SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 7
LESSON 11
Advertising as Visual communication


TOPICS COVERED
Advertisement Campaigns, Steps to develop Campaign concepts, ideas visualization,
making verbal/visual connections, how to approach idea visualization.



OBJECTIVE

Visuals are used heavily in Advertising. How do they work? We see them in hoardings,
in Point of Sale (shops) kiosks, newspapers, magazines, TV..

.You will learn how meaning is produced and conveyed in messages that are primarily
visual.
 .Learning to make visuals work is the challenge of every media person.



VISUAL MEANING IN ADVERTISING
How is meaning produced and conveyed in messages that are primarily visual? This
question is particularly relevant when the message is one that relies almost exclusively on
visual communication cues. The production of meaning from visual messages in such
visually intensive areas as advertising has been largely uninvestigated even though the
question is of tremendous importance to designers of advertising messages. The reason is
because of the difficulty of capturing visual meaning and the lack of structured research
approaches to code and categorize such information.

Visual Semiotics
Studies of meaning evolve from semiotics, a philosophical approach that seeks to
interpret messages in terms of their signs and patterns of symbolism. The study of
semiotics, or semiology in France, originated in a literary or linguistic context and has
been expanding in a number of directions since the early turn-of-the century work of C.S.
Pierce in the U.S. and Levi Strauss and Ferdinand Saussure in France.
A sign can be a word, a sound, or a visual image. Saussure divides a sign into two
components--the signifier (the sound, image, or word) and the signified, which is the
concept the signifier represents, or the meaning. As Berger points out, the problem of
meaning arises from the fact that the relation between the signifier and the signified is
arbitrary and conventional. In other words, signs can mean anything we agree that they
mean, and they can mean different things to different people. Given the nonverbal nature
of the "1984" commercial, it might be expected that the complex sign system in the
commercial might produce a variety of meanings.
Pierce categorized the patterns of meaning in signs as iconic, symbolic and indexical. An
iconic sign looks like what it represents--a picture of a dog, for example. The meaning of
a symbol, like the flag or the Statue of Liberty, is determined by convention--in other
words, its meaning is arbitrary; it is based upon agreement and learned through
experience. Language uses words as symbols that have to be learned; in Western
languages there is no iconic or representational link between a word and its signified
concept or meaning. An indexical sign is a clue that links or connects things in nature.
Smoke, for example, is a sign of fire; icicles mean cold. Visual communication,--
including video forms--uses all three types signs. Because of the essentially nonverbal
nature of the "1984" commercial storyline, it is particularly rich in complex visual
signification.
Most signs operate on several levels--iconic as well as symbolic and/or indexical, which
suggests that visual semiotic analysis may be addressing a hierarchy of meaning in
addition to categories and components of meaning. As Eco explains, "what is commonly
called a 'message' is in fact a text whose content is a multi leveled discourse. In the
"1984" commercial, it would be interesting to deconstruct the visual image to determine
what elements are iconic, symbolic, and indexical.
The broadening concept of text and discourse encourages additional research into how
visual communication operates to create meaning. Deeply explains that "at the heart of
semiotics is the realization that the whole of human experience, without exception, is an
interpretive structure mediated and sustained by signs." Semiotics now considers a
variety of texts, using Eco's terms, to investigate such diverse areas as movies, art,
advertisements, and fashion, as well as visuals. In other words, as Berger explains, "the
essential breakthrough of semiology is to take linguistics as a model and apply linguistic
concepts to other phenomena--texts--and not just to language itself." Anthropologists like
Grant McCracken and marketing experts like Sydney Levy have even used semiotic
interpretations to analyze the rich cultural meanings of products and consumer
consumption behaviors as texts.
Visual texts are an important area of analysis for semioticians and particularly for
scholars working with visually intensive forms such as advertising and television because
images are such a central part of our mass communication sign system. Linda Scott has
deconstructed the images in perfume advertising as well as in Apple's "1984" commercial
using close readings of the various messages which can be interpreted from the ads. Shay
Sayre has also looked at perfume advertising images and the visual rhetoric in Hungary's
first free election television advertisements using semiotic analysis. Also using semiotics,
Arthur As a Berger has deconstructed the meaning of the "1984" commercial as well as
programs such as Cheers and films such as Murder on the Orient Express.
Systems of meaning, Culler and Berger tell us, is analyzed by looking at cultural and
communication products and events as signs and then by looking at the relationship
among these signs. The categories of signs and the relationships between them create a
system. Barthes, for example, has analyzed the "fashion system," and classified the
system of communication through fashion into two categories: image clothing and
descriptive clothing. Likewise, an advertisement has its own system of meaning. We
expect an appeal to purchase, either directly or implied, to be made and a product to be
shown, for example, as part of the advertising system.
We, the undersigned, are graphic designers, art directors and visual communicators who
have been raised in a world in which the techniques and apparatus of advertising have
persistently been presented to us as the most lucrative, effective and desirable use of our
talents. Many design teachers and mentors promote this belief; the market rewards it; a
tide of books and publications reinforces it.

