These is three
pictures are from the Mango catalogue 2014. Gorgeous Australian model Robyn Lawley
is wearing a mix of denim looks, printed shirts and comfy dresses in order to
show us the beauty of new collection presented by well known brand Mango.
The usual
trick, beautiful lady presenting something new for people to buy, is of course
used here. Our inability to ignore attractiveness (Olson & Marshuetz, 2005)
is widely and successfully used by many companies. Sui & Liu (2009) argued
that facial beauty is automatically grabs our attention. In their experiment
participants asked to judge the orientation of a cued target presented to the
left or right visual field while ignoring an irrelevant face image flashed in
the opposite field. Appearance of attractive faces lengthened the performance
which made researchers suggest that reaction to attractiveness, or particularly
facial beauty, competes with the ongoing cognitive task (e.g. spatial
attention).
The reason
why I chose this advertising is actually this pretty 24 years old model. Robyn
Lawley is well known as the first plus-size model to be shot for Australian
Vogue and GQ, and the first Australian plus size model to be on the cover of the
fashion magazine ‘Madison’. She is also famous
for being the first plus-size model to appear in a campaign for Ralph Lauren.
The model worked with different famous photographers and companies. So what is
so special about this girl?
I believe
that this ‘plus-size’ is what important to Mango and all other companies and
magazines, even thought size 12 is barely a ‘plus’ size. Unusual forms for a
model, is what makes this girl desirable. I believe that image of a beautiful
woman is not the only technique used by Mango’s marketing team to attract us to
the advertising above. I think that the main principle here is similarity. This
girl looks more similar to a regular woman than any of Victoria Secret models. Various
studies showed that we like more and willing to comply more with those who are
similar to us. For example, we often are attracted to people who share similar
values, interests, and personality characteristics (cited in Burger et al,
2001). Customers are likely to attribute amiability and benevolence to
salespeople who are similar to themselves (Swan, Bowers, & Richardson, 1999).
One study found that significantly greater number of passersby were willing to lend
money to a stranger for a phone call when that stranger resembled them in
appearance (Emswiller,Deaux, & Willits, 1971).
I believe
it is more pleasant for women and more productive for salesmen to have
catalogue with models who have similar size to customers. As average size for a
British woman is 12-14 it is important for them to see that beautiful clothes
could look good on someone bigger than size 6. It is an encouragement and a
comfort.. and the biggest trick.
References:
Burger, J.
M., Soroka, S., Gonzago, K., Murphy, E., & Somervell, E. (2001). The effect
of fleeting attraction on compliance to requests. Personality and Social
Psychology Bulletin, 27(12), 1578-1586.
Emswiller,
T., Deaux, K., & Willits, J. E. (1971). Similarity, Sex, and Requests for
Small Favors1. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1(3), 284-291.
Olson, I.
R., & Marshuetz, C. (2005). Facial attractiveness is appraised in a glance.
Emotion, 5(4), 498.
Sui, J.,
& Liu, C. H. (2009). Can beauty be ignored? Effects of facial
attractiveness on covert attention. Psychonomic bulletin & review, 16(2),
276-281.
Swan, J.
E., Bowers, M. R., & Richardson, L. D. (1999). Customer trust in the
salesperson: an integrative review and meta-analysis of the empirical
literature. Journal of Business Research, 44(2), 93-107.
Khmelnitskaya Elizaveta
I like the analysis but the writing is unclear in places.
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