A surreal introduction

Possibly the single biggest influence on modern advertising techniques lends itself from the Surrealist method. From Dali’s paranoiac critical to Magritte’s juxtaposition, they are all there for one to see. The idea of hidden latent sexuality in objects is also a major part of the advertising ploy of the modern age. How many companies use sexual images to sell their products, regardless of the nature of the product?

The most important feature though is the anchoring that is used. By this I mean that basically a product is advertised usually on the strength of an association with an ideal or concept. For example, dairy products might be anchored with the countryside and fresh flowery fields, aftershave with ultimately attractive members of the opposite sex and sexual success. It is this association which sells a product. Often it is this association and also the bombardment of these images in order to constantly reinforce the ideas that place a product within a certain framework in our minds. Manipulation of images of this kind is seen all through surrealist work. Particularly as in Dali’s paranoiac critical method, where double images appear constantly associating one with another and also in Magritte’s juxtaposition of objects – this is the most blatant similarity. Magritte places objects in contexts where they are unfamiliar with the viewer, a rock in the air for instance. This image might be also used in advertising as, say, to indicate how ‘light’ a sugar free drink will make you feel, there are many more examples but this serves to illustrate my point. The manipulation and anchoring of images is essential in modern advertising and also in much of the historical, especially wartime, propaganda.  Imagine if the advertising industry resorted to more ‘honest’ ways of portraying their products.

High50

I found on The Campaign website, there is a website called High50 which is a devoted website for over 50′s who believe old is good, an online community of 20000 online active members which was founded over 4 years ago. It has articles, links to culture, shopping, money, news etc. So maybe the market is beginning to pick up?

Surely it would be better for the older generation than seeing the same predictable adverts for the over 50’s, below is a good example of one..

Lynx ads

Below is a lynx advert purely focused for the younger male market, lynx only target that audience, but are lynx big enough as a brand to try a campaign for the older generation, they are successful, maybe they could afford to take the risk? Or are they just better off as a brand for the younger market. The risk could be that the younger market may be put off by the brand if its targeted for the older category.

 

M&S ads

M&S seems to want to target a new younger market but also keep the loyal older generation of customers too, but could it be too much of a risk?

M&S have included Twiggy as part of their ads, an iconic 60’s model, which appeals to both the older and younger generation. M&S seems to be trying to appeal to both the older generation and the younger, some may critise it doesn’t work and the loyal customers may feel like they are almost pushed out.

Introduction

The over 50′s have more than £200billion of disposable income and account for 80 percent of private wealth. They make up a third of people online and are the fastest growing demographic using social networking sites. A survey of a million 50 year olds found they believe 86percent of advertising is of little or no relevance to them. Companies have turned a blind eye to the older market, while the ‘seniors’ are more active and spend driven than ever before. A report published in the economist magazine in 2002, companies still spend over 95percent of their marketing and advertising budget on the under 50′s age groups.

‘We are in a society where there is strong preference for young people’ writes Jean Paul Treguer, founder of senior agency, for advertising consultancy for seniors, on his website..

‘ Large worldwide corporations like Coca Cola, Walt Disney, Sony and Nike were born in the 20th century, and they contributed to define the core target for advertising as 15 – 35 year olds. Today people in marketing, advertising and television still address the youngest consumer possible to build up loyalty, while continuing following this formula , the marketing people, agencies & tv channels go to who they see as the easiest target & ignore the rapidly aging population.’

So the statistics show they may have been forgotten, but why? Jean Treguer made a valid point of targeting early to gain loyalty through out the years. This brings me to M&S, more of the older generation are now loyal customers and have been for years, but M&S have changed the way they advertise, and it looks to be like they are targeting more and more to a younger generation, is M&S in danger of alienating core customers by forgetting those of the older generation?

 

My chosen two questions

have chosen to look into two topics, one of which I will choose to research deeper to start my dissertation

1 Has advertising had a profound effect on Britains Political Climate?

2 Has the advertising industry forgotten the older generation as a target audience?

I chose the first question because its an area I know very little about, a purely chose this so I can learn and gain new knowledge, I would like to dig deep into research and find out as much information as possible on whether advertising really does make a differnce to Britains voters, methods and how some advertising works better than others, does it really change voters minds? Does politics dictate advertising? Or does advertising dictate politics? Where does advertising end…and properganda begin?

The second question I have have chosen to research is because its something that Im extremely curious about. The older generation mostly retired, have more time on their hands, some have more money, so why is there so little ad’s targeting at this generation? With more money surely they are likely to buy, with more time, theyre likely to see these ads.Is there space left in advertising? Do statistics show advertising does not work for the older generation? Or are they just forgotten? Or just too much of a risk…

Article The Drum

Here is an article I found in The Drum, on political advertising, I have made the words bold on some of the key factors that will help me with my research on the impact of advertising in the political climate…

The sight of David Cameron on numerous billboards shortly after New Year signalled that the advertising campaign for the 2010 General Election campaign has unofficially begun. Politicians love getting involved in advertising and agencies seem to love getting involved in politics.

During my time working for the Labour Party in Scotland, managing its advertising campaigns, I was always amazed by the eagerness of agencies to work on our accounts. We had very little money to pay them, we demanded super human efforts in return and we always wanted results yesterday. Yet still agencies queued up to pitch.

Frustrations Working on a political campaign for an agency can be tough going. At times it seems like a never ending series of demands, frustrations and unrealistic expectations as parties search for the one poster that will change the course of the campaign and boost their electoral fortunes.

