This remarkable and thought-provoking billboard
campaign comes from the Australian Childhood Foundation in 2009 and dramatizes
the issue of neglect. The aim of the poster is to prompt people to get better
at noticing and reporting this sometimes overlooked type of abuse. This message
is strikingly conveyed by the billboard as the poster itself has been plastered
over a child-sized mannequin who is dressed up in children’s clothing with only
the legs and feet sticking out of the bottom. The image is a somewhat
unsettling, literal portrayal of the message printed that 'neglected children
are made to feel invisible'. The campaign is deliberately disturbing as it
intends to shock the viewer into noticing the message as well as creating a
lasting impression which persuades them to take action. Shock is a highly
influential persuasion tactic as it grabs the viewer’s attention due to the
presence of an unexpected factor. Furthermore, it is effective as the message
is deeply imprinted causing people the desire to act upon it.
Empirical research has supported the idea that
shock can increase processing. Pyszczynski and Greenberg (1981)
found that individuals use more attributional processing for unexpected events
than they do for expected events. Participants viewed a confederate being asked
either a small favour (compliance expected) or a large favour (refusal
expected). The confederate would either confirm or refute the participant’s
expectations by complying or refusing the request. Participants were then given
permission to look at a selection of items from a questionnaire the confederate
had supposedly completed. Whether or not participants chose to view helping
items was taken as a measure of the participant’s motivation to discover and
process information that might explain the confederate’s response to the
helping request. Pyszczynski and Greenberg found that participants chose more
helping-relevant questions when their expectations had been disconfirmed. This
supports the notion that surprise may inspire further cognitive activity as
people are motivated to understand the cause of their surprise. This additional
processing of advertisements, caused by shock, therefore promotes comprehension
and elaboration, as the viewers are compelled to understand the advert and
produce message-related thoughts (Greenwald and Leavitt, 1984).
Additionally, I believe what makes this campaign
particularly effective is that it provokes an immediate reaction and forces the
viewer to interact with the billboard. It cleverly compels people to pay
attention to the poster and its message, as by ignoring it, the viewer is simply
proving the message true – that these children are allowed to be ‘invisible’. The campaign has created a scenario whereby the abused children are neglected by their caregivers, literally by the poster itself and also by the ordinary passerby if they fail to notice.The
billboards were installed in popular places around Sydney, at ground level,
meaning that thousands of people every day walked past them and were shocked
into noticing, thinking, and hopefully acting on this message. In fact, immediate action
was perhaps encouraged as in a clever twist the campaign prepared for and
almost invited the expected vandalism. If and when the poster was torn and the
mannequin removed, left behind was the emotional message “Thank you for
noticing me”.
Greenwald, A. G.,
& Leavitt, C. (1984). Audience Involvement in Advertising: Four Levels. Journal of Consumer Research, 11,
581-92.
Pyszczynski, T. A.,
& Greenberg, J. (1981). Role of Disconfirmed Expectancies in the Instigation
of Attributional Processing. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology, 40, 31-38.
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