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Chapter Four. The Communication Process, Meaning Creation, and the Fundamentals of Consumer’s Use of MarCom Information. Chapter Four Objectives. Appreciate the elements of the communication process
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Chapter Four The Communication Process, Meaning Creation, and the Fundamentals of Consumer’s Use of MarCom Information
Chapter Four Objectives • Appreciate the elements of the communication process • Understand the nature of meaning in marketing communications using a perspective known as semiotics • Describe marketing communicators’ usage of three forms of figurative language (simile, metaphor, and allegory)
Chapter Four Objectives • Discuss two models of consumer behavior: the consumer processing model (CPM) and the hedonic, experimental model (HEM) • Describe the eight stages of consumer information processing • Explain the fundamental features of the hedonic, experiential model
Elements in the Communication Process Source Is a communicator in some MarCom capacity – an advertiser, salesperson, sales promoter – who has thoughts to share with an individual customer or and entire target audience
Elements in the Communication Process Communication Objective Creating brand awareness, implanting positive associations in the consumer’s memory as a basis for a positive brand image, and affecting behavior
Elements in the Communication Process Message Is the symbolic expression of what the communicator intends to accomplish
Elements in the Communication Process Message Channel Is the path through which the message moves from source to receiver
Elements in the Communication Process Receiver Is the person or group of people with who the source attempts to share ideas
Elements in the Communication Process Communication Outcome An outcome(s) in response to the message received from a brand communicator
Elements in the Communication Process Feedback The way the source monitors how accurately the intended message is being received and whether it is accomplishing its intended objective(s)
Elements in the Communication Process Noise Interference and distortion at any stage of the communication process
Marketing Communications and Meaning Semiotics Is the study of signs and the analysis of meaning-producing events
The Nature of Signs Sign Something physical and perceivable that signifies something (the referent) to somebody (the interpreter) in some context
The Use of Signs and Symbols in Marketing Sign • Derives its meaning from other items in its context and vice versa • Polo logo signifies high status, financial well-being, and even royalty
The Meaning of Meaning Meaning The perceptions (thoughts) and affective reactions (feelings) to stimuli evoked within a person when presented with a sign in a particular context
The Meaning of Meaning Perceptual Field The sum total of a person’s experiences during his or her lifetime
The Meaning of Meaning • Communication is effective when signs are common to both the sender’s and the receiver’s fields of experience • The larger the overlap in their perceptual fields, the greater the likelihood that signs will be decoded by the receiver in the manner intended by the sender
Meaning Transfer: From Culture to Object to Consumer Drawing meaning from the culturally constituted world
Meaning Transfer: From Culture to Object to Consumer Drawing meaning from the culturally constituted world
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Simile • Uses a comparative terms such as like or as to join items from different classes of experience • e.g., “Jekyll Island, Georgia. Like the tide, it draws you back again and again.”
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Use of Simile
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Metaphor • Differs from simile in that the comparative term is omitted • Create a picture in consumers’ minds and tap into meaning shared both by the advertiser and consumer • e.g., Wheaties is the “Breakfast of Champions”
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Use of Metaphor
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications The use of metaphor in advertising
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Allegory • A form of extended metaphor • Conveys meaning in a story-underneath-a-story, where something other than what is literally represented is also occurring • Personification • Often used in advertising of potentially offensive products
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Allegory
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications Allegorical personification: The Pillsbury Dough Boy
The Use of Figurative Language in Marketing Communications The Pillsbury Doughboy represents allegorical personification
Behavior Foundations of Marketing Communications • How consumers process and respond to marketing communications stimuli and make choices among brands • Two models of consumer behavior • CPM and HEM • Consumer behavior is too complex and diverse to be explained by two extreme models
Behavior Foundations of Marketing Communications Consumer Processing Model (CPM) Behavior is seen as rational, highly cognitive, systematic,and reasoned
Behavior Foundations of Marketing Communications Hedonic, Experiential Model (HEM) Consumer behavior is driven by emotions in pursuit of “fun, fantasies, and feelings”
Consumer Information Processing: Stage 1 Exposure to information • Consumers come in contact with the marketer’s message • Gaining exposure is a necessary but insufficient for communication success • A function of key managerial decisions regarding the size of the budget and the choice of media and vehicles
Selective Attention: Stage 2 Attention • Focus on and consider a message to which one has been exposed • Highly selective
Selective Attention: Stage 2 To attract consumers attention: • Appeals to cognitive and hedonic needs • Use of novel stimuli • Use of intense stimuli • Use of motion
Selective Attention: Stage 2 Illustration of selective attention
Selective Attention: Stage 2 Illustration of selective attention
Selective Attention: Stage 2 Illustration of attention getting advertising
Selective Attention: Stage 2 Plays on selective attention
Comprehension: Stage 3 • Understand and create meaning out of stimuli and symbols • Interpreting stimuli involves perceptual encoding • Peculiar to each individual (idiosyncratic) • Mood can influence • Miscomprehension are common
Perceptual Encoding 1. Feature analysis: Initial stage whereby a receiver examines the basic features of a stimulus 2. Active synthesis: Beyond examining physical features, the context or situation plays a major role in what meaning is acquired
Humorous Illustration of Active Synthesis Humorous illustration of active synthesis
Selective Perception Each individual is likely to perceive images in different ways
Consumer Information Processing: Stage 4 Agreement with what is comprehended The matter of whether consumers yield to - that is, agree with - what they have comprehended
Agreement: Stage 4 • Comprehension by itself does not ensure that the message influence consumers’ behavior • Agreement depends on • whether the message is credible • whether the information appeals to the consumer