Attention Worthy Content

In today’s interconnected world, there is no escaping the 24/7 onslaught of media messages. Illustrating the challenges associated with a global network that is overly saturated with content, Ethan Zuckerman promotes the notion that “our challenge is not access to information; it is the challenge of paying attention” (Rewire, 19). With so many eyeballs viewing […]

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How Marketers and Advertisers Can Get Me to Stop Scrolling and Actually Pay Attention to Them

I’m old fashioned. I watch “The Golden Girls”  on a daily basis and my house phone is still a thing. Living in such a face-paced world catches up to you eventually. The constant, unending, and down-right intrusive stream of notifications is overwhelming. So at the end of a typical day in my busy college schedule, I just […]

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Marketing Lessons From America’s Favorite Sponge

“The aim of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well the product or service fits him and sells itself.”-Peter Druker

In today’s twenty first century we are as bombarded with advertisements as boy bands are bombarded with marriage proposals. We see posts on every form of social media to buy the new latest phenom that even the phrase, “Hi Billy Mayes here” fails to make our heads turn. The question is then, how do marketers and advertisers succeed in reaching their demographic in a society in which attention is a commodity? The answer lies in the 4 P’s of marketing- Product, Place, Promotion, and Price.

First comes product- the actual tangible item, or intangible service you are trying to sell. In order to be a relevant product you must have a good understanding of your place within the market and competition you will be facing. An important factor that comes with this is your uniqueness. What makes your product better than everything else currently in the market? This is a question that Aaron Krause answered on the hit ABC television show Shark Tank. His product- a glorified sponge that gets soft in warm water and firm in cold water-called Scrub Daddy. Who would have ever thought that you could make a profit off of the sponge market- but now 3 years later- Aaron Krause and his Scrub Daddy is the most successful business ever to have come from Shark Tank with over 50 million in sales. Why, because he understood the need for his product.

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Next comes place and promotion. Not only is it important to understand why your product is valuable and what makes it unique, but you must also be able to identify its place within the market, who your target audience is, and how you are going to reach your target audience. This is the particular challenge advertisers and marketers face every day. Sticking with our Scrub Daddy example, Aaron Krause identified that his market were people who do their dishes by hand and are fed up with the average household sponge. This demographic includes mostly women, probably with families who have lots of dishes, and probably low income families at that who can’t afford a dishwasher. Therefore the Scrub Daddy has to be appealing and generally marketed to the average housewife, well how do you reach her? She watches daytime television, shops at discount stores, and loves a good bargain. Based on these conclusions the Scrub Daddy is sold in all of the major conglomerate stores, (Bed, Bath and Beyond, Target, Walmart, Staples) as well as online and on television through QVC. Scrub Daddy has a social media presence on Twitter as well as Facebook, however, I think it’s important to note that they have less than 2,000 followers on Twitter and over 21,000 likes on Facebook. This makes sense given their demographic, the average housewife, is much more likely to be an avid Facebook user over Twitter. The advertisers of Scrub Daddy clearly realize this and put much more effort into their online and TV presence than their social media presence.

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Lastly in marketing your product it is important to understand price. Price is important not only in calculating the cost to manufacture your product, but also how much your product is worth versus what the average consumer will pay for it. In Scrub Daddy’s case, it has to be cheap enough to compete with the average sponge, but costly enough to prove it has value and is worth investing in. According to Staples website the cost of a 3-pack of Scotch-Brite no scratch sponges is $4.99. A 3 pack of no scratch Scrub Daddy’s however, is valued at double that for $9.99. So what does this mean? It means that the Scrub Daddy is successfully competing in a market at nearly double the price, which proves it is also successfully advertising it’s uniqueness over the average sponge and garnering the attention it deserves in the average housewife market.

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So what have we learned here? Ultimately the way to get the attention you seek is to have faith in your product and understand its purpose, research your target audience thoroughly, and sell your product at a competitive price. If you do all of the above correctly then hopefully you too will have learned a lesson from America’s favorite sponge, and will successfully reach your target demographic.

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Oh, You Were Talking to Me?!

In the busy world we live today the average attention span is about 8.2 seconds. You might be asking yourself, how do we ever get stuff done? I personally don’t know. I’m constantly looking at my phone, texting, switching to Facebook, getting notifications from Instagram, running into something random so I have to SnapChat it […]

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Work for My Attention

Everywhere I look, there are advertisements being thrown in my face. I see ads when I’m scrolling through Facebook or Intagram. I see them when I read the daily SnapChat magazines. I see them when I flip through actual paper magazines. I glance at marketing ploys when I am driving down the road and huge billboards creep into my peripheral vision. They are on the television, on the sides of buses, in the train station…they are everywhere! Advertisements are inescapable because they constantly bombard us on a daily basis. But, just because these advertisements are visible to me, does that mean that I am truly paying attention to them?

