This is a Spanish advert from 2009 advertising household
items. This advert purposely breaches social norms with the intent to shock. Shock
tactics in advertising are often used and have been known to attract attention,
increase memory of the advert and encourage consumers to engage in
message-relevant behaviours (Dahl, Frankenberger & Machanda, 2003). Although
shock tactics might attract initial attention, the implication of this advert
is very unclear and is sending a very worrying message – is it saying that
there are other uses for the product e.g. a murder weapon? Nothing in this
advert educates the consumer about the product – no information has been
provided and it has purely been designed to attract attention.
As this advert offers no information about the product, the
consumer is unlikely to have a high product involvement. When a consumer has
lower product involvement they tend to devote fewer cognitive resources to
advertisement processing. When confronted with a controversial advert the
available cognitive resources that the audience has devoted to the advert are
quickly overwhelmed to the detriment of message comprehension (Huhmann &
Mott-Stenerson, 2008). The content of
this advert is already confusing and without a high product involvement, the
message is completely lost.
Consumers who consider the content of an advert to be
threatening or disturbing will filter that information out. This is known as
perceptual defence as is the tendency for people to protect themselves against
ideas, objects or situations that are threatening. Perceptual defence is more
likely in anxiety producing situations because it leads consumers to avoid
stimuli that produce fears of anxieties (Thes, 1994). As this advert contains violent images it is
fair to conclude that it could be anxiety provoking for many of the audience.
This is a very extreme concept for the advertisement for home ware product. The company should consider using shock tactics that are perhaps less dramatic but just as vivid. A vivid appeal is emotionally interesting, image provoking and immediate. Borgida and Nisbett (1977) found that students’ selection of courses was much more dependent on receiving a vivid comment from another person compared to looking at ratings of the course by previous students. However vividness can be ineffective when paired with a weak argument – such as this advert demonstrates.
Borgida, E., & Nisbett, R. E. (1977). The differential impact
of abstract vs. concrete information on decisions. Journal of Applied social
psychology, 7, 258 – 271.
Dahl, D W., Frankenberger, K. D., & Manchanda, R, V.
(2003). Does it pay to shock? Reactions to shocking and nonshocking advertising
content among university students. Journal
of advertising research, 43, 268-280.
Huhman, B. A., & Mott-Stenerson, B. (2008).
Controversial advertisement executions and involvement on elaborative
processing and comprehension. Journal of
marketing communications, 14, 293-313.
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