Audience Research

  • June 2020
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Audi enc e Rese arch Before an agency can target an audience they need to know who the audience is and what their likes and dislikes are. There are many different ways of defining an audience, from the simple ABC of UK social class (whereby the C2Ds are the 'mass market'), to the streets where people live, or an elaborate lifestyle classification system such as VALS. Advertisers need to classify individuals as belonging to a group, in order to be able to discuss them, or analyse their needs. Audiences can be classified by age, as in this example: •







Mil lennia ls - Under 25 in 2003, tech savvy, grew up in prosperous times, media saturated and ethnically diverse. Will possibly be the biggest ever spending generation in history Gen X -ers - 25-38in 2003, grew up during economic downturn so more cynical than the Millennials, although also very media savvy. Individualistic. Boomers - 39-58 in 2003, avid consumers, want to deny aging process, focused on self-actualisation of Maslow's hierarchy of needs Matu res - 57+, practical and pragmatic, very money conscious, conformist

Or by income - here are some of the advertisers' acronyms from the 1980s (when labels ending in ie were all the rage) which have crept into common parlance Yuppi e

Young Urban Professional

Yummie

Young Urban Mother

Dinkie

Dual Income No Kids

Sinkie

Single Income No Kids

Minkie

Middle Income No Kids

Pou pie

Porsche Owning Urban Professional

Swell

Single Woman Earning Lots of Loot

Gupp ie

Green-sympathising Yuppie

Bobo

Burnt Out But Opulent

Woopie

Well Off Older People

Jo ll ies

Jetsetting Olders With Lots of Loot

Glams

Greying Leisured Affluent Middle Aged

Decc ie

DIY decorators who drag, stipple & marble

Slap pie

Stripped Pine Laura Ashley People (-???)

Dockney

East Docklands (ie paid a lot of money for their flat) London

Yuppie Tweeni e

Between 5 & 12 years old

Gr ey Panthe rs

Senior Citizens with opinions

Empt y Nesters

Couples whose children have grown up and moved away

http://www.fashionera.com/1980s_lifestyle_and_fashion.htm#Advertiser's%20Acronyms For a 21st century profile, check out this story from The Observer on Geezers, Britain's newest category of consumers. Then come classifications by ethnicity, location etc. One system, known as ACORN (a Classification of Residential Neighbourhoods) defines target audiences based on the type of housing in that street. • •

Read more about ACORN here A classification of a typical postcode. You can type in your own at the top.

Once an advertiser has decided which category of audience they are trying to reach, they must gather data on that category's behavioural choices, employing a mix of psychology, anthropology, sociology and statistics, thus turning advertising into a science, of sorts. Audience research is a vital part of any campaign, and is these days a painstaking and complex process. Research must take into account current and predicted trends , consumer values and how these drive po pular cu lture . The world is constantly changing - changing family structures, the level of average incomes, and globalisation all have an effect on what people can and will spend their money on. Audience research is the start of any marketing campaign, as manufacturers ask the question "What will people buy?" rather than asking "Will they buy what we sell?". Research Techniques include Biogr aphies - some agencies create a biography of the target customer of the product they are campaigning for, detailing his or her education, status, lifestyle, aspirations and attitudes towards the world they live in. This is an extension of the Personality Type theory of Jung which suggests that there are normal differences between the attitudes and behaviours of healthy people, simply because they react to stimuli and process information in different ways. When advertisers create an ad they talk as though directly addressing that one consumer and their needs. Quite often the ads will feature a model who resembles the target consumer - or a slightly more glamorous and successful version of who they perceive themselves to be.

Diaries - it is common practice to get test groups to fill in a diary detailing their media (and other) consumption habits over a period of seven days. Whilst this produces a snapshot of listening, viewing, reading (and eating) habits, it is only as reliable as the test subject. The diary system known as RAJAR is used to measure radio audiences in the UK, but there is dissatisfaction with this, and electronic metering devices (such as wristwatches) look to be the way forward. •

Guardian Article

Ma rk et R esear ch Compani es - before targeting research about a specific product, agencies will check the data about general trends in the population as gathered by research companies such as MediaMark. The items people purchase on their storecards, or using points-gathering cards such as Nectar give information on consumer habits which can be used by big market research databases. Questionnai res - the simple Q&A format which asks a set of questions designed to indicate likely choices. Read more here. Institutions such as the Stanford Research Institute pride themselves on the scientific nature of their questionnaire approach, and offer a "consumer psychographic segmentation system [which] offers a rigorous and scientific treatment of the psychological differences and similarities between consumers and analyzes how these differences and similarities affect consumers' choices". This gives agencies information about who they are advertising to, and where and how they may be reached by advertising. Media Buying As well as indicating appropriate content for advertising, research dictates media planning - which media will the ad appear in, and how many times. Advertising Media - A comprehensive overview from Hairong Li, Michigan Universtiy Further Reading • • •

Brand You - lengthy, but well worth reading article on Account Planning Nielsen Research - informative site explaining how this company conducts extensive research into US (and other) TV audiences BARB - TV audience research in the UK. Less transparent than Nielsen, but worth the comparison.

Taken from www.mediaknowall.com/Advertising/research.html

Tas ks: 1. What are VALS? Name the 8 segments and explain what each of them mean. 2. For each segment write down at least one current advert which you think is trying to appeal or target that segment. E.g. because image is an expression of an Innovator’s personality and Achievers are driven by achievement Citizen watches with Kevin Pietersen might appeal to Innovators and Achievers because its “unstoppable – just like the people who wear it”. 3. Look at the 1980s acronyms (yuppies etc) and write down at least one current advert which might be aimed at this group. 4. Read The Observer article on Geezers and summarise its main points. 5. Check out your post code and comment on how accurate you think the description is. What type of junk mail should you receive?

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