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Marketing Communication - Full RUG summary of all lectures and chapters of the book

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This is a summary of the master course Marketing Communication at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, given in the MSc Marketing Management (Semester 2 - period 1). The summary includes all the required lectures, as well as all required chapters of the book for this course: Psychology of Advertising - 3rd edition. You will definitely have everything that is needed for the exam! It is easy to go through this summary, since the definitions and important concepts are in bold etc. It even includes the most important images/graphs from the book and slides! You will pass your exam with this summary! It might seem like a long summary, but there are topics which are discussed in both the lectures and the chapters, so if you understand it the first time, you can skip the other parts! Besides, chapter 1 is an overview of the other chapters discussed in the book, so that will also save you time! I wish you all the best in studying for the exam! Good luck! NOTE: LECTURE 5 IS NOT ONLINE YET. IF YOU DOWNLOAD THE SUMMARY NOW, YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE NEW VERSION (INCLUDING THE SUMMARY OF THE LAST LECTURE) FOR FREE, ONCE THIS NEW VERSION IS UPLOADED. YOU WILL GET A NOTIFICATION THEN.

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Summary Marketing Communication

Week 1:
- Lecture 1: Effective marketing communication: a game of hurdles
- Chapter 1: Setting the stage
- Chapter 2: Hurdle #1, how consumers acquire and process information from
advertising

Week 2:
- Lecture 2: Memory and attitudes
- Chapter 3: Hurdle #2, how advertising affects consumer memory
- Chapter 4: Hurdle #3, how to target attitudes, the ‘forgotten’ effectiveness indicator

Week 3:
- Lecture 3: Persuasion and behavior
- Chapter 5: Hurdle #4, how consumers yield to advertising
- Chapter 6: Hurdle #5, how to bridge the intention-behavior gap

Week 4: tutorials - no literature

Week 5:
- Lecture 4: Nudging and online consumer behavior
- Chapter 7: Hurdle #6, how to nudge consumer behavior change
- Chapter 8: Hurdle #7, how to persuade the online consumer

Week 6: tutorials - no literature

Week 7:
- Lecture 5

,Week 1
Lecture 1: Effective marketing communication: a game of hurdles
Individual perspective: predicting the impact of specific advertising variables on specific,
individual consumer responses and explain the processes responsible for any advertising
impact
- This perspective is taken in the course
- This means that we have to focus on specific ad variables:
- Source (endorser) variables: (the source of the ad)
- Expertise/credibility/trustworthiness
- Attractiveness
- Number
- Fame etc
- Message variables:
- Argument quality: how strong are the arguments
- Argument quantity
- Information density
- Internal/external pacing etc
- All variables translate to all communication tools: regular advertising, direct
marketing, sales promotion, interactive marketing, PR, personal selling etc

Individual and specific consumer responses:
- Cognitive responses: what they think about the ad/brand:
- Beliefs, evaluations, inferences, convictions, awareness, attitudes,
preferences
- Affective responses: feelings about the ad/brand:
- Emotions and moods, transient (short) and enduring, positively/negatively
valenced
- Behavioral responses: acting towards the ad/brand
- Trail vs habit, buying (very exceptional), using, disposing
- All type of responses influence each other

Context
- More than 1000 commercial stimuli a day, which have the potential to create a
response
- Does not mean that you will actually have a response
- Consumers have to be selective in processing information, since we are not able to
process all the information in our working memory

Advertising: any form of paid (or not paid) communication by an identified sponsor (or not
sponsored) aimed to inform and/or persuade target audiences about an organization,
product, service or idea
- Advertising for all promotion tools, and media tools in the marketing communication
toolbox

- Argument-based appeals: getting information across
- Mostly affect thinking; cognitive responses
- Emotional-based appeals: getting emotions across
- Mostly affect feelings; affective responses

, - Both may affect behavioral responses
- Usually, you cannot have both, and might be better to make a distinct choice
- Make a choice between the two, because both types are effective for other groups of
consumers and ineffective for the remainder

Two key functions of advertising
To inform and/or to persuade
- The persuasion function is way more important
1. Inform: change non evaluative consumer responses (beliefs, knowledge)
- You want that your information given will feed the persuasion of the consumer
2. Persuade: change evaluative consumer responses (attitude, preferences)
- Both argument-based and emotional appeals can inform and/or persuade

Two basic strategies of advertising:
1. Alpha strategies: promoting on approach motivation
a. Making the offer more attractive
2. Omega strategies: reducing an avoidance motivation
a. Reducing resistance

Hurdle #1: How consumers acquire and process information from advertising
4 basic stages from low effort, unconscious and automatic to high effort, conscious and
deliberative:
1. Preattentive analysis
2. Focal attention
3. Comprehension
4. Elaborative reasoning
Covaries with consumer involvement/engagement
- Involvement is a feature of the consumer, not a product (e.g. expensive is not
necessarily high involvement)
- Involvement is high when you are super interested in the product and the product is
very relevant for you personally

Preattentive analysis
Preattentive analysis:
- General, non-goal directed surveillance of the environment
- Incidental exposure to advertising
- Unconscious
- Why relevant? = far from trivial for advertisers: especially suitable for ad placement
strategies

Hemispheric lateralization: specialization in function brain hemisphere
- Left: text processing
- A textual ad benefits from being processed by the left hemisphere = so place
it right
- Right: picture processing
- A pictorial ad benefits from being processed by the right hemisphere = so
place it left

, - Left visual view feeds the right hemisphere, the right visual view feeds the left
hemisphere

Focal attention
Focal attention: process by which information is brought into short term, working memory
where it becomes the object of conscious attention
- When involvement turns from low to moderate
- So when we actively focus on things and start noticing them
- Voluntary attention: when the consumer decides what he will look at, process and
what he will not
- Involuntary attention: when the consumer starts having attention for stuff beyond his
or her will

Factors promoting involuntary focal attention:
- Salience: extent to which variable is noticeably different from its environment: extent
of experienced contrast
- Vividness: extent to which information is emotionally interesting, concrete/image
provoking and proximate
- Novelty: extent of newness, frequently a function of extent to which information
disconfirms pre existing consumer expectations
- Two sided ad: an add that does not only have positive factors, but also
negative bits of information about the product/brand

Comprehension
Comprehension: once we notice things, can we make sense of them?
- Starts with either believing (accepting) or not believing (not accepting) incoming
information
- An initial, unconsciousness, spontaneous response
- Seeing is believing: a truth effect
- When we perceive any new information, our first, gut response is to believe
what we see, hear, read etc
- And this effect becomes stronger when the information is repeated, and the
consumer is not on full alert

Elaborative reasoning
What all advertisers want, but what is seldom achieved
- From moderate to high involvement
- Completely conscious
Elaborative reasoning: active, conscious inference making:
- E.g. linking what you just learned about a brand through an ad to what you already
know about the brand in your memory, and so creating new ideas, beliefs, attitudes
etc (or updating old ones)
- Prevalence (the extent to which consumers do it) frequently overestimated by
advertisers = do not overestimate this stage
- Rare phenomenon, since we are exposed with 1000 stimulus, we do not have the
time/motivation/capacity to do this
- We only do this when the matter is really important to them

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