Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Can we please dismiss the meaningless word "Subliminal" from our advertising jargon!


There was -- and still is -- little proof that these efforts to engineer

action through manipulation of the unconscious led to any behavioral changes

favorable to specific marketers. As for James Vicary's experiment in subliminal

advertising -- it was a hoax: Vicary later admitted that he hadn't done what

he'd claimed. Several subsequent studies of the effectiveness of embedded

messages have shown it to be virtually impossible to use them to produce

specific, predictable responses. Still, faith in the power of the media to

induce millions of people to act contrary to their better judgment or conscious

desires remains profound. More than three quarters of the U.S. population

currently believes that marketers use subliminal messages to sell products or

services, according to the Journal of Advertising Research; consumers

themselves spend some $50 million annually on subliminal self-help products,

such as audiotapes that are supposed to teach one a foreign language in one's

sleep.

There is only one form of effective, accountable advertising and that is Interactive Marketing Communication.

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