value self-sufficiency. They live within a traditional context of family, practical work, and physical recreation and have little interest in what lies outside that context. Makers experience the world by working on it--building a house, raising children, fixing a car, or canning vegetables--and have enough skill, income, and energy to carry out their projects successfully. They are unimpressed by material possessions other than those with a practical or functional purpose (such as tools, utility vehicles and fishing equipment.) (ACTION)
Strugglers - Struggler lives are constricted. Chronically poor, ill-educated, low-skilled, without strong social bonds, elderly and concerned about their health, they are often resigned and passive. Because they are limited by the need to meet the urgent needs of the present moment, they do not show a strong self-orientation. Their chief concerns are for security and safety.
Work Cited:
Box, Doug. “Values and Lifestyle”. Simply Selling. 3Feb09. Simplyselling.com.

7 comments:

  1. Ad #1:
    1.) In this commercial a high school boy us going to prom by himself, his mom puts his flower on telling him that he looks great and its fine that he’s going alone. In the background his little sister, probably about eight says it’s not. The dad tosses his the keys to his Audi and says “have fun tonight” music that gives a badass vibe comes on as the boy drives to prom you can also hear the revving of the engine. The boy parks in the principles parking spot, and walks into prom. The music continues and he walks straight up to the prom queen and kisses her, her boyfriend sees them, and begins walking towards him (angry). The next thing you see is the boy driving down the highway with a large black eye, you hear the engine rev and the boy howls. The screen goes black and the work bravery pops up, then the Audi logo.
    2.) This ad is advertising Audi cars, based on the ad I know that Audi’s have a sleek look, go fast and based on the noises made by the engine have a lot of horse power. Another thing that I know from this ad is that the Audi is something that people take notice of it’s a symbol for both status and popularity.
    3.) The ad makes a lifestyle appeal, appealing to young people and the thought that having an Audi will allow you to be braver, and daring the lifestyle they are advertising is one that every young person can relate to.
    4.) The logo of Audi is used throughout the commercial and is almost always visible.

    5.) I saw this ad while watching the super bowl on February 3rd, on NBC.
    6.) The ad is targeted towards teens and young adults, both men and women, and more towards those with more money,(but not specific to them). I believe that this is the case because the setting is of a high school prom which wouldn’t really appeal to older people; also hundreds of thousands of teens don’t have the guts to tell their crush that they like them and if the car is a catalyst for that then they might buy it. The ad is not geared towards lower class people because Audi’s are expensive, the ad hints at this, by showing all the gadgets and things that the car has, but tries to steer clear of the topic in general.
    7.) I think that in this ad the main audience is aspirers, I believe that this is the ads target audience because aspirers want to be part of social groups and want to be accepted, and they buy status symbols to aide them in their process to doing so. In the ad the boy wants to be accepted by someone, he’s going to prom by himself and he has a crush on the most popular girl in school, the car gives him that extra shot of bravery to do what he wants and accept his fears.
    8.) This ad appeals to logos, reasoning, by showing that a complete disregard of reason is necessary to let the person inside you out, in this case the boys dangerous or daring side. The ad makes you trust the company because at the beginning of the ad the boy is sad and going to prom alone which makes the audience feel bad for him. As the ad progresses and he drives the car the audience sees that the car made him happy and able to show his feelings to his crush despite everything else. The ad appeals to the emotions in the same way a slow transition happens from the audience feeling bad for the boy to the audience wanting the boy to succeed and finally rejoice with the boy that he was able to show his whole high school who he really was.

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  2. 9.) The ad is able to build up the audience’s confidence in the brand by showing them that anything is possible if you own an Audi. It may seem ridiculous to sell such a high end car to young people but with this ad that perspective changes young people can see themselves going out and doing what they’ve always wanted to do and being who’ve they’ve always wanted to be in an Audi. Most young people are aspirers because their dreams are just slightly out of reach, but this ad leads them to believe if they own an Audi anything is possible.
    10.) This ad is affective because it appeals to an audience of consumers that may never have thought about buying an Audi before, it make them talk about the ad. The Ad makes young people think that maybe they have the bravery to take a chance and buy an Audi to let their inner most desires out. Aspirers take risks to get to that level that they want to be on so badly; the ad is trustworthy and allows people to relate to and make connections of their own to.
    Ad # 2:
    1.) At the beginning of the ad it shows a young man maybe 25 in a Landry mat waiting for a dryer, he is thinking that he has been waiting for the dryer for too long and decided to take out the other persons clothes and notes that he doesn’t car it they get wrinkled. While he is taking out the clothes he drops a pair of women’s underwear and picks them up, the clothes owner walks over and asks what he is doing (he’s still holding the panties). I thinks to himself how much of a perv he looks like and a voice says “sweating on the inside handle it on the outside” and a picture of speed stick deodorant pops up. The man goes on to explain that he was folding her laundry so it wouldn’t get wrinkled, she says it’s sweet. Then he ruins his save by saying he’d fold her underwear any day.
    2.) Power speed stick deodorant is being advertised, the ad shows that it is extra strong and that by using it is “handling sweat.”
    3.) The ad is making a humor appeal by having everything that could go wrong to the guy happen and then when he fixes it he messes up again. The ad also has a certain sex or beauty appeal because of the underwear and the girl being attractive.
    4.) The slogan “sweating on the inside handle it on the outside” is used twice in the ad.
    5.) I saw this ad while watching the super bowl on February 3rd, on NBC.
    6.) This ad is geared towards men, of all ages,