Encouraged in this direction, designers then apply their skill and imagination to sell dog
biscuits, designer coffee, diamonds, detergents, hair gel, cigarettes, credit cards, sneakers,
butt toners, light beer and heavy-duty recreational vehicles. Commercial work has always
paid the bills, but many graphic designers have now let it become, in large measure, what
graphic designers do. This, in turn, is how the world perceives design. The profession’s
time and energy is used up manufacturing demand for things that are inessential at best.

Many of us have grown increasingly uncomfortable with this view of design. Designers
who devote their efforts primarily to advertising, marketing and brand development are
supporting, and implicitly endorsing, a mental environment so saturated with commercial
messages that it is changing the very way citizen-consumers speak, think, feel, respond
and interact. To some extent we are all helping draft a reductive and immeasurably
harmful code of public discourse.

There are pursuits more worthy of our problem-solving skills. Unprecedented
environmental, social and cultural crises demand our attention. Many cultural
interventions, social marketing campaigns, books, magazines, exhibitions, educational
tools, television programmes, films, charitable causes and other information design
projects urgently require our expertise and help.

We propose a reversal of priorities in favour of more useful, lasting and democratic forms
of communication – a mindshift away from product marketing and toward the exploration
and production of a new kind of meaning. The scope of debate is shrinking; it must
expand. Consumerism is running uncontested; it must be challenged by other
perspectives expressed, in part, through the visual languages and resources of design.

In 1964, 22 visual communicators signed the original call for our skills to be put to
worthwhile use. With the explosive growth of global commercial culture, their message
has only grown more urgent. Today, we renew their manifesto in expectation that no
more decades will pass before it is taken to heart.



THE ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN


From time to time, we have made reference to the "advertising campaign." Now that the
basic elements of writing copy have been investigated, it is time that more detailed
attention be given to the overall picture of planning and executing a long-term program,
and subsequently, an advertising campaign.
THE CAMPAIGN
An advertising campaign is a series of advertisements concerned with a product or family
of products (or services), having generally the same objective, with a unifying central
creative theme or idea. This may be expressed in any number of appeals or approaches,
but each advertisement indicates a "family resemblance" when it is varied for different
media. The "personality" of the verbal and visual elements gives a campaign identity and
continuity.

For example, the Ford Motor Company maintained the same basic campaign for several
years with "The Better Idea," a central theme running through season after season of
advertising campaigns. From billboards to television, the unifying idea ,was retained with
many variations, but always clearly making its impact on the public. Recently a corporate
variation has been added, extolling the factory operation and the finished cars as an
"incredible" product.

This, in essence, is the importance of a campaign, and the importance of a strong central
idea. It provides the maximum impact on the consumer for every dollar spent. No matter
what the budget, the continuity and cumulative effect provided by a unified campaign
make each advertisement more memorable. In addition, a campaign forces each
advertisement to contribute to the one that follows it. This continuity provides a
cumulative impact, which is the synergism the advertiser hopes, will give him extra sales.

For the copywriter, there is a special plus derived from the aesthetic satisfaction of
having created an effective campaign. (The satisfaction is not what the client pays for, but
it adds immeasurably to the excitement of the job!)

THE COPY PLATFORM
A copy platform is a written statement of creative plans that goes through two stages.
First, when a presentation is made to a copy supervisor and finally to the client, as all
advertising agencies must do at regular intervals, a copy platform is included at the
beginning of the section on copy. The copy platform has been discussed by copy chiefs,
art directors, and, sometimes, account supervisors. It is hoped that it will later be
approved by the client.

Before the campaign goes into production, the copy platform must be approved by the
client whether or not some few changes have been or will be made. Then, in its second
stage, it becomes the bible for each copywriter who works on that account.

PROCEDURES FOR DEVELOPING CONCEPTS FOR CAMPAIGNS AND COPY
Up to now, we have covered a reasonably deep study of the factors that combine to
produce effective concepts for advertising campaigns and copy. In fact, it would seem
appropriate at this point to give the student copywriter an opportunity to look back and
see how it is all put together.

The following are the steps generally covered in developing concepts (central ideas) for
campaigns and then writing the copy. This need not be taken as gospel; it is a guide to a
reasonable procedure that can be helpful before the copywriter gains enough experience
to prepare her own procedures.



Steps to Develop Campaign Concepts

1. Assemble and analyze all the facts for planning a strategy: (a) The company you are
writing for.
(b) The audience you are writing to.
(c) The product you must sell.
(d) The objectives (product and/or institutional) of the immediate advertisement.
(e) The medium you are writing for.

