Posts Tagged Advertising
A Three-Minute Guide to Ethos, Pathos, and Logos in Advertising
Posted by jjhnsn in Advertising, Content Strategy, Marketing on June 28, 2011
This article was originally published on Avenue Right’s Media Buying Automation Blog.
All advertising is, most fundamentally, an attempt to persuade an audience. We want those people to buy our products, to enlist our services, to support an organization or cause.
The media we use to deliver these messages should match the habits of our target audience, and the message needs to remain consistent, however it’s presented within the media mix.
Just as the media buyer needs to incorporate multiple media channels to reach an audience, the ads need to blend a combination of rhetorical appeals to be effective.
It’s not good enough anymore to tell the audience that a treat from Peggy’s Pie Palace is a guilt-free experience—we need some evidence telling us why it’s a low-calorie snack option.
The art of persuading an audience means using the three basic appeals that Aristotle first described: ethos, pathos, and logos.
This means using the appeal of personal character, emotion, or logic, respectively.
Ethos
Ethos is the appeal of a speaker’s/actor’s character or authority, such as the use of local celebrities or the business owner/employees in a company’s advertising.
This appeal gives character and personality to the message, making it easier for the audience to relate to, trust, or place authority in the figure represented.
Ethos may be represented differently in different media. Visual media has the benefit of using images, such as that of sports hero, where text-only ads and auditory media such as radio rely on style, tone, and name recognition to convey ethos.
Pathos
Perhaps the most powerful tool in advertising, pathos is an appeal to the audience’s emotions. It can be used to create feelings of confidence and intrigue in a brand (“established in 1915”), to reinforce value (“find more time for you with Acme Widget”), or to promote a sense of urgency (“don’t spend another night with bedbugs”).
The emotions to which the message appeals may be many and varied: safety, well-being, pride, anger, insecurity, desire.
Logos
Logos is a logical appeal typically marked by facts, figures, and data. This information is quantifiable and helps us rationalize our decisions through hard data on money saved, time saved, higher status, and so on.
One tactic that combines all three rhetorical appeals is telling the audience how many people, just like them, have purchased a product or service. This social proof approach
- helps lower perceived risk and lessens our insecurity about the purchase (pathos),
- paints a concrete picture of market share through data (logos), and
- introduces like-minded characters and personalities through testimonials (ethos).
Working Your Ass Off To Get There
Posted by jjhnsn in Advertising, Marketing, Startup Life, Technology on September 20, 2010
“We as humans have the ability to create amazing things, which will never be hindered by automation. It’s a process change that results in more time to think and be creative, which is what advances civilization.”
So begins the response to an interview question on to what degree today’s workforce will be replaced by a bunch of automatons.
Recently Avenue Right’s founder & CEO, Brian Gramer, was interviewed on IdeaMensch and MO.com. Sure, this post is a shameless mention since I’m also the PR person there. But nonetheless, both interviews are good reads if you’re interested in life at a technology startup and how ideas are turned into products and brought to market.
These interviews are worth mentioning out here for a few more reasons:
1) it’s great to see people writing about Avenue Right,
2) the content is interesting, even if you’re not in the advertising business, and
3) these interviews give a good overview of Avenue Right, where the vision came from, and why we do what we do.
This interview delves into the where our company sits in the “clash between old and new media,” the advancements in technology that allow for automation, and whether these advancements in the long run hinder creativity.
This one covers what’s happening now with Avenue Right and offers an individual profile of the creative processes involved in “bring[ing] ideas to life.”
Local Advertising & the Consumer Decision Process
Posted by jjhnsn in Advertising, Marketing on July 28, 2010
This post originally appeared on Avenue Right’s blog, Nue Media Mix. I thought it was worth posting out here as well.
Consumers are empowered more now than they ever have been to find information when they want it, and block out unwanted or irrelevant messages on the radio, television, their favorite online magazine.
The ads that do make it through the clutter have to compete for attention.
Recent studies prove that not only are we engaged in media from more sources than ever before, but a large percentage of the population does it simultaneously—already in 2006, 60% of adults surfed the internet occasionally while watching television. Then there are those who listen to the radio while spending time online or reading a print publication. The possibilities for concurrent consumption of media—and advertising—are endless.
As we engage in these media channels, we both seek out and are exposed to advertising messages designed to inform and persuade our feelings toward a business or brand, or our inclination toward a purchase.
This brings consumers through the decision process of
• Awareness
• Consideration
• Evaluation
• Purchase
• Loyalty
Shaping that path for the consumer are such factors as motivation for the purchase (physiological, social, personal fulfillment); buyer persona; and the way the consumer retains, organizes, and interprets information, which also affects purchase behavior (i.e., impulse purchase online vs. moving through consideration and evaluation stages).
Here’s a closer look at what’s going on in each of those stages. The time spent in each stage varies depending on the product or service and its price, but in general, it looks something like this:
• Awareness – Identifies a problem/need/desire, whether it’s a need for gas in the minivan or a desire that had a little help from marketing, such as a ticket to an upcoming concert or play.
• Consideration – Searches for information or solution related to problem/need/desire.
• Evaluation – Compares options and considers price, quality, benefit, and risk factors.
