Reactions to creative variations of a direct response Ad
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Direct Marketing
- Vol. 3 (3) , 16-26
- https://doi.org/10.1002/dir.4000030306
Abstract
For print advertising in general and direct marketing in particular, the role of communication style (i.e., how we say something) and organization (i.e., the sequential positioning of requests) as vehicles for effective understanding, retention of information, and persuasion, has long been assumed important. Style, perhaps even more than organization, has a strong intuitive appeal; more personal, forceful, or colorful ad messages are believed to have a greater impact on reader reactions than their counterparts. Yet, such were not the findings of this study. With few exceptions across a variety of print ad presentations, style and organization, both individually and in combination, were found to have very little effect upon how readers reacted to those ads. Results of this nature “run contrary” to what many copywriters believe and, therefore, bring into further question the assumed role that these factors play in the communication process.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Direct response advertising as an element in the promotional mixJournal of Direct Marketing, 1987
- Analysis of Information Content in U.S. and Japanese Magazine AdvertisingJournal of Advertising, 1986
- The Effect of Verbal and Pictorial Advertising Stimuli on Aesthetic, Utilitarian and Familiarity PerceptionsJournal of Advertising, 1986
- The Information Content of Comparative Magazine AdvertisementsJournal of Advertising, 1983
- The Information Processing of Pictures in Print AdvertisementsJournal of Consumer Research, 1983
- Industrial AD Readership as a Function of Headline TypeJournal of Advertising, 1983
- Feature Interactions in Consumer Judgments of Verbal versus Pictorial PresentationsJournal of Consumer Research, 1981
- Base rates can affect individual predictions.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1980
- Effects of interactive imagery on learning: Application to advertising.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1977
- Attribution and the psychology of prediction.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1975