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Assessing Ad Message Effectiveness

Chapter Twelve. Assessing Ad Message Effectiveness . Chapter Twelve Objectives. Explain the rationale and importance of message research. Describe the various research techniques used to measure consumer’s recognition and recall of advertising messages.

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Assessing Ad Message Effectiveness

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  1. Chapter Twelve Assessing Ad Message Effectiveness

  2. Chapter Twelve Objectives • Explain the rationale and importance of message research. • Describe the various research techniques used to measure consumer’s recognition and recall of advertising messages. • Illustrate measures of physiological arousal to advertisements.

  3. Chapter Twelve Objectives • Explicate the role of persuasion measurement, including pre- and post- testing of consumer preference. • Explain the meaning and operation of single-source measures of advertising effectiveness. • Examine some key conclusions regarding television advertising effectiveness.

  4. Overview of Advertising Research • More than 80% of advertisers and agencies pretest television commercials before airing them on a national basis. It’s not easy or inexpensive but the value outweighs the drawbacks.

  5. What Does Advertising Research Involve? • To test effectiveness of messages • Pretesting ads during developmental stages • Posttesting to determine if messages achieve their established objectives Media Effectiveness (covered later) Message Research

  6. Four Stages At Which Ad Message Research Might Be Conducted • Copy development stage • “Rough” stage • Final production stage • After the ad has been run in the media

  7. Industry Standards for Message Research PACT Principles Principle 1: provide measurements that are relevant to the advertising objectives Principle 2: requires agreement about how the results will be used in advance of each specific test Principle 3: provides multiple measurements because single measurements are generally inadequate

  8. Industry Standards for Message Research PACT Principles Principle 4: based on a model of human response to communications Reception of a stimulus Comprehension of the stimulus The response of the stimulus Principle 5: allows for consideration of whether the advertising stimulus should be exposed more than once

  9. Industry Standards for Message Research PACT Principles Principle 6: recognizes that a more finished piece of copy can be evaluated more soundly Alternative executions be tested in the same degree of finish Principle 7: system provides controls to avoid the bias normally found in the exposure context

  10. Industry Standards for Message Research PACT Principles Principle 8: takes into account basic considerations of sample definition Requires that the sample be representative of the target audience Principle 9: can demonstrate reliability and validity A reliable test is one that yields consistent results A valid test is one that is predictive of the marketplace performance

  11. What Can Be Learned from Message Research? • Message research is needed to diagnose an advertisement’s prospective equity-enhancing and sales-expanding potential. • The ARF assessed which of 35 measures best predicts the sales effectiveness of television commercials. The only definitive conclusion of their study is that no one measure is universally appropriate or best.

  12. Message Research Methods Qualitative Message Research Quantitative Message Research

  13. Quantitative Message Research Measurement Understanding Control Improvement

  14. Illustrative Message Research Methods

  15. Advertising Research Methods Message Research Methods Recognition & Recall Physiological Arousal Persuasion Sales Response

  16. Message Research Methods • Starch readership service (magazines) • Bruzzone tests (TV) • Burke day-after recall (TV) Recognition & Recall Physiological Arousal Persuasion Sales Response

  17. Starch Readership Service Measures the primary objective of a magazine ad—to be seen and read Examines reader awareness of ads in consumer magazines and business publications Readers are classified

  18. Starch Readership Service Classifications Noted—remember having previously seen the ad in the issue being studied Associated—noted the ad and saw or read some part of it that clearly indicated the name of the brand or advertiser

  19. Starch Readership Service Classifications Read Some—read any part of the ad’s copy Read Most—read half or more of the written material in the ad

  20. Starch Readership Service Indices are developed ADNORM index: compares an advertisement’s scores against other ads in the same product category as well as the same size (e.g., full page) and color classifications (e.g., four-color ads)

  21. Measures of Recognition & Recall • 39% of people noted the ad, • 37% associated it, • 27% read some of it, and • 10% read most of the body copy contained in the ad.

  22. Measures of Recognition & Recall • 58% of people noted the ad, • 54% associated it, • 39% read some of it, and • 39% read most of the body copy contained in the ad.

  23. Kia Sorento ad Adnorm index scores 72 (noted) 74 (associated) 73 (read some) 59 (read most) The ad performed 28% worse than the average noted score for similar ads. Jose Cuervo Especial Tequila ad 107 (noted) 108 (associated) 105 (read some) 229 (read most) The ad performed slightly above average noted score for similar ads. Starch Readership Service

  24. Bruzzone Tests Bruzzone test provides advertisers with a test of consumer recognition of television commercials. Anything identifying the brand is removed, to test whether viewers remember the name of the advertiser.

  25. Measures of Recognition & Recall Bruzzone test Advertising Response Model (ARM) links responses to the 27 descriptive adjectives to consumers’ attitudes toward both the ad and the advertised brand and to purchase interest.