The working hours can be exhausting. If politicians are up at 2am thinking about the strategy for the next few days then they expect the agency to be as well. If they need a last minute poster to react to the events of the day then it is going to mean working through the night. You can produce a brilliant, bold piece of communication then watch politicians take cold feet and it’s soon heading straight for the pile marked ‘thanks but no thanks’.

Then there is the potential for disaster at every turn. I remember in 2003 standing in a very wet Parliament Square in Edinburgh watching in horror as our final poster of the campaign became more and more rain soaked to slowly reveal the Tories poster from the previous day underneath.

Thankfully that didn’t attract any significant press comment but you are always one mishap away from being on the front page of the Daily Record. I often wonder why any sane agency would want to get involved. The reason is that no other sector offers the potential profile and the unique experience that comes from working on a campaign. Where else would you be delivering an ad concept at 5pm, testing it in focus groups at 7pm, debriefing the client at 11pm and driving past it as a billboard a few days later? The sheer adrenaline and buzz that comes from working at that pace is fantastic. It is fast, it is vibrant and it can be addictive. Working on political advertising campaigns has given me some of the most memorable moments of my career.

I remember the thrill of testing the image of William Hague in a Margaret Thatcher wig in the 2001 election and watching the response from voters. We knew right away it was going to be a defining poster of the campaign. I recall flicking through the ad concepts from TBWA/Edinburgh in 2003 and finding the simple image of a Scotland torn from England and the words ‘Then What?’ and knowing that here was a poster that summed up the folly of independence far more than any 100 page policy document ever could.

High profile It doesn’t even need to be a high profile poster. In 2003 we produced a fairly low level leaflet on what Labour had achieved for pensioners.

The concept was simple – an illustration of a pensioner waiting at a bus stop with the line ‘You wait for ages and then three come at once’. Turn it over to discover that in the last four years Labour in the Scottish Parliament had provided free bus travel, free care for the elderly and free central heating to benefit older people.

Just getting the leaflet agreed was a battle as politicians needed persuaded that using a cartoon illustration wasn’t undermining the serious business of politics and that we didn’t need to scream Labour onwanting to talk about ‘that leaflet’. He told me that he had opened the box and thought  the front of every piece of communication. But the battle was won and it went out. Just a few days later I feared the worst as I was approached by one of our no nonsense Glasgow MSPswhat the hell is this? He handed it to his activists and their reaction was the same. But they took it out on the streets and had received the best reaction they had ever experienced to a Labour leaflet.

When you get it right and the voters respond then it is quite magical. Working for a political party is perhaps the ultimate gamble for an agency. The high profile nature of the work makes it high risk and high reward. Produce a killer poster and you will forever be credited as the person who won the election single handed.

Mess up and you are blamed for the defeat or front page news. Just ask the agency who airbrushed David Cameron to look a little too perfect.

Right now the battle lines for the coming campaign are being drawn. It will be interesting to see the tone of each party’s campaign and the balance between positive and negative advertising. There is a myth in political advertising that only negative campaigning really works but it only works if it is based on an existing truth.

Attacking William Hague by placing him in a Thatcher wig was only accepted by voters because it was funny and, more importantly, because voters were genuinely concerned about going back to the Tories if they were still the party of Thatcher and the Poll Tax.

Vindictive Going negative just for the sake of it will risk you ending up looking petty and vindictive like the Tories did when they portrayed Tony Blair with devil eyes in1997 or the SNP did in the run up to 2003 when they produced a New Year poster showing Jack McConnell as a cigarette being stubbed out in an ashtray. Yes it was as bad as it sounds.

The first Conservative poster sets out their initial strategy quite clearly. Focus on the need for change and emphasise the leader rather than the party. The sensible thing to do when polling shows that the Cameron brand is more popular in the country than the Conservative brand. No doubt attacks on Labour and Gordon Brown will follow. For Labour the challenge The Conservative Party’s newly launched campaign has caused a stir; while Labour’s worries of old were different to today’s problems is how to look fresh and represent the change the country needs when you are the incumbent who has been in power for the last 12 years.

The threat of Tory cuts may not be as potent given the global recession and Cameron provides a less obvious link to the Thatcher Government than William Hague or Michael Howard did.

That said I still wouldn’t rule out them producing the defining image of the campaign as they have done in recent elections. The other parties will be struggling to compete as the big two dominate the debate. No one knows exactly how the election campaign will unfold but the one thing we can be sure of is that it will be fascinating.

Steven Lawther is the founder of Red Circle Communications and former Head of Communications for the Scottish Labour Party. He has worked on political campaigns since1992. He continues to advise the Labour Party on polling, advertising and communication. He recently worked on a major public opinion survey for the Office of the First Minister and Deputy First Minister in Northern Ireland and spent time at Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research – a leading US polling agency – during the 2004 US Presidential Elections.

When I first read this article I could relate to the views, the deeper I have researched the more I found that negative ads do seem to have a greater impact on the public, especially the Labour ‘Dave the Chameleon’, incredibly humourous and witty and cleverly done. How brave was it for an ad agency to create such an ad? Political parties have carried on creating negative ads, so there must be some sort of pattern of success. Or is it that one cannot do without the other?

Labour isnt working campaign

1978 Saatchi advertising agency produced a poster campaign for the Conservatives, with the slogan ‘Labour isnt working’ a fake photograph of a long line of people queuing at an unemployment office. It shattered Labours image as the party of the ordinary worker, and the message that the party had failed its base. It was voted the poster campaign of the century by advertising industry magazine campaign. following the conservative victory in 1979, it was hailed as ‘ the poster that won the election’. Incredibly powerful words, could of one poster changed the views of a political party? Looking at examples like this, its hard not to sway further towards advertising having a great impact on political climate..