| last updated 
      9/24/2009 
		Persuasion through Advertising Advertiser Goals 
Product recognition
by trademarkspackagingslogans Differentiation
Unique Selling
Proposition (e.g. Floristan) -- the USP Association of audience (potential customer)  with sources and causes and images
Identity Emotive Model
establish identitypresent it in a setting for enactmentlink product to identityshow usefulness of product to gaining identity Types of associations
"Use it; be like me"Use it; I'm doctor-likeuse historical periods or figuresappropriate famous phraseslink to social movements (Virginia Slims) or nationalistic associations Participation
identification with ad charactersget an emotional reactioncreate link to audience significant experiencesmake audience join in the progression of jingle or reasoning (Nyquil, Nyquil ...) Redundancy
repetition within ads (not too much)repeated exposure (esp. with variation) Advertiser Argumentation Strategies 
naming (positives in the name)
pseudo-claims ("fights tooth decay," "helps")
pseudo-comparisons ("new and improved," "none better")
best seller = quality ??
pseudo-survey (4 out of 5 dentists recommend sugarless gum for patients who
  chew gum)
imply causality (9 out of 10 Olympians eat our breakfast food) when none
  exists
juxtapose product with happy people etc.
imply if-then relationship ("Want love?  Get Closeup!)
imply if not - then not ("If you don't ...  who will?) Advertiser Techniques and Tricks 
parity statement - "none better than .."
borrowed interest - Superbowl champs go to  Disney World
guilt (Be a good mother)
omission - "These aren't American Express??"
emotion - "Celebrate the moments of your life."
Holy words - "It's the right thing to do."
Bandwagon effect
"plain-folks"  vs  "snob appeal"
buried warnings (900 number ads)
babies and animals
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