  26. ARM for the “Thanking the Troops” Commercial

  27. Measures of Recognition & Recall Bruzzone test Provides valid prediction of actual marketplace performance along with being relatively inexpensive Doesn’t provide a before-the-fact indication Tests offer important info for evaluating a commercial’s effectiveness and whether it should continue to run Tests are performed online

  28. Measures of Recognition & Recall Burke Day-After Recall Testing • Used to assess the effectiveness of test commercials and to ID strengths and weaknesses (1) Claimed-recall scores—indicate the percentage of respondents who recall seeing the ad (2) Related-recall scores—indicate the percentage of respondents who accurately describe specific advertising elements

  29. Measures of Recognition & Recall Burke Day-After Recall Testing Coke execs reject recall as a valid measure 1) Recall simply measures whether an ad is received but not whether the message is accepted 2) Recall is biased in favor of younger consumers

  30. Measures of Recognition & Recall Burke Day-After Recall Testing 3) Recall scores generated by ads are not predictive of sales performance 4) Day-after recall testing is biased against certain types of advertising content Understate the memorability of commercials that employ emotional or feeling-oriented themes and are biased in favor of rational or thought-oriented commercials

  31. Day-After Recall Vs. Masked-Recognition Research Findings

  32. Message Research Methods • Psychogalvanometer • Pupilometer Recognition & Recall Physiological Arousal Persuasion Sales Response

  33. Measures of Recognition & Recall Measures of Physiological Arousal • Ads that are better liked are more likely to be remembered and to persuade • Efforts are now made to measure consumer’s affective and emotional reactions to ads

  34. Measures of Recognition & Recall Measures of Physiological Arousal • Galvanometer—measures minute levels of perspiration in response to emotional arousal • Pupillometric tests—measure pupil dilation • Advertising researchers use changes in physiological functions to indicate the actual, unbiased amount of arousal resulting from ads.

  35. Message Research Methods • Ipsos-ASI Next*TV method • Rsc’s ARS Persuasion method Recognition & Recall Physiological Arousal Persuasion Sales Response

  36. Measures of Persuasion Used when an advertiser’s objective is to influence consumers’ attitudes toward and preference for the advertised brand.

  37. Measures of Persuasion Ipsos-ASI Next*TV Method • Performs ad research in more than 50 countries • Tests television commercials in consumers’ homes • Tells consumers to evaluate a TV program, but actually evaluating the commercials within the program

  38. Measures of Persuasion Ipsos-ASI Next*TV Method • One day after viewing—personal contact with sampled consumers and measure their reactions to the TV program and the advertisements • Measures message recall and persuasion

  39. Measures of Persuasion Ipsos-ASI Next*TV Method • Persuasion measured by: Consumers’ attitudes toward advertised brands Shift in brand preferences Brand-related purchase intent and frequency

  40. Measures of Persuasion Ipsos-ASI Next*TV Method • Tests in a natural environment • Assesses the ability of TV commercials to break through the clutter • Determines how well tested commercials are remembered after this delay period • Allows the use of a representative national sampling

  41. Measures of Persuasion The ARS Persuasion Method--rsc • Respondents indicate what brands they prefer to receive among a “basket” of options—the pre measure. • After exposure to a television program respondents again indicate what brands they would prefer to receive if their name were selected in a drawing—the post measure. ARS Persuasion Score = Post % for target brand – Pre % for target brand

  42. Measures of Persuasion The ARS Persuasion Method--rsc The ARS Persuasion score simply represents the post-measure percentage of respondents preferring the target brand minus the pre-measure percentage who prefer that brand A positive score indicates a shifted preference toward the target brand A higher-scoring commercial generates greater sales volume and larger market share gains

  43. Measures of Persuasion The ARS Persuasion Method--rsc ARS Persuasion scores are valid predictors of in-market performance The higher the score, the greater the likelihood that a tested commercial will produce positive sales gains when the focal brand is advertised under real-world, in-market conditions

  44. Predictive Validity of ARS Persuasion Scores

  45. Message Research Methods • AC Nielsen’s SCANTRACK • IRI’s BehaviorScan Recognition & Recall Physiological Arousal Persuasion Sales Response

  46. Measures of Sales Response Single-Source Systems Gather purchase data from panels of households using: (1) electronic television meters (2) optical laser scanning of universal product codes (UPC) at retail checkout (3) split-cable technology

  47. Measures of Sales Response Nielsen’s SCANTRACK SCANTRACK collects purchase data by having panel households use handheld scanners Panelists record purchases of every bar-coded product purchased regardless of the store where purchased

  48. Measures of Sales Response Nielsen’s SCANTRACK Use handheld scanners to enter: Any coupons used Record all store deals Record in-store features that influenced their purchasing decisions

  49. Measures of Sales Response IRI’s BehaviorScan IRI knows what items each household purchases by linking up optically scanned purchases with ID numbers Members provide IRI with detailed demographic information

  50. Measures of Sales Response IRI’s BehaviorScan Single source data consists of: (1) household demographic info (2) household purchase behavior (3) household exposure to new television commercials that are tested under real world test conditions

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