Ad General
Ad General
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Generalizations about
Advertising Effectiveness in Markets
GERARD J. TELLIS
Based on over 260 estimates, the mean elasticity of sales or market share to
Marshall School of
advertising is 0.1 percent. Another 450 field experiments suggest that changes in
Business
University of Southern
California
[email protected]
media, product, target segments, advertising scheduling, and advertising content are
more likely to yield changes in sales than do changes in advertising weight. Numerous
other studies suggest that advertising wear-in does not exist or occurs quite rapidly
while advertising wear-out occurs more slowly. Details of and differences in these
results by condition are discussed in this article.
OVERVIEW
Advertising effectiveness in markets refers to
organization.
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DOI: 10.2501/S0021849909090357
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ADVERTISING EFFECTIVENESS IN MARKETS
EMPIRICAL GENERALIZATION
Research on over 260 estimates of advertising elasticity leads to the following important generalization. If advertising changes by 1 percent, sales or market share will
change by about 0.1 percentthat is, advertising elasticity is 0.1. The advertising
elasticity is higher in Europe relative to the United States, for durables relative to
nondurables, in early relative to late stages of the product life cycle, and in print over TV.
The advertising elasticity is lower in models that incorporate disaggregate data, advertising carryover, quality, and promotion relative to those that do not. The advertising
elasticity is lower in multiplicative models relative to other model forms, such as the
additive model. The advertising elasticity is invariant over the measure of the dependent
carryover.
1991).
Implications
econometrics.
elasticity is 0.1.
period.
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change weight.
Where profitability of the advertising
an elasticity.
weight.
RESEARCH ON ADVERTISING
studies
FREQUENCY
findings:
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ADVERTISING EFFECTIVENESS IN MARKETS
which it is repeated.
Implications
ing content;
RESEARCH ON WEAR-IN/WEAR-OUT
sion scores.
variety
executions.
of
advertisements
and
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content
time around.
116.
withdrawn.
Implications
cycle.
does not happen at all. Second, the findings suggest typical types of wear-in
and wear-out that advertisers may expect
for their campaigns. Whenever resources
and time permit, however, advertisers
should test their advertisements for wear-in
and wear-out and accordingly decide on
the duration of the advertising campaign.
Implications
These findings have two important implications for advertisers. First, to increase
effectiveness, advertisers should modify
content more than increasing weight or
frequency. Second, advertisers need to test
Content refers to what is in an advertisement as opposed to such external characteristics as weight or frequency. Aspects of
content include the appeal (argument, emotion, and endorsement), the duration or
length of the advertisement, the use of color,
sound, or video, the amount/type of text,
etc. While a vast number of theater and lab
product.
................................................................................................
GERARD J. TELLIS is a professor of marketing/Jerry and
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
be made cautiously.
918.
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ADVERTISING EFFECTIVENESS IN MARKETS
(1991): 16074.
G14149.
Tellis, Gerard J. Advertising Exposure, Loyalty and Brand Purchase: A Two Stage Model
of Choice. Journal of Marketing Research 15, 2
(1988a): 13444.
Lodish, Leonard M., Magid Abraham, Stuart Kalmenson, Jeanne Livelsberger, Beth
Publications, 2004.
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