Half of the time when I see an advertisement, I just continue scrolling past it without being phased at all by its content. If someone were to ask me what the ad was marketing, I would not be able to answer without tapping deep into my subconscious, slightly photographic memory. So what does an advertisement have to do to grab my attention and get me to scroll back and really look at it?

First of all, visual intake, I believe, is one of the most important aspects of marketing and advertising. Let’s compare this to picking which slice of pizza to get at the pizza shop. Here I am, at the pizzeria looking at all the pizzas, trying to figure out which one will taste the best. Since I can’t try a sample of each pizza before I pick one, I use my sight to pick the best one. Which one looks like it’ll taste good? Now let’s assume that I’ve never had a slice of pizza before and I have no taste-bud memories to go off. I have to pick the pizza slice that simply looks the most appealing. I also pick the biggest slice because I’m feeling gluttonous.

Original collage

In that same realm, people are drawn in to what is aesthetically pleasing to them and from what they will get the most enjoyment. The use of pictures and visuals in advertisements helps a person to visualize the product in their possession. A description of something without the visual aspect is not always enough to convince someone to engage in this advertisement. Even the use of color schemes and designs can help to attract someone’s attention if there is no picture. For instance, if I saw two advertisements that were essentially marketing the same idea or product, but one was just black text with a white background and the other had interesting font and a simple design with cool color schemes, I would be more drawn to the latter.

Next, the advertisement must be marketing something that I am personally interested in. With the advancement of social media and its growing hand in the marketing industry, it is easier for advertisers to target specific people. For example, I really needed a new pair of shoes for my birthday this summer and I was looking through every shoe website I could find. Then when I logged into Facebook, I noticed that a bunch of the ads on the side of the webpage were for websites like Aldo and Steve Madden, both very popular shoe companies. I actually experimented with this phenomenon while writing this entry. I visited about five different shoe websites and searched “shoe websites” on Google in a matter of about three minutes. I immediately logged into my Facebook account and, there it was, a shoe advertisement. At first I felt a bit weird about this, as if there were little robots spying on me through my computer and tracking my Internet whereabouts. Eventually I came to understand that this marketing strategy is actually pretty brilliant, even though it may freak me out. By keeping tabs on a person’s online activity, marketers can directly cater to his or her specific interests, which will almost guarantee that the advertisement will get attention.

Original screenshot from personal computer

Another way that advertisers get my attention is through representation. If I see an advertisement featuring someone who looks like me or if something that aligns with my identities is being marketed, then I will be more intrigued. For example, advertisements featuring women or people of color will often get my attention because I identify with both of those social groups and what is being marketed may be beneficial or important to me. Marketers can do this on a larger scale by analyzing who uses or engages in what platforms of media in a specific place and at a certain time. These marketers then have a better way of targeting specific groups of people that may benefit from what they are advertising.

 

Another way in which marketers receive attention is by appealing to the general public. Marketers who place their ads on websites, magazines, or Internet articles that have (or will have) high engagement will most likely gain more attention. One example is Time magazine’s reporting on Facebook’s new addition, the “dislike” button. The dislike button has always been a feature that many people wanted on Facebook but was constantly deemed a “no-go” by its founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg. I don’t think the marketers of this article had to try very hard to make this article get attention. The words “dislike button” were definitely enough to grab mine. I think the marketers that chose to place their ads on this page were very smart to do so because so many people are going to be clicking on that article and will see and maybe lend their attention to a few of the several ads on the webpage.

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Ultimately, advertisers and marketers have to fight their hardest to get people’s attention. They must try to appeal to people as individuals and as a unit. They must also stay current in order to know what people will be interested in enough to actually pay attention to it. With our ever-evolving culture, advertisers and marketers really have to stay on top of their game to make people stop what their doing and truly look at what they have to offer.

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Conan, Geico, and Companion

Late-night television has been a classic North American pastime since Johnny Carson popularized the genre in the early 1960s. As a child and teen told to be quietly in my room before 11PM, I never understood why when it came to talk shows, late was seen as better. Now, for the first time in my […]

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Non-Wallpaper Advertising

I find it crazy to think about all of the messages we don’t even pay attention too that are presented to us every single day. We have become so numb to everything that surrounds us we have to seek out the information we want and need to see. This goes especially for advertisements. Last semester […]

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