2. Assemble and study the ad facts, mechanical facts about the proposed advertisement:
(a) Is this a single ad, or a part of a campaign?
(b) If print, what is the size and shape of the space?
(c) Black and white or color?
 (d) If on radio or television, what is the length of the commercial? How will it be
produced? What is the time slot?

3. Review the product facts_ use buyers' fact sheets, all research, surveys, trade
publications, etc.

4. List all the product's selling points.
        (a) Study and number them according to strength; relist them in order.
        (b) Decide on a cut-off point of usable selling points (usually three or so).

5. Determine the most effective copy appeal on the basis of the selling point chosen as
the most important and dominant, the one that offers the greatest consumer benefit and
becomes the theme of the copy and the headline area.

6. Decide on the copy approach. (At this point, the copywriter has developed a concept.)

7. Decide on tentative idea visualization; do lots of vizthinks and thumbnails. Make nota-
tions for the guidance of the art department.

8. Outline the body copy.

9. Write the headline. (Steps 7, 8, and 9 are interchangeable; sometimes one, sometimes
another comes first.)

10. Write the first draft.

11. Check all facts again. Check copy against copy checklists and copy platform given
you by your own company or against any other guides you may wish to use.

12. Confer with the art department on actual layout and artwork.

13. If necessary, rewrite the body copy or details of the copy to fit the final layout
exactly. Be prepared to do a character count if exact typographical specification is
required. This is called copy fitting. This technique is fully described in Chapter II.

14. Write final copy, complete in all details, ready for typesetting. (Do not rely on the
typists to do your detail work for you.)

15. After the advertisement is set in type, see the proofs at ever-y stage. You are
responsible
As suggested in Step 11 above, it is wise to review the copy against a checklist, as well as
to look at it critically, before rewriting it in final form. Some of the following may be
pertinent questions to ask yourself:

1. Does the copy state customer benefit(s)?
2. Will it be interesting to a prospective buyer?
3. Is it accurate?
4. Is it clear?
5. Is it specific?
6. Does it give adequate information?
7. Is it plausible and believable?
8. Does it call for proof? If so, is your proof impressive?
9. Can it be made more concise?
10. Does it make the reader want the product?

WRAP-UP

To summarize this chapter's discussion of advertising campaigns, the following may be
observed:

1. Start with a basic consumer (customer) benefit.
2. Keep the central idea simple but strong.
3. Do not be timid or fainthearted. Strike out with new, innovative ideas.
4. Subordinate techniques of advertising production, either verbal or visual, to a strong
central idea. In other words, do not create the central idea around tricky type faces or
grotesque camera shots.
5. Test a single idea against others.
6. Keep the central idea fresh with numerous variations.
7. Do not be swayed by "armchair" research.
8. Stick with your campaign idea so long as the marketing goals remain the same.
        9. Plan ahead for change.
10. Be ready to change when basic marketing conditions or new product benefits call for
new goals.

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2Arzoo Sahni
 
Feature writing final
Feature writing finalFeature writing final
Feature writing finalArzoo Sahni
 
Ec module ii & iii
Ec module ii & iiiEc module ii & iii
Ec module ii & iiiArzoo Sahni
 
Ec radio presentation 1
Ec radio presentation 1Ec radio presentation 1
Ec radio presentation 1Arzoo Sahni
 
1. Print Media - Lead
1. Print Media - Lead 1. Print Media - Lead
1. Print Media - Lead Arzoo Sahni
 
Print Media - History post-ind
Print Media - History post-indPrint Media - History post-ind
Print Media - History post-indArzoo Sahni
 
Terminologies of script writing
Terminologies of script writingTerminologies of script writing
Terminologies of script writingArzoo Sahni
 
Marketing Plan Radio Mirchi
Marketing Plan Radio MirchiMarketing Plan Radio Mirchi
Marketing Plan Radio MirchiShruti Bhatia
 
Television news writing
Television news writingTelevision news writing
Television news writingArzoo Sahni
 
News Writing
News WritingNews Writing
News WritingMG Arroyo
 
Tv news script formats & sample scripts
Tv news script formats & sample scriptsTv news script formats & sample scripts
Tv news script formats & sample scriptsJun Tariman
 
Radio Script writing and Broadcasting
Radio Script writing and BroadcastingRadio Script writing and Broadcasting
Radio Script writing and BroadcastingMary Queen Bernardo
 
Eight Elements of News
Eight Elements of NewsEight Elements of News
Eight Elements of NewsLogan Aimone
 
FM Radio Program Script
FM Radio Program ScriptFM Radio Program Script
FM Radio Program ScriptRoxanne Robes
 

Viewers also liked (15)

News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
 
Feature writing final
Feature writing finalFeature writing final
Feature writing final
 
Reporting writing news_lead
Reporting writing news_leadReporting writing news_lead
Reporting writing news_lead
 
