Ad Industry

| Saturday, January 17, 2009

the advertising industry.

The advertising industry has an important part to play in developed economies. As well as generating sales of goods and services, it provides often the sole source of revenue for media companiies such as magazines and radio stations. The institution of advertising is made up of a number of different advertising agencies. These agencies employ a variety of different personnel who perform diverse roles, from coming up with creative ideas, to doing audience research, to post production on TV commercials. The agencies provide expertise in a number of different areas (eg print design, market profiling) to manufacturers and thus provide a vital link to audience. It was recognised as long ago as the late nineteenth century that an advertising agency could offer the services of skilled personnel as and when their specialism were needed on a particular project, and that this was a more cost effective approach that individual manufactuers employing their own advertising department.


Advertising is a global industry, and just as there are huge global corporations who sell and advertise their goods around the world (Nike, McDonalds, Microsoft, Adidas, Samsung) so there are huge global advertising agencies who have offices in every major territory.The main advertising agencies (and their websites) are:

  • Bates Asia - includes useful case studes (Nokia)
  • BBDO - Their Mission Statement plus some good case studies (FedEx & Pepsi)
  • DDB - "bringing Humanity to the Digital Age"
  • M&C Saatchi - this is the mac link
  • Ogilvy - plus links to their different incarnations
  • TBWA - the UK site, flash-tastic (not), but again some good examples of campaigns



The advertising process and personnel


The manufacturer provides a number of different agencies with a particular brief. The brief includes details of the product and the aims of the campaign - it might be to launch an new line or inspire new interest in an old favourite - as well as limitations of budget, timescale etc. Each agency will then research the brief, and come up with a campaign idea which they will pitch to the client. The client chooses their favourite pitch and employs that agency to mastermind the campaign. The agency is then responsible for executing the campaign, producing in full the designs for adverts, buying space in magazines, on billboards and TV, and rolling out the campaign on the given dates.

Producing a single campaign can be an expensive process involving hundreds of skilled people - read about a recent Audi (A8) campaign here which employed over 600 people and "the kind of state-of-the-art film technology otherwise reserved for Hollywood blockbusters".


The main personnel who work for an advertising agency include:

Account Managers - They deal directly with the client and oversee all operations. They have overall responsibility for individual accounts - and their success or failure. Quite a responsibility if your client is FedEx...

Creatives - art directors and copywriters who are responsible for coming up with visual and verbal ideas. They are responsible for turning the strategy devised by the strategic planner and account manager into a series of original and effective advertisements.

Strategic Planners - are responsible for researching audiences and markets -an increasingly scientific task - and coming up with a strategy which will connect audience to product. They need to know about psychographics, demographics and economics.

Media Buyers - spend their time negotiating for pages in magazines, and bashing out deals with TV companies for prime time commercial spots. Because they are often negotiating on behalf of many clients at once, buying huge blocks of advertising space, they are powerful enough to get good deals.


Source: http://www.mediaknowall.com/gcse/advertising/analysis.html

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