PRODUCT PLACEMENTS The Impact of Placement Type and Repetition on Attitude Pamela Miles Homer ABSTRACT: The global market for product placement‚ the practice in which firms pay to place branded products (e.g.‚ brand name/logo‚ package‚ signage‚ other trademarks) in the content of mass media programming‚ has exploded. A pair of studies test two potential moderating factors that may help account for the lack of attitude change reported in past experimental studies of placement effects. Specifically
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Product placement dates back to the nineteenth century in publishing.[citation needed] By the time Jules Verne published the adventure novel Around the World in Eighty Days (1873)‚ he was a world-renowned literary giant to the extent transport and shipping companies lobbied to be mentioned in the story as it was published in serial form. Whether he was actually paid to do so‚ however‚ remains unknown.[6] Product placement is still used in books to some extent‚ particularly in novels. Self-advertising:
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Product * A good‚ idea‚ method‚ information‚ object or service created as a result of a process and serves a need or satisfies a want. It has a combination of tangible and intangible attributes (benefits‚ features‚ functions‚ uses) that a seller offers a buyer for purchase. The Product Concept * This orientation holds that consumers will favor those products that offer the most quality‚ performance‚ or innovative features. * A philosophy that a good product creates its own market‚
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A product is anything that meets the requirements of a particular market‚ this term involves a lot of dimensions because it is essential to recognize what contributes to the “total product offer”1 in order to be successful in the market or simple to keep our customers satisfy. A service is an intangible economic activity‚ not stored and does not result in ownership; Services nowadays are becoming more important and growing faster and consumers are more apprehensive with performance and satisfaction
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Product Red‚ styled as (PRODUCT)RED‚ is a brand licensed to partner companies such as Nike‚ American Express (UK)‚ Apple Inc.‚ Starbucks‚ Converse‚ Bugaboo‚ Penguin Classics (UK & International)‚ Gap‚ Emporio Armani‚ Hallmark (US)‚ Dell‚ SAP and Beats Electronics (Beats by Dr. Dre). The concept was founded in 2006 by U2 frontman and activist‚ Bono‚ together with Bobby Shriver of the ONE/DATA; the pair sought to engage the private sector for the purpose of raising awareness and funds to help eliminate
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Amy Brower MKTG100 May 31‚ 2014 (Product) RED 1. Do you think a partnership with (Product) RED can improve Gap’s image? Is it a sign that they are making a commitment to corporate social responsibility or do you agree with critics who say their involvement is an attempt to spit-shine the company’s image while continuing to do business as usual? I do believe that partnering with (Product) RED can and did improve Gap’s image. I believe that any company that helps with benefiting The Global Fund
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Product Placement placements in Movies and TV-shows Authors: Jens Abrahamsson Marketing Programme Niclas Lindblom Marketing Programme A study about Swedes attitude towards product Tutor: Examiner: Subject: Level and semester: PhD. Rana Mostaghel PhD. Pejvak Oghazi Marketing Bachelor´s esis‚ Spring 2012 Abstract Marketers have always been looking for alternative ways to reach the target population with their messages. One approach that has grown the last decades is product placement
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ask the question "where does product liability end and consumer responsibility begin?" This question has been further complicated by occurrences that stretch to the most far-reaching ends of this spectrum‚ the spectrum ranging from strict product liability of the company to complete consumer responsibility. On the strict product liability of the company side‚ we have the cigarette industry where the CEOs of the largest cigarette companies denied that their product was liable for the cause of addiction
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Product Positioning A product positioning statement has four main components – the target‚ the frame of reference‚ the differentiation‚ and the reason(s) to believe. THE TARGET The target is who the product is for – who is the target user or customer of the product. The key to a good target definition is to balance being specific with being concise‚ you need to describe the target well enough that they can be identified‚ without being so verbose that your positioning statement goes beyond
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Levels of product Core product The core product is not the tangible physical product. We can’t touch it. That’s because the core product is the benefit of the product that makes it valuable to us. So with the car example‚ the benefit is convenience the ease at which we can go where we like‚ when we want to. Another core benefit is speed since we can travel around relatively quickly. Actual product The actual product is the tangible‚ physical product. We can get some use out of it. Again with the
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