a brief history of advertisement

185
“ Never write an advertisement which you wouldn't want your family to read. You wouldn't tell lies to your own wife. Don't tell them to mine.”

Upload: ishraq-dhaly

Post on 09-May-2015

4.215 views

Category:

Business


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Credit: Tuğçe Esener http://www.linkedin.com/in/tugceesener

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: A Brief History of Advertisement

“ Never write an advertisement which you wouldn't want your family to

read.  You wouldn't tell lies to your own wife. 

Don't tell them to mine.” 

“ Never write an advertisement which you wouldn't want your family to

read.  You wouldn't tell lies to your own wife. 

Don't tell them to mine.” 

Page 2: A Brief History of Advertisement

Ground zero…Ground zero…

Page 3: A Brief History of Advertisement

“You Can Have Any Color As Long As It Is Black”“You Can Have Any Color As Long As It Is Black”

Page 4: A Brief History of Advertisement

1900 – 19401900 – 1940

• World War I and II• World War I and II

Page 5: A Brief History of Advertisement

“Killers versus Poets”

“Killers versus Poets”

Page 6: A Brief History of Advertisement

The reason whyThe reason why

The writer of an unsigned 1902 editorial in Printers' Ink spoke for the majority, noting: "More attractive than fine pictures, more potent than fine language, are the Why and Wherefore of the goods-the Reasons.“

Page 7: A Brief History of Advertisement

“Killers” and “Poets”“Killers” and “Poets”

Hard-sell advocates frequently criticized "poets" for desiring personal recognition for their creativity. Conversely, soft-sell advocates often criticized "killers" for their lack of creativity.

Page 8: A Brief History of Advertisement

Copyman’s troubleCopyman’s trouble

1908, observations in Printers Ink:"The modern 'copy man' has to say things in a way that they have not been said before-because that is the only kind of talk that will nowadays attract attention."

Page 9: A Brief History of Advertisement

A period of “experimental” discoveryA period of “experimental” discovery

• 1905: the University of Pennsylvania offered a course in "The Marketing of Products"

• 1908: Harvard Business School opens• 1908: Northwestern University opens its

School of Commerce, which will later become the Kellogg School of Management, home to influential marketing professor Philip Kotler

Page 10: A Brief History of Advertisement

1912

1923(Kodak)

1927

Page 11: A Brief History of Advertisement

1886

Page 12: A Brief History of Advertisement

1886

1880

1904

Page 13: A Brief History of Advertisement

1905

19071920

Page 14: A Brief History of Advertisement

1929

1935

1939

Page 15: A Brief History of Advertisement

19141918

Page 16: A Brief History of Advertisement

1919 1922

Page 17: A Brief History of Advertisement

1923

Page 18: A Brief History of Advertisement

1924 1925

Page 19: A Brief History of Advertisement

1927 1929

Page 20: A Brief History of Advertisement

1918

Page 21: A Brief History of Advertisement

1923

1926

Page 22: A Brief History of Advertisement

1918 1919

Page 23: A Brief History of Advertisement

1902

Page 24: A Brief History of Advertisement

1925 1928

Page 25: A Brief History of Advertisement

1925 1936

Page 26: A Brief History of Advertisement

1922 1926

Page 27: A Brief History of Advertisement

1932 1930

Page 28: A Brief History of Advertisement

1930

Page 29: A Brief History of Advertisement

1930 1932

Page 30: A Brief History of Advertisement

1945

Page 31: A Brief History of Advertisement

1937 1936

Page 32: A Brief History of Advertisement

1937 1946

Page 33: A Brief History of Advertisement

1926 1929

Page 34: A Brief History of Advertisement

19311947

Page 35: A Brief History of Advertisement

1950’s1950’s

“After World War II society had to settle back for a moment before it picked up the 20th century.” Stella Blum

Page 36: A Brief History of Advertisement

Marketing for the masses…Marketing for the masses…

Page 37: A Brief History of Advertisement

Marketing “theories”Marketing “theories”

• More of the consumer viewpoint and of economic analysis were introduced.

• The concept of marketing was being reformulated.

Page 38: A Brief History of Advertisement

Rise of MadManRise of MadMan

Leo Burnett, identified two schools of strategic thought in a Printers' Ink article:

1-Poster-style advertising2-Reason-why advertising

Page 39: A Brief History of Advertisement

Ultimate question continues…Ultimate question continues…

In the 1950s, a slim majority continued to argue that advertising's role was to sell products directly, with remarks similar to those of hard-sell advocates from forty years earlier.

Page 40: A Brief History of Advertisement

“Television is the triumph of machine over people.” “Television is the triumph of machine over people.”

Page 41: A Brief History of Advertisement

The birthday of the bathroom break.The birthday of the bathroom break.