• Purchase – Decides what, where, when to buy.
• Loyalty – Repeats purchase behavior depending on level of satisfaction with product or service experience.
Keeping the general stages of the decision-making cycle in mind along with the attributes and message delivery attributes of each media channel can help create a media plan that drives consumers from awareness to purchase.
More on this topic coming soon. Watch for Avenue Right’s newest white paper, “3 Tips for Aligning Local Advertising with the Consumer Decision-Making Process.” Don’t want to wait? Request it now by writing to jessie [dot] johnson [at] avenueright.com!
Leveraging the Medium to Deliver the Message
Posted by jjhnsn in Advertising, Marketing on July 6, 2010
As a form of persuasive communication, advertising seeks to guide an audience through a decision-making process that begins with awareness and results in a purchase.
We deliver rational and emotional appeals through words and sound and images that reach our audience based on who they are, where they live, where they shop.
How far that message will reach and with what impact is determined by both the creative and the media through which it’s delivered.
An advertising campaign that uses multiple media channels to target local consumers will be most effective in reaching its intended audience. This allows media buyers to leverage the advantages of each media channel and their unique properties in the overall message delivery strategy.
Different media channels deliver different experiences to different audiences. The success of an advertising campaign ultimately depends on a combination of factors—messaging strategy, media scheduling, creative execution, and audience recall.
When it comes to reaching and influencing an audience, each local media channel has unique advantages and disadvantages that result from a combination of audience media consumption patterns, popularity of the media outlet in its local market, and the nature of the medium itself.
This might be the ability to use emotion or sensory experience to increase recall, or deliver just enough information in just the right place or number of characters to influence the consumer to make that purchase or visit that website.
Understanding how media resonate with the audience through different levels of sensory and emotional engagement helps media buyers leverage the strengths of each advertising channel included in the campaign. The table below illustrates some key points of comparison not only in terms of message delivery, but ease of execution and cost to produce.
Here’s a link to the original post as it appeared on Avenue Right’s blog. If anyone would like a copy of the full white paper, please email me at jessie[dot]johnson[at]avenueright.com.
Book Review: Media Buying “Demystified” in New Advertising Book
Posted by jjhnsn in Advertising, Business Writing on June 21, 2010
Media buying is a fast-moving, complicated process that demands a mix of both hard data and intuition to be executed successfully.
It’s not as easy as making a few phone calls and plugging some numbers into a spreadsheet, neither for ad agencies nor the businesses and organizations that plan and buy their own advertising.
Each media channel is measured differently, and the formulas used to determine the best placements vary depending on the advertiser’s goals, the different media used, and how the campaign results will be measured. And if you stare long enough, the formulas can turn into one big circular reference.
There’s a mountain of information to collect and manage that—if printed out and piled—would rival the height of the campaign budget in dollar bills.
To make sense of it all, Michael J. Massey and Chrissie VanWormer offer their media buying experience and expertise in their new book Your Ad Here: De-Mystifying the Business of Media and Advertising. 
In fewer than 100 pages, the book provides a high-level overview of basic advertising concepts and how to implement them in a media plan. The chapters are laid out in an order that follows the process of a media buy, making it a quick read with easily digestible tips, tricks, and examples. It’s worth the time spent following the case study of retailer Crazy Boy Jeans, who is making a buy to promote an upcoming denim sale.
Not only does the book demystify the esoteric language of media buying by providing clear definitions for words like flighting and makegood, it also offers practical tips on negotiating placements and for managing and organizing all the information related to a media buy.
In the first section, Massey and VanWormer cover
- Audience profiling and targeting
- Budgeting
- Account management
- Avail requests
- Data management
- Trafficking and creative
The second section reviews all media and the strategy and tactics behind the ads—from broadcast to word of mouth—and provides tips for incorporating those media channels into an advertising campaign.
Your Ad Here captures some of the key challenges that media buyers face, especially when working with a tight budget. There’s also an overriding theme of “win-win” that applies to everyone who participates in getting the message out there—agency, media outlet, the business, and even the interns looking to get into the advertising space.
And above all, note Massey and VanWormer, the message needs to be good, too, to help it spread.
Read the rest of this book review at Avenue Right’s blog, including my top 10 tips from the book.
Learn more about De-mystifying the Business of Media and Advertising and purchase the book at www.YourAdHereTheBook.com.
Lessons in Business Writing from Aristotle
Posted by jjhnsn in Business Writing on September 21, 2009
In a blog post for Avenue Right, I suggested looking to the rhetorical appeals as defined by Aristotle as a way to develop advertising content that resonates with a target audience.
I won’t regurgitate the full post, but what I did want to highlight here is how ethos, pathos, and/or logos should be used in any marketing materials or business communications to present a solid and persuasive argument.
- Ethos refers to the appeal of the speaker’s character or authority. A good example of ethos in advertising is celebrity endorsements.
- Pathos appeals to the audience’s emotions. It can be used to convey feelings of confidence and integrity in a brand, or to inspire a feeling or emotion that brings about the desired action.
- Logos is logical appeal. This persuasive strategy is usually marked by facts, figures, and data.
If you’re interested in the full post on advertising content strategy, check it out here.