Ec module ii & iii
Ec module ii & iiiEc module ii & iii
Ec module ii & iii
 
Ec radio presentation 1
Ec radio presentation 1Ec radio presentation 1
Ec radio presentation 1
 
1. Print Media - Lead
1. Print Media - Lead 1. Print Media - Lead
1. Print Media - Lead
 
Print Media - History post-ind
Print Media - History post-indPrint Media - History post-ind
Print Media - History post-ind
 
Terminologies of script writing
Terminologies of script writingTerminologies of script writing
Terminologies of script writing
 
Marketing Plan Radio Mirchi
Marketing Plan Radio MirchiMarketing Plan Radio Mirchi
Marketing Plan Radio Mirchi
 
Television news writing
Television news writingTelevision news writing
Television news writing
 
News Writing
News WritingNews Writing
News Writing
 
Tv news script formats & sample scripts
Tv news script formats & sample scriptsTv news script formats & sample scripts
Tv news script formats & sample scripts
 
Radio Script writing and Broadcasting
Radio Script writing and BroadcastingRadio Script writing and Broadcasting
Radio Script writing and Broadcasting
 
Eight Elements of News
Eight Elements of NewsEight Elements of News
Eight Elements of News
 
FM Radio Program Script
FM Radio Program ScriptFM Radio Program Script
FM Radio Program Script
 

Similar to IVC - Lesson 11

Pt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheet
Pt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheetPt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheet
Pt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheetSimon Gummer
 
Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...
Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...
Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...Elizabeth Temburu
 
Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...
Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...
Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...Faiz Ullah
 
Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign"
Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign" Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign"
Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign" Oktari Aneliya
 
Visual Communication
Visual CommunicationVisual Communication
Visual CommunicationArzoo Sahni
 
Lava PR - An Introduction To Semiotics
Lava PR - An Introduction To SemioticsLava PR - An Introduction To Semiotics
Lava PR - An Introduction To SemioticsLava
 
ENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptx
ENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptxENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptx
ENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptxhirotoshinohara2020
 
Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2
Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2
Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2Abdullah Saleem
 
Four key concepts of media studies
Four key concepts of media studiesFour key concepts of media studies
Four key concepts of media studiesmeganbradfordx
 
Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...
Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...
Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...//disruptiVesemiOtics//
 
Class 2 - Intro to Semiotics
Class 2 - Intro to SemioticsClass 2 - Intro to Semiotics
Class 2 - Intro to Semioticserikasawyershu
 
How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?
How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?
How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?EmilyNewson
 
The Brand as Broadcaster
The Brand as BroadcasterThe Brand as Broadcaster
The Brand as BroadcasterRChimera
 
Dissertation - Final Ever Version
Dissertation -  Final Ever Version Dissertation -  Final Ever Version
Dissertation - Final Ever Version Elliot Frost
 
The metaphor of_consumerism
The metaphor of_consumerismThe metaphor of_consumerism
The metaphor of_consumerismMuhammad Hasyim
 

Similar to IVC - Lesson 11 (20)

Pt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheet
Pt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheetPt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheet
Pt 2 use semiotic analysis worksheet
 
Brandology Semio2014
Brandology Semio2014Brandology Semio2014
Brandology Semio2014
 
Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...
Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...
Examples Of Design Or Advertising Using The Apparatuses Of...
 
Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...
Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...
Semiotic Analysis of Zeera Plus Biscuit Advertisement: Unraveling Sign System...
 
Ad pp everything .pptx
Ad pp everything .pptxAd pp everything .pptx
Ad pp everything .pptx
 
Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign"
Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign" Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign"
Discourse Analysis of "Dove Campaign"
 
Visual Communication
Visual CommunicationVisual Communication
Visual Communication
 
Lava PR - An Introduction To Semiotics
Lava PR - An Introduction To SemioticsLava PR - An Introduction To Semiotics
Lava PR - An Introduction To Semiotics
 
ENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptx
ENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptxENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptx
ENGLISH 10 Composing text with multimodal elements.pptx
 
Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2
Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2
Discourse Analysis article shared by Azhar Khan ..2
 
Four key concepts of media studies
Four key concepts of media studiesFour key concepts of media studies
Four key concepts of media studies
 
Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...
Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...
Semiotics of brand equity george rossolatos brand equity,semiotics http://gro...
 
Class 2 - Intro to Semiotics
Class 2 - Intro to SemioticsClass 2 - Intro to Semiotics
Class 2 - Intro to Semiotics
 
How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?
How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?
How effective is your combination of your main task and ancillary tasks?
 
