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Summary AC2.2 Evaluation of media used in campaigns for change

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June 17, 2025
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AC2.2 Evaluation of media used in campaigns for change

15 marks (1 hour)

Advertising:

Advertising is a marketing campaign to promote a product or service, creating

awareness with the public by communicating to the watcher, influencing them to

engage with the campaign. Advertising can take many formats, including; TV or

radio adverts, newspaper campaigns, billboards, email marketing, direct mail, social

media, and even merchandise.


TV adverts:

TV adverts are a range of TV programmes that organisations pay for and produce.

These convey a message and can be used to raise awareness for campaigns. They

last between 30-60 seconds between TV breaks and are portrayed visually and/or

auditorily.

The strengths of using TV adverts is that it is very effective by using moving

imagery, this could include music that fits with the campaign. Another strength is

this creates a visual representation of the problem, making the issues more

memorable for the audience. One method of doing this is celebrity endorsement to

grasp attention; evidence suggests such endorsement increases sales/donations,

increases volunteer numbers and shapes public perception. Using tv adverts reaches

a wider audience than other methods of advertising, due to the amount of viewers,

there are 6 million TV viewers in the UK. In 2021 over 715 million people across

Europe were tv viewers. This is practical for campaigns because they reach a broad

target audience as anyone in the UK who watches TV can see it. You can select the

times of broadcast, as children go to bed during the evening, you can specifically can

target ads towards the adult population. Another advantage is when watching these

, adverts they can have an empathy element as they can be spiritual, heartwarming or

comical which could attract a higher number of people towards the campaign than

other forms including posters in which emotion can be more challenging to portray.

This would be good for a campaign as it spreads more awareness and gets people

to engage within their campaign and many adverts become famous in their own

rights and extend awareness by word of mouth as people discuss it with their

friends, an example of this is the annual coveted John Lewis Christmas advert.

The disadvantages of using this method for campaigning is they are very costly to

produce and the cost of your time slot will vary depending on channel and whether

you want your advert to air at prime times. Roughly £1,100-£2,200 for a daytime

slot and anything up to £20,000 for an evening peak time on larger channels in an

advert break of a popular show or sporting event. In 2022 the UK spent an

estimated 5.4 billion on tv adverts, which makes an expensive campaign. Therefore,

for a campaign with a limited budget, TV advertising is unlikely to be feasible.

Another negative is that most people skip the adverts if they are watching on catch

up or they could possibly ignore them depending on the content. According to IPG

65% of viewers skip video ads. It may not be successful and possibly a waste of

money if it doesn’t reach the correct target audience. Furthermore some adverts

contain graphics and horrific scenes which could upset younger viewers who could

be associated with the topic, this could create a negative atmosphere around the

campaign possibly leading to an unsuccessful campaign as it is then viewed

negatively. Something else to consider if choosing this route for a campaign is

ensuring the clarity of your message, you would not want to go through the expense

of production and advertising for viewers to be unclear or confused about what the

message of the campaign is about and what the aim of it is.

A real life example of a campaign using TV ads is in 2014-2015, The Water Aid

campaign, this campaign allowed 2 million people to have access to safe water and
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