July 1, 1941, the first day the Federal Communications Commission allowed TV stations to switch from experimental to commercial broadcasts. NBC New York affiliate WNBT becomes the first of 22 FCC licensees to air sponsored programming.

Page 42: A Brief History of Advertisement

The birth of USP The birth of USP

The president of N.W. Ayer and Son observed in 1941 that advertising "cannot create a single point of superiority in a product or add a single virtue to its manufacturer. What advertising can do is to speed up the process of getting a good product well and favorably known."

Page 43: A Brief History of Advertisement

Hierarchy of needsHierarchy of needs

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs model was developed between 1943-1954, and first widely published in Motivation and Personality in 1954. At this time the Hierarchy of Needs model comprised five needs. Maslow's most popular book is Toward a Psychology of Being (1968), in which more layers were added.

Page 44: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 45: A Brief History of Advertisement

1950

1951

Page 46: A Brief History of Advertisement

1951 1953

Page 47: A Brief History of Advertisement

1954

1954

Page 48: A Brief History of Advertisement

1950

Page 49: A Brief History of Advertisement

19511952

Page 50: A Brief History of Advertisement

1956 - 1957

Page 51: A Brief History of Advertisement

1955 - 1956

Page 52: A Brief History of Advertisement

19511955

Page 53: A Brief History of Advertisement

1954 1959

Page 54: A Brief History of Advertisement

1954

Page 55: A Brief History of Advertisement

19501958

Page 56: A Brief History of Advertisement

1954

Page 57: A Brief History of Advertisement

1955

Page 58: A Brief History of Advertisement

1956

Page 59: A Brief History of Advertisement

1954 - 1955

Page 60: A Brief History of Advertisement

1957

Page 61: A Brief History of Advertisement

1955 1951

Page 62: A Brief History of Advertisement

19571959

Page 63: A Brief History of Advertisement

60’s60’s

“Don't trust anybody over thirty!” Jack Weinberg

Page 64: A Brief History of Advertisement

Question of “ethics”Question of “ethics”

Page 65: A Brief History of Advertisement

Rise of cynicismRise of cynicism

“What is the difference between unethical and ethical advertising? Unethical advertising uses falsehoods to deceive the public; ethical advertising uses truth to deceive the public. ” Vilhjalmur Stefansson, 1964

Page 66: A Brief History of Advertisement

First trialFirst trial

In 1968, a creative team at BBDO, New York, slips some marbles into a bowl of Campbell's vegetable soup to keep the vegetables from sinking to the bottom. This seemingly innocent effort sparks a Federal Trade Commission probe and becomes the basis for the FTC's efforts to eliminate false ads with a practice that allows it to demand "corrective advertising" from an advertiser that has made a false claim.

Page 67: A Brief History of Advertisement

1960

Page 68: A Brief History of Advertisement

1960 Mc Donalds

Page 69: A Brief History of Advertisement

1960 - 1961

Page 70: A Brief History of Advertisement

1962 - 1963

Page 71: A Brief History of Advertisement

1964 – 1965

Page 72: A Brief History of Advertisement

1966

Page 73: A Brief History of Advertisement

1967

Page 74: A Brief History of Advertisement

1968

Page 75: A Brief History of Advertisement

1962

Page 76: A Brief History of Advertisement

1968

Page 77: A Brief History of Advertisement

1960

Page 78: A Brief History of Advertisement

1961 - 1962

Page 79: A Brief History of Advertisement

1960 - 1961

Page 80: A Brief History of Advertisement

1961 - 1964

Page 81: A Brief History of Advertisement

1964 - 1969

Page 82: A Brief History of Advertisement

1960

Page 83: A Brief History of Advertisement

1961 - 1962

Page 84: A Brief History of Advertisement

1963

Page 85: A Brief History of Advertisement

1962 - 1965

Page 86: A Brief History of Advertisement

1965 - 1967

Page 87: A Brief History of Advertisement

1967 - WARNER

Page 88: A Brief History of Advertisement

1966

Page 89: A Brief History of Advertisement

70’s70’s

“I find your lack of faith disturbing.”

Page 90: A Brief History of Advertisement

“The battle is in the consumers mind”“The battle is in the consumers mind”

Page 91: A Brief History of Advertisement

A new approach: PositioningA new approach: Positioning

Beginning in 1969 two young marketing guys, Jack Trout and Al Ries, wrote, spoke and disseminated to the advertising and PR world about a new concept in communications called positioning.

Page 92: A Brief History of Advertisement

Brand image?Brand image?

Lee Clow, in 1971: "Why isn't the persona of the brand considered a real difference? Is it because it's too esoteric?"

Page 93: A Brief History of Advertisement

Mystique?Mystique?