Rossolatos stirling 4 7 16
Rossolatos stirling 4 7 16Rossolatos stirling 4 7 16
Rossolatos stirling 4 7 16
 
The Brand as Broadcaster
The Brand as BroadcasterThe Brand as Broadcaster
The Brand as Broadcaster
 
Key concepts
Key conceptsKey concepts
Key concepts
 
Dissertation - Final Ever Version
Dissertation -  Final Ever Version Dissertation -  Final Ever Version
Dissertation - Final Ever Version
 
The metaphor of_consumerism
The metaphor of_consumerismThe metaphor of_consumerism
The metaphor of_consumerism
 
Four key concepts
Four key conceptsFour key concepts
Four key concepts
 

More from Arzoo Sahni

Television interview
Television interviewTelevision interview
Television interviewArzoo Sahni
 
Political coverage
Political coveragePolitical coverage
Political coverageArzoo Sahni
 
Lifestyles coverage
Lifestyles coverageLifestyles coverage
Lifestyles coverageArzoo Sahni
 
International reporting
International reportingInternational reporting
International reportingArzoo Sahni
 
How to write a news package
How to write a news packageHow to write a news package
How to write a news packageArzoo Sahni
 
Entertainment coverage
Entertainment coverageEntertainment coverage
Entertainment coverageArzoo Sahni
 
Writing documentaries
Writing documentariesWriting documentaries
Writing documentariesArzoo Sahni
 
Business coverage
Business coverageBusiness coverage
Business coverageArzoo Sahni
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2Arzoo Sahni
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2Arzoo Sahni
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1Arzoo Sahni
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1Arzoo Sahni
 
News & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalities
News & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalitiesNews & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalities
News & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalitiesArzoo Sahni
 
3 international personalities
3 international personalities3 international personalities
3 international personalitiesArzoo Sahni
 
EC - Radio Notes
EC - Radio NotesEC - Radio Notes
EC - Radio NotesArzoo Sahni
 
EC - Indian radio industry
EC - Indian radio industryEC - Indian radio industry
EC - Indian radio industryArzoo Sahni
 
EC - Radio - Radio formats final
EC - Radio - Radio formats  finalEC - Radio - Radio formats  final
EC - Radio - Radio formats finalArzoo Sahni
 

More from Arzoo Sahni (20)

Television interview
Television interviewTelevision interview
Television interview
 
Political coverage
Political coveragePolitical coverage
Political coverage
 
Lifestyles coverage
Lifestyles coverageLifestyles coverage
Lifestyles coverage
 
International reporting
International reportingInternational reporting
International reporting
 
How to write a news package
How to write a news packageHow to write a news package
How to write a news package
 
Entertainment coverage
Entertainment coverageEntertainment coverage
Entertainment coverage
 
Crime coverage
Crime coverageCrime coverage
Crime coverage
 
Writing documentaries
Writing documentariesWriting documentaries
Writing documentaries
 
Court coverage
Court coverageCourt coverage
Court coverage
 
Business coverage
Business coverageBusiness coverage
Business coverage
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 2
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
 
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
News & Contemporary Issues - Criminalization of politics 1
 
News & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalities
News & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalitiesNews & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalities
News & Contemporary Issues - 3 international personalities
 
3 international personalities
3 international personalities3 international personalities
3 international personalities
 
EC - Radio Notes
EC - Radio NotesEC - Radio Notes
EC - Radio Notes
 
EC - Indian radio industry
EC - Indian radio industryEC - Indian radio industry
EC - Indian radio industry
 
EC - BBC
EC - BBCEC - BBC
EC - BBC
 
EC - Radio - Radio formats final
EC - Radio - Radio formats  finalEC - Radio - Radio formats  final
EC - Radio - Radio formats final
 

Recently uploaded

Merck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Merck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxMerck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Merck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxLoriGlavin3
 
The Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and Cons
The Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and ConsThe Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and Cons
The Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and ConsPixlogix Infotech
 
Data governance with Unity Catalog Presentation
Data governance with Unity Catalog PresentationData governance with Unity Catalog Presentation
Data governance with Unity Catalog PresentationKnoldus Inc.
 
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to HeroUiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to HeroUiPathCommunity
 
Sample pptx for embedding into website for demo
Sample pptx for embedding into website for demoSample pptx for embedding into website for demo
Sample pptx for embedding into website for demoHarshalMandlekar2
 
Scale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL Router
Scale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL RouterScale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL Router
Scale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL RouterMydbops
 
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native developmentEmixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native developmentPim van der Noll
 
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdfWhat is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdfMounikaPolabathina
 
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxPasskey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxLoriGlavin3
 
Generative AI for Technical Writer or Information Developers
Generative AI for Technical Writer or Information DevelopersGenerative AI for Technical Writer or Information Developers
Generative AI for Technical Writer or Information DevelopersRaghuram Pandurangan
 
Take control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test Suite
Take control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test SuiteTake control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test Suite
Take control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test SuiteDianaGray10
 
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024BookNet Canada
 
Connecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdf
Connecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdfConnecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdf
Connecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdfNeo4j
 
