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Qualitative Effects of Media on Advertising Effectiveness

By Bobby J. Calder and Edward C. Malthouse

Magazines

 

"The way a person experiences a magazine or newspaper can affect the way they react to advertising in the publication."


Source: Paper presented at ESOMAR/ARF Worldwide Audience Measurement (WAM), Geneva, Switzerland, June 13–18, 2004.


Type of Promotional Materials/Activity: Magazines, newspapers


Sample Population:  4,347 magazine readers and 4,444 newspaper readers weighted to U.S. Census using age, race, and gender.


Methodology: Predictive modeling analysis of multi-scaled mailed survey.
 

Metrics: Qualitative experiences reading a magazine/newspaper and attitudes towards an ad that is relatively “generic” and is not reflective of that magazine's or newspaper’s content.
 

Dependent variable: 

 

Independent variables:


Top Line Results:
 


Take-Away: To quote the authors:  “This research demonstrates that the way a person experiences a magazine or newspaper can affect the way the person reacts to advertising in the publication. For example, people who find the stories in a magazine more absorbing also have more positive reactions to the advertising in the magazine. Therefore, other things being equal, an advertisement in a magazine that absorbs its readers is worth more to the advertiser than the same ad in a magazine that does not absorb its readers as much.”
 

 

Complexity rating of the original source:  2
(Complex statistical analysis scale:  1= none, 2= moderate, 3 = difficult)

 

Source:  Qualitative Effects of Media on Advertising Effectiveness