As one wrote in 1971, "Research not only takes some of the mystique out of agency creative departments, it also gives the client more direct control over creative people."

Page 94: A Brief History of Advertisement

1976

1972

1971

1971

Page 95: A Brief History of Advertisement

1970

Page 96: A Brief History of Advertisement

1971

Page 97: A Brief History of Advertisement

1971

Page 98: A Brief History of Advertisement

1970

Page 99: A Brief History of Advertisement

1970

Page 100: A Brief History of Advertisement

1971

Page 101: A Brief History of Advertisement

1975

Page 102: A Brief History of Advertisement

1978

Page 103: A Brief History of Advertisement

1979 Wonderbra

Page 104: A Brief History of Advertisement

80’s80’s

"You'll never look at music the same way again"

Page 105: A Brief History of Advertisement

The search for “cool”The search for “cool”

Page 106: A Brief History of Advertisement

Emotion is the king!Emotion is the king!

Edward de Bono (1985)He noted: "Emotions are an essential part of our

thinking ability and not just something extra that mucks up our thinking"

Page 107: A Brief History of Advertisement

Invention of ROIInvention of ROI

"I know that half of my advertising budget is wasted, but I'm not sure which half.“

John Wanamaker

Page 108: A Brief History of Advertisement

Differentiate or dieDifferentiate or die

Hal Riney, a creative director for the BBDO agency during the "creative revolution" of the 1960s, stated this point very clearly in 1982: '"Most of the time,' he says, 'the facts haven't done me a lot of good. It seems there's someone already using the same ones'"

Page 109: A Brief History of Advertisement

Emergence of relationship marketingEmergence of relationship marketing

• CRM• Customer value• Brand loyalty• Long term brand investment

Page 110: A Brief History of Advertisement

Consumer radar Consumer radar

• Introduction of “guerilla” marketing methods.

Page 111: A Brief History of Advertisement

1989

Page 112: A Brief History of Advertisement

1982

Page 113: A Brief History of Advertisement

U.S. Army, 1981

Page 114: A Brief History of Advertisement

1989

Page 115: A Brief History of Advertisement

Apple Computer, 1984

Page 116: A Brief History of Advertisement

1984

Page 117: A Brief History of Advertisement

1987

Page 118: A Brief History of Advertisement

Nike 1983

Page 119: A Brief History of Advertisement

1987

Page 120: A Brief History of Advertisement

1988

Page 121: A Brief History of Advertisement

Lee Cooper 1987

Page 122: A Brief History of Advertisement

90’s 90’s

“Just do it!”

Page 123: A Brief History of Advertisement

Need for integrationNeed for integration

Page 124: A Brief History of Advertisement

Brand is the kingBrand is the king

1993 The Brand Asset Valuator of advertising agency Young & Rubicam measures Brand Value by applying four broad factors.

Page 125: A Brief History of Advertisement

Integrated effortsIntegrated efforts

Mark Tungate, the Paris-based author of Fashion Brands: Branding Style From Armani to Zara.

"Advertisers today can be more subtle because they are safe in the knowledge that a single image does not have to stand alone. The Web site and the store are equally parts of the brand experience. "

Page 126: A Brief History of Advertisement

Long live consumerismLong live consumerism

“It is our job to make women unhappy with what they have. ” B. Earl Puckett, 1992

Page 127: A Brief History of Advertisement

The new buzz!The new buzz!

• Introduction of “viral” marketing

Page 128: A Brief History of Advertisement

1998

1992

1995

Page 129: A Brief History of Advertisement

1993

Page 130: A Brief History of Advertisement

1993

Page 131: A Brief History of Advertisement

1994

Page 132: A Brief History of Advertisement

1994

Page 133: A Brief History of Advertisement

1993

Page 134: A Brief History of Advertisement

1991

Page 135: A Brief History of Advertisement

1991

Page 136: A Brief History of Advertisement

1992

Page 137: A Brief History of Advertisement

1993

Page 138: A Brief History of Advertisement

1994

Page 139: A Brief History of Advertisement

1989

Page 140: A Brief History of Advertisement

1989

Page 141: A Brief History of Advertisement

1991

Page 142: A Brief History of Advertisement

1991

Page 143: A Brief History of Advertisement

1991

Page 144: A Brief History of Advertisement

1991

Page 145: A Brief History of Advertisement

1992

Page 146: A Brief History of Advertisement

1992

Page 147: A Brief History of Advertisement

1992

Page 148: A Brief History of Advertisement

1992

Page 149: A Brief History of Advertisement

1994

Page 150: A Brief History of Advertisement

1996

Page 151: A Brief History of Advertisement

1996

Page 152: A Brief History of Advertisement

Apple 1997

Page 153: A Brief History of Advertisement

2000’s2000’s

Page 154: A Brief History of Advertisement

And the era of “dialogue”…And the era of “dialogue”…

Page 155: A Brief History of Advertisement

Who is Generation Y?Who is Generation Y?• 76 million people born between 1978 – 2000• Millienials, Net Generation, Echo Boomers, Google

Generation, iGeneration• Ongoing debate about where to begin and end a

generation.