2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch Tuesday2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch TuesdayIvanti
 
Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024
Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024
Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
 
Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...
Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...
Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...Rick Flair
 
Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...
Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...
Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...Scott Andery
 
A Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
A Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxA Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
A Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxLoriGlavin3
 
Generative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdf
Generative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdfGenerative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdf
Generative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdfIngrid Airi González
 
Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...
Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...
Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...Farhan Tariq
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Merck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Merck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxMerck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Merck Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
 
The Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and Cons
The Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and ConsThe Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and Cons
The Ultimate Guide to Choosing WordPress Pros and Cons
 
Data governance with Unity Catalog Presentation
Data governance with Unity Catalog PresentationData governance with Unity Catalog Presentation
Data governance with Unity Catalog Presentation
 
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to HeroUiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
UiPath Community: Communication Mining from Zero to Hero
 
Sample pptx for embedding into website for demo
Sample pptx for embedding into website for demoSample pptx for embedding into website for demo
Sample pptx for embedding into website for demo
 
Scale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL Router
Scale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL RouterScale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL Router
Scale your database traffic with Read & Write split using MySQL Router
 
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native developmentEmixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
Emixa Mendix Meetup 11 April 2024 about Mendix Native development
 
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdfWhat is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
 
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxPasskey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
 
Generative AI for Technical Writer or Information Developers
Generative AI for Technical Writer or Information DevelopersGenerative AI for Technical Writer or Information Developers
Generative AI for Technical Writer or Information Developers
 
Take control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test Suite
Take control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test SuiteTake control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test Suite
Take control of your SAP testing with UiPath Test Suite
 
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
 
Connecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdf
Connecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdfConnecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdf
Connecting the Dots for Information Discovery.pdf
 
2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch Tuesday2024 April Patch Tuesday
2024 April Patch Tuesday
 
Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024
Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024
Long journey of Ruby standard library at RubyConf AU 2024
 
Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...
Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...
Rise of the Machines: Known As Drones...
 
Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...
Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...
Enhancing User Experience - Exploring the Latest Features of Tallyman Axis Lo...
 
A Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
A Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxA Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
A Deep Dive on Passkeys: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
 
Generative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdf
Generative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdfGenerative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdf
Generative Artificial Intelligence: How generative AI works.pdf
 
Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...
Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...
Genislab builds better products and faster go-to-market with Lean project man...
 