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  3. 6.) This ad is geared towards men, of all ages,specifically for men. Another reason this is true is that by having the underwear be women’s and the girl be attractive it taps into men’s sexuality.
    7.) The psychographic of the ad seems to be the explorer, because the explorer seeks new challenges and exciting experiences. In the ad the man is encountering a new experience that puts him in an awkward situation causing him to sweat and need the product, explorers seek these thrills comes sweat or nerves which is the purpose of the product.
    8.) Logos is appealed to because the audience a can easily reason that deodorant stops sweating and that the situation depicted in the ad causes sweating to occur so it makes sense. Pathos is appealed to because the audience experiences the emotion linked with humor and as the ad plays out the audience’s heart stops when the girl walks up and laughs when she responds. Because the audience is able to bond on an emotional level with the character they trust that the brand is being honest as well and that the deodorant will work.
    9.) The ad makes me feel satisfied with the way the product was presented but, I don’t want to run to the store and buy it because of the commercial. This is because the ad is funny but doesn’t really give me any good information about how the product works or how it is better than other brands, the commercial is just a source of a laugh but doesn’t have an overwhelming impact on me as the consumer.
    10.) The ad was ineffective, this is true because very little information was given to me about the product and the ad barely said anything about the product except for the name and slogan. Without any other information how am I as the consumer able to decide to purchase the item?
    Ad #3:
    1.) All of the dialogue in the ad is in a whispering tone because it takes place in a library. The ad begins with a guy studying a text book and eating an Oreo saying to his friend he prefers the cream of the Oreo over the cookie part, the friend says it’s ridiculous and flips the table. Throughout the ad people say cream or cookie and throw things or push each other fighting, somehow a fire is started and the fire department comes (still whispering) they “yell” fire but everyone keeps fighting. The librarian calls the cops and they crash through the wall “yelling” at the people to stop fighting because they’re the cops nothing happens. An Oreo comes on the screen and a voice says “choose your side on instagram.”

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  4. 2.) Oreo cookies are being advertised, from the ad one can learn what an Oreo looks like and that both the cream and the cookie in it are good but it is up for debate which is better.
    3.) The ad has a humor appeal and a testimonial appeal. The humor appeal is that everyone is whispering no matter what goes wrong respecting the rules of the library, and also that it is such a hug conflict about which part of the cookie is better. The testimonial appeal comes from all of the different people involved in the argument telling their opinion.
    4.) The micropropoganda used in the ad is the image of the Oreo cookie along with the interaction expected from the audience with the follow up on instagram.
    5.) I saw this ad while watching the super bowl on February 3rd, on NBC.
    6.) The demographic of this commercial is everyone, people of all ages, genders, ethnicity, are involved in the commercial. Another reason that this is the demographic is that everyone loves Oreo’s there is no specific person for a cookie it’s for anyone.
    7.) Experiencers are the main psychographic of this ad because they are impulsive, the people depicted in the ad are very impulsive because they break things and jump over balconies in order to prove their point or in this case opinion on the cream-cookie debate. They also find outlets for their energy people who are paying attention to this commercial find the way these people spend their energy humorous and want to go to instagram and voice their opinion and go buy Oreos.
    8.) This doesn’t ad apply logos there is absolutely no reasoning happening in the commercial, the argument is pointless and doesn’t correspond with the audience other than providing them a good laugh. However the commercial establishes trustworthiness in the brand by showing that they know cookies and they know what is important to their customer, which is how the cookie tastes. The ad applies pathos by forcing the audience to choose which they like better and root for their side.
    9.) The ad is trying to persuade the audience to see the Oreo as something that people talk about, it’s a topic of discussion. The ad shows through the arguing that people know what Oreo is it makes people want to get a bow of cookies and decide if they like the cream or the cookie better, it forces people to have an opinion of their company and product.
    10.) This ad is effective because it aids people in the forming of an opinion of the Oreo brand, do you like Oreos? Do you like the cream? The cookie? The ad is basically telling the audience to get up grab a box of Oreos and make a decision. By having the demographic be everyone Oreo has a larger scope of an audience than an ad that is only appealing to children.