Page 156: A Brief History of Advertisement

OLD MARKETINGOLD MARKETING

PRODUCT

PACKAGING

DISTRIBUTION

CRM

ADVERTISING

CONSUMERWha

t’s N

ext

in M

arke

ting

Page 157: A Brief History of Advertisement

MODERN MARKETINGMODERN MARKETING

PRODUCT

PACKAGING

DISTRIBUTION

ADVERTISING

CONSUMER

CRM

Wha

t’s N

ext

in M

arke

ting

Page 158: A Brief History of Advertisement

perception

80% of CEO’s believe of believe their brand provides a superior customer experience

8 % of their customers agree

(Bain & Company)

FUTURELAB

Page 159: A Brief History of Advertisement

76% of consumers don’t believe that companies tell the truth in advertisements

Yankelowich,2006

FUTURELAB

I A

M T

HE

ME

DIA

Page 160: A Brief History of Advertisement

160

ONLY 14% TRUST ADS

CR

EA

TIN

G BUZZ

Page 161: A Brief History of Advertisement

161

69 % INTERESTED IN ADBLOCKING TECHNOLOGIES

CR

EA

TIN

G BUZZ

Page 162: A Brief History of Advertisement

162

LAW OF FEW

10% INFLUENCE PURCHASING BEHAVIOR OF OTHER 90%

CR

EA

TIN

G BUZZ

Page 163: A Brief History of Advertisement

Marketing landscapeMarketing landscape

Page 164: A Brief History of Advertisement

2001

20072005

2004

1999

20062005

Page 165: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 166: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 167: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 168: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 169: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 170: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 171: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 172: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 173: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 174: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 175: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 176: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 177: A Brief History of Advertisement
Page 178: A Brief History of Advertisement

Diesel 2008

Page 179: A Brief History of Advertisement

2008

Page 180: A Brief History of Advertisement

Cadburry 2008

Page 181: A Brief History of Advertisement

Dove Real Beauty 2008

Page 182: A Brief History of Advertisement

“I have always believed that writing advertisements is the second most profitable form of writing. The first, of course, is ransom notes...”

Philip Dusenberry

Page 183: A Brief History of Advertisement

References References Articles:• Title: Hard-Sell "Killers" and Soft-Sell "Poets": Modern Advertising's Enduring Message Strategy Debate

Date: 10/1/2004; Publication: Journalism History; Author: Beard, Fred K • Title: The biggest moments in the last 75 years of advertising history.

Date: 3/28/2005; Publication: Advertising Age; • Title: Ad Ages 50 years of image-making; evolving from the rational pitch to glossy lifestyle campaigns,

men's fashion advertising over the past half-century is a window on culture and society.Date: 4/24/2006; Publication: Daily News Record; Author: Lipke, David

Books:• The Hidden Persuaders by Vance Packard and Mark Crispin Miller• American Social Classes in the 1950s: Selections from Vance Packard's The Status Seekers (The Bedford Ser

ies in History and Culture) by Vance Packard and Daniel Horowitz

• The Origin of Brands by Al/ Ries, Laura Ries• Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind, 20th Anniversary Edition by Al Ries and Jack Trout• Big Brands Big Trouble: Lessons Learned the Hard Way by Jack Trout

Page 184: A Brief History of Advertisement

ReferencesReferencesWebsites• http://www.wk.com/#/clients/15/• http://www.advertisingarchives.co.uk/gallery_1900s.php• http://graphic-design.tjs-labs.com/gallery-view?span=15&start=30• http://adage.com/century/timeline/index.html• http://www.rareads.com/rareads/webauto.html• http://donttellmymum.com/2008/10/23/10-pieces-of-content-that-define-todays-marketing-reality/• http://adage.com/century/campaigns.html• http://www.logoorange.com/logodesign-A.php• http://www.adclassix.com/sitemap.htm#1900• http://www.toxel.com/inspiration/2008/06/28/24-unforgettable-advertisements/

Presentations• Whats next in Marketing Paul Isakson

http://www.slideshare.net/paulisakson/whats-next-in-marketing-advertising-318143:• Futurelab I am the media http://www.slideshare.net/alainthys/i-am-the-media• Kameran Ahari Creating Buz http://gotastrategy.typepad.com

Page 185: A Brief History of Advertisement

Thank you

Tuğçe Esener http://www.linkedin.com/in/tugceesener