IVC - Lesson 11

  • 1. LESSON 11 Advertising as Visual communication TOPICS COVERED Advertisement Campaigns, Steps to develop Campaign concepts, ideas visualization, making verbal/visual connections, how to approach idea visualization. OBJECTIVE Visuals are used heavily in Advertising. How do they work? We see them in hoardings, in Point of Sale (shops) kiosks, newspapers, magazines, TV.. .You will learn how meaning is produced and conveyed in messages that are primarily visual. .Learning to make visuals work is the challenge of every media person. VISUAL MEANING IN ADVERTISING How is meaning produced and conveyed in messages that are primarily visual? This question is particularly relevant when the message is one that relies almost exclusively on visual communication cues. The production of meaning from visual messages in such visually intensive areas as advertising has been largely uninvestigated even though the question is of tremendous importance to designers of advertising messages. The reason is because of the difficulty of capturing visual meaning and the lack of structured research approaches to code and categorize such information. Visual Semiotics Studies of meaning evolve from semiotics, a philosophical approach that seeks to interpret messages in terms of their signs and patterns of symbolism. The study of semiotics, or semiology in France, originated in a literary or linguistic context and has been expanding in a number of directions since the early turn-of-the century work of C.S. Pierce in the U.S. and Levi Strauss and Ferdinand Saussure in France. A sign can be a word, a sound, or a visual image. Saussure divides a sign into two components--the signifier (the sound, image, or word) and the signified, which is the concept the signifier represents, or the meaning. As Berger points out, the problem of meaning arises from the fact that the relation between the signifier and the signified is arbitrary and conventional. In other words, signs can mean anything we agree that they mean, and they can mean different things to different people. Given the nonverbal nature of the "1984" commercial, it might be expected that the complex sign system in the commercial might produce a variety of meanings.
  • 2. Pierce categorized the patterns of meaning in signs as iconic, symbolic and indexical. An iconic sign looks like what it represents--a picture of a dog, for example. The meaning of a symbol, like the flag or the Statue of Liberty, is determined by convention--in other words, its meaning is arbitrary; it is based upon agreement and learned through experience. Language uses words as symbols that have to be learned; in Western languages there is no iconic or representational link between a word and its signified concept or meaning. An indexical sign is a clue that links or connects things in nature. Smoke, for example, is a sign of fire; icicles mean cold. Visual communication,-- including video forms--uses all three types signs. Because of the essentially nonverbal nature of the "1984" commercial storyline, it is particularly rich in complex visual signification. Most signs operate on several levels--iconic as well as symbolic and/or indexical, which suggests that visual semiotic analysis may be addressing a hierarchy of meaning in addition to categories and components of meaning. As Eco explains, "what is commonly called a 'message' is in fact a text whose content is a multi leveled discourse. In the "1984" commercial, it would be interesting to deconstruct the visual image to determine what elements are iconic, symbolic, and indexical. The broadening concept of text and discourse encourages additional research into how visual communication operates to create meaning. Deeply explains that "at the heart of semiotics is the realization that the whole of human experience, without exception, is an interpretive structure mediated and sustained by signs." Semiotics now considers a variety of texts, using Eco's terms, to investigate such diverse areas as movies, art, advertisements, and fashion, as well as visuals. In other words, as Berger explains, "the essential breakthrough of semiology is to take linguistics as a model and apply linguistic concepts to other phenomena--texts--and not just to language itself." Anthropologists like Grant McCracken and marketing experts like Sydney Levy have even used semiotic interpretations to analyze the rich cultural meanings of products and consumer consumption behaviors as texts. Visual texts are an important area of analysis for semioticians and particularly for scholars working with visually intensive forms such as advertising and television because images are such a central part of our mass communication sign system. Linda Scott has deconstructed the images in perfume advertising as well as in Apple's "1984" commercial using close readings of the various messages which can be interpreted from the ads. Shay Sayre has also looked at perfume advertising images and the visual rhetoric in Hungary's first free election television advertisements using semiotic analysis. Also using semiotics, Arthur As a Berger has deconstructed the meaning of the "1984" commercial as well as programs such as Cheers and films such as Murder on the Orient Express. Systems of meaning, Culler and Berger tell us, is analyzed by looking at cultural and communication products and events as signs and then by looking at the relationship among these signs. The categories of signs and the relationships between them create a system. Barthes, for example, has analyzed the "fashion system," and classified the system of communication through fashion into two categories: image clothing and descriptive clothing. Likewise, an advertisement has its own system of meaning. We expect an appeal to purchase, either directly or implied, to be made and a product to be shown, for example, as part of the advertising system.
  • 3. We, the undersigned, are graphic designers, art directors and visual communicators who have been raised in a world in which the techniques and apparatus of advertising have persistently been presented to us as the most lucrative, effective and desirable use of our talents. Many design teachers and mentors promote this belief; the market rewards it; a tide of books and publications reinforces it. Encouraged in this direction, designers then apply their skill and imagination to sell dog biscuits, designer coffee, diamonds, detergents, hair gel, cigarettes, credit cards, sneakers, butt toners, light beer and heavy-duty recreational vehicles. Commercial work has always paid the bills, but many graphic designers have now let it become, in large measure, what graphic designers do. This, in turn, is how the world perceives design. The profession’s time and energy is used up manufacturing demand for things that are inessential at best. Many of us have grown increasingly uncomfortable with this view of design. Designers who devote their efforts primarily to advertising, marketing and brand development are supporting, and implicitly endorsing, a mental environment so saturated with commercial messages that it is changing the very way citizen-consumers speak, think, feel, respond and interact. To some extent we are all helping draft a reductive and immeasurably harmful code of public discourse. There are pursuits more worthy of our problem-solving skills. Unprecedented environmental, social and cultural crises demand our attention. Many cultural interventions, social marketing campaigns, books, magazines, exhibitions, educational tools, television programmes, films, charitable causes and other information design projects urgently require our expertise and help. We propose a reversal of priorities in favour of more useful, lasting and democratic forms of communication – a mindshift away from product marketing and toward the exploration and production of a new kind of meaning. The scope of debate is shrinking; it must expand. Consumerism is running uncontested; it must be challenged by other perspectives expressed, in part, through the visual languages and resources of design. In 1964, 22 visual communicators signed the original call for our skills to be put to worthwhile use. With the explosive growth of global commercial culture, their message has only grown more urgent. Today, we renew their manifesto in expectation that no more decades will pass before it is taken to heart. THE ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN From time to time, we have made reference to the "advertising campaign." Now that the basic elements of writing copy have been investigated, it is time that more detailed attention be given to the overall picture of planning and executing a long-term program, and subsequently, an advertising campaign.