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  5. Ad #4:
    1.) The ad begins with a seemingly wimpy boy having his football taken away by some boys that look like your average bullies. The bully says to the boy come back when you have a team, so the boy gets in his moms car and they go around and pick up his friend who are lifting weights, wrestling a bear, and carrying a man out of a burning building. The group goes back to the field where the bullies were and he tosses them the ball and tells them to kick off, when they do the ball hits one knocking him over.
    2.) The Hyundai Sonata, the audience learns that the car can hold up to seven passengers and has a sleek appearance that any mom would appreciate.
    3.) The commercial is making a lifestyle appeal for soccer mom types, that they can look cool, drive around a lot of kids, and be appreciated by those kids. This is shown when the boy and his mom pick up the kids, he doesn’t even say anything the mom just knows by a head nod who to pick up and where to get justice for her kid.
    4.) The Hyundai logo (which is just an H in a circle) is shown in the ad as well as their slogan “new thinking new possibilities.”
    5.) I saw this ad while watching the super bowl on February 3rd, on NBC.
    6.) The commercials demographic audience was women who have kids the “soccer mom” type. This is shown because the mom is driving and she goes around to pick up the other kids, she knows where they are so she has been there before and she has that mentality given her expressions.
    7.) The psychographic audience of this commercial is the mainstreamer because the audience is moms so it would make sense that the psychographic audience is home-oriented, and wants a more family brand. Moms tend to want the things that will be a good value and the safest thing for their family and that in the Hyundai shown in this commercial.
    8.) This ad appeals to logos because it shows that the Hyundai car is perfect for moms because it seats seven people and it’s not a minivan so you can still be a “cool” mom, this allows moms to agree that it is a reasonable product and justifiable purchase. Ethos is established when the car is shown too safely hold the 7 “dangerous” kids, a consumer is able to trust that what the ad is saying is true when they can see it for themselves. Pathos is appealed to by the audience feeling bad for the little boy when the bullies take away his football, so they are on his side and then when he comes back with his bad ass friends the audience is excited to see them beaten.
    9.) Overall the ad persuades the audience that the Hyundai Sonata is a safe car that can hold a lot of people while keeping moms away from the awful image of the minivan. The visual scenes that the commercial provides show that the car is not a minivan, and that everyone appreciates the reliability and appearance of the car. Also the facial expressions that the mom and son share help to persuade the audience that even kids think that the car is cool.
    10.) This ad is effective because it establishes pathos with the audience having them be on the wimpy kid’s side and generally want anything to do with him to succeed. Also the ad shows that the demographic is clear, which helps to clearly persuade moms to buy the Sonata and dump their minivans.

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  6. Ad#5:
    1.) The ad begins in a crowded elevator some people are complaining about Mondays, a middle aged white man says something positive in a flaunt Jamaican accent, he goes from situation to situation in his office building making complimants in this accent. Then when a business meeting doesn’t go well he says that the room needs some smiles and asks if anyone wants to go for a ride. The next thing shown is him and two others ins a bright red Volkswagen bug smiling, when they get back they too have Jamaican accents and are very positive.
    2.) The Volkswagen bug is being advertised, the ad shows that the car improves attitude and relaxation level in people, and that it is made in Germany.
    3.) A humor appeal is made when the Jamaican accent comes out of the white man’s mouth because it is completely unexpected. Also a lifestyle appeal is being made because the ad shows that the car improves the attitude of even the most negative people, much as the people in the business meeting.
    4.) The Volkswagen slogan appears in the ad as well as their slogan “Das Auto.”
    5.) I saw this ad while watching the super bowl on February 3rd, on NBC.
    6.) The advertisements demographic is middle aged people who have boring jobs or are too uptight who need and escape. This is because the commercial depicts an office full of dull depressed people except for the owner of the Volkswagen, who is bright and cheery people can relate to this office situation and see that the car gives them an escape from reality and are able to be happy.
    7.) The psychographic audience of this commercial is the mainstreamer because the audience is very conventional and aren’t really unordinary people, but the ad shows these people that they can be conventional, and value oriented without being boring. The ad is geared towards the people who are mainstreamers but want to be able to be happy with what they have at the same time.
    8.) The ad appeals to thinking because people can see themselves in the situation depicted in the ad and know that they can relate and want to be happy so the car makes sense and isn’t out of reach or unreasonable for them. The ad appeals to emotion by at first having people relate to the negative people in the commercial and not really understand the main characters attitude, but then in the end the audiences attitude changes and they are actually happier from just seeing the cars effects. The ethos is created by the final understanding of how the commercial all came together, without that final scene the audience wouldn’t trust the ad but with it and the boss beginning in the car to the audience believes the company.
    9.) The ad overall is able to persuade the audience into believing that the car will give them a sense of relaxation and influence them to be happy. The ad does this by showing the audience exactly what they want to hear, that a car will fulfill them and give them something that they want out of life, happiness.
    10.) The ad is effective because it allows its audience to believe that the car it is advertising will fulfill their human need and want of being happy. At the end of the commercial it even says “Get happy” telling the audience that the car will definitely make them happy and by getting it they will be buying happiness.

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