238 CHAPTER 7 ADVERTISING
Table 7.4 Positioning of countries on cultural dimensions
Countries scoring high on
left-dimension attributes
Countries scoring
average
Countries scoring high on
right-dimension attributes
Collectivism East and West African countries
Latin American countries
Portugal
Arab countries, Greece,
Japan, Spain, Turkey
Australia, Switzerland,
Scandinavian countries,
France, UK, USA, Germany,
the Netherlands, Belgium
Individualism
Low power Scandinavian countries, Austria,
Switzerland, Germany, Ireland,
USA, UK, the Netherlands
Spain, Taiwan, Greece,
Japan, Italy, Portugal
Malaysia, Guatemala, Arab
countries, West African
countries, Philippines
High power
Feminine Scandinavia, Portugal, the
Netherlands, Turkey
Belgium, France, Greece,
Spain, Arab countries
Austria, Canada, UK, Ireland,
Italy, Japan, Switzerland, USA
Masculine
Uncertainty
tolerant
Scandinavian countries, UK,
USA, Ireland, Canada, India
Arab countries, Austria,
Switzerland, Germany
Belgium, France, Greece,
Japan, Portugal, Spain
Uncertainty
avoidance
Short-term
orientation
Pakistan, Nigeria, Canada, UK,
USA, Australia, Germany,
Poland, Sweden
India, Thailand,
Hungary, Singapore,
the Netherlands
China, Hong Kong,
Taiwan, Japan, South Korea
Long-term
orientation
High
context
Japan, China, Arab countries,
Latin American countries
Italy, Spain, France, UK North American countries,
Scandinavian countries,
Germany, Switzerland
Low context
Summary
Advertising is any paid, non-personal communications through various media by an iden tifi ed
brand or company. It is one of the most visible tools of the communications mix. Advertising
campaign development consists of a number of stages. Firstly, advertising strategy has to be
decided on: who are the target groups of the campaign; what are the objectives; and what
messages are going to be conveyed? At the very core of the advertising process is the develop-
ment of a creative idea. Companies have to write a creative brief before the advertising agency
can start to do its job. Creativity is hard to describe, but bringing the message in an original,
novel and appealing way comes close. In general, two broad types of creative appeals,
rational and emotional, can be used to develop a campaign, although mixed forms also
exist. Emotional appeals are ads whose main purpose is to elicit aff ective responses and to
convey an image. Rational appeals, on the other hand, contain information cues such as price,
value, quality, performance, components, availability, taste, warranties, new ideas, etc. For
both rational and emotional appeals, diff erent formats or execution strategies can be used.
Rational appeals may, for instance, make use of a talking head, a demonstration, a problem
solution, a testimonial, a slice of life, a drama or a (direct or indirect) comparison with
competitors. Emotional appeals may be based on humour, fear, warmth, eroticism, music or
the like. Rational and emotional appeals may further feature diff erent types of endorsers:
ordinary people, experts or celebrities. None of the execution strategies works in all situations
and for all target groups; for example, although everyone agrees that emotional techniques
are capable of attracting attention, it is by no means certain that they get the message across
in the manner intended. Th erefore caution should be taken to select the right technique. In
cross-cultural advertising campaigns, substantial diff erences in cultural characteristics have
to be taken into account.
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