  • 4. THE CAMPAIGN An advertising campaign is a series of advertisements concerned with a product or family of products (or services), having generally the same objective, with a unifying central creative theme or idea. This may be expressed in any number of appeals or approaches, but each advertisement indicates a "family resemblance" when it is varied for different media. The "personality" of the verbal and visual elements gives a campaign identity and continuity. For example, the Ford Motor Company maintained the same basic campaign for several years with "The Better Idea," a central theme running through season after season of advertising campaigns. From billboards to television, the unifying idea ,was retained with many variations, but always clearly making its impact on the public. Recently a corporate
  • 5. variation has been added, extolling the factory operation and the finished cars as an "incredible" product. This, in essence, is the importance of a campaign, and the importance of a strong central idea. It provides the maximum impact on the consumer for every dollar spent. No matter what the budget, the continuity and cumulative effect provided by a unified campaign make each advertisement more memorable. In addition, a campaign forces each advertisement to contribute to the one that follows it. This continuity provides a cumulative impact, which is the synergism the advertiser hopes, will give him extra sales. For the copywriter, there is a special plus derived from the aesthetic satisfaction of having created an effective campaign. (The satisfaction is not what the client pays for, but it adds immeasurably to the excitement of the job!) THE COPY PLATFORM A copy platform is a written statement of creative plans that goes through two stages. First, when a presentation is made to a copy supervisor and finally to the client, as all advertising agencies must do at regular intervals, a copy platform is included at the beginning of the section on copy. The copy platform has been discussed by copy chiefs, art directors, and, sometimes, account supervisors. It is hoped that it will later be approved by the client. Before the campaign goes into production, the copy platform must be approved by the client whether or not some few changes have been or will be made. Then, in its second stage, it becomes the bible for each copywriter who works on that account. PROCEDURES FOR DEVELOPING CONCEPTS FOR CAMPAIGNS AND COPY Up to now, we have covered a reasonably deep study of the factors that combine to produce effective concepts for advertising campaigns and copy. In fact, it would seem appropriate at this point to give the student copywriter an opportunity to look back and see how it is all put together. The following are the steps generally covered in developing concepts (central ideas) for campaigns and then writing the copy. This need not be taken as gospel; it is a guide to a reasonable procedure that can be helpful before the copywriter gains enough experience to prepare her own procedures. Steps to Develop Campaign Concepts 1. Assemble and analyze all the facts for planning a strategy: (a) The company you are writing for. (b) The audience you are writing to. (c) The product you must sell. (d) The objectives (product and/or institutional) of the immediate advertisement.
  • 6. (e) The medium you are writing for. 2. Assemble and study the ad facts, mechanical facts about the proposed advertisement: (a) Is this a single ad, or a part of a campaign? (b) If print, what is the size and shape of the space? (c) Black and white or color? (d) If on radio or television, what is the length of the commercial? How will it be produced? What is the time slot? 3. Review the product facts_ use buyers' fact sheets, all research, surveys, trade publications, etc. 4. List all the product's selling points. (a) Study and number them according to strength; relist them in order. (b) Decide on a cut-off point of usable selling points (usually three or so). 5. Determine the most effective copy appeal on the basis of the selling point chosen as the most important and dominant, the one that offers the greatest consumer benefit and becomes the theme of the copy and the headline area. 6. Decide on the copy approach. (At this point, the copywriter has developed a concept.) 7. Decide on tentative idea visualization; do lots of vizthinks and thumbnails. Make nota- tions for the guidance of the art department. 8. Outline the body copy. 9. Write the headline. (Steps 7, 8, and 9 are interchangeable; sometimes one, sometimes another comes first.) 10. Write the first draft. 11. Check all facts again. Check copy against copy checklists and copy platform given you by your own company or against any other guides you may wish to use. 12. Confer with the art department on actual layout and artwork. 13. If necessary, rewrite the body copy or details of the copy to fit the final layout exactly. Be prepared to do a character count if exact typographical specification is required. This is called copy fitting. This technique is fully described in Chapter II. 14. Write final copy, complete in all details, ready for typesetting. (Do not rely on the typists to do your detail work for you.) 15. After the advertisement is set in type, see the proofs at ever-y stage. You are responsible
  • 7. As suggested in Step 11 above, it is wise to review the copy against a checklist, as well as to look at it critically, before rewriting it in final form. Some of the following may be pertinent questions to ask yourself: 1. Does the copy state customer benefit(s)? 2. Will it be interesting to a prospective buyer? 3. Is it accurate? 4. Is it clear? 5. Is it specific? 6. Does it give adequate information? 7. Is it plausible and believable? 8. Does it call for proof? If so, is your proof impressive? 9. Can it be made more concise? 10. Does it make the reader want the product? WRAP-UP To summarize this chapter's discussion of advertising campaigns, the following may be observed: 1. Start with a basic consumer (customer) benefit. 2. Keep the central idea simple but strong. 3. Do not be timid or fainthearted. Strike out with new, innovative ideas. 4. Subordinate techniques of advertising production, either verbal or visual, to a strong central idea. In other words, do not create the central idea around tricky type faces or grotesque camera shots. 5. Test a single idea against others. 6. Keep the central idea fresh with numerous variations. 7. Do not be swayed by "armchair" research. 8. Stick with your campaign idea so long as the marketing goals remain the same. 9. Plan ahead for change. 10. Be ready to change when basic marketing conditions or new product benefits call for new goals.