Apart
from using source credibility this advertisement uses the fear appeal as a
persuasion technique. The fear appeal aims to arouse fear by diverting attention
towards the source or cause of threat and then suggesting a form of protective
action, which can reduce the threat or harm (Maddux & Rogers, 1983). In a
study conducted by Dillard & Anderson (2004) messages with higher levels of
fear (influenza) led participants to report greater likelihood of taking vaccinations
in the future. This advertisement talks about acid wear and how it can damage
the enamel and when the enamels “gone… its gone” indicating that’s its
permanent damage. This is the fear element the advertisement creates. Who after
all wants to lose their enamel coating?
To
protect the enamel use pronamel. Repeating “pronamel” three times
by an authoritative figure (dentist) is very persuasive. According to (O'Guinn, Allen, & Semenik, 2008) things that are said more
often are more likely to be remembered than things said less often. Messages
that are moderately repeated are beneficial as they create greater attitude
change (Petty, Wheeler & Tormala, 2003).
Sensodyne
has therefore created a powerful and persuasive add by exploiting the fear
appeal technique and repeating and recommending the product through a dentist
(Source credibility).
Akshay shah (blog 2)
References
Dillard, J. P., & Anderson, J. W.
(2004). The role of fear in persuasion. Psychology & Marketing, 21,
909-926
Maddux, J. E., & Rogers, R. W. (1983). Protection motivation and
self-efficacy: A revised theory of fear appeals and attitude change. Journal of
Experimental Social Psychology, 19, 469-479.
O'Guinn, T., Allen, C., &
Semenik, R, J. (2008). Advertising and
Integrated Brand Promotion. Thomson/South-Western.
Petty, R. E., Wheeler, S. C., & Tormala, Z. L. (2003).
Persuasion and attitude change. In
T. Millon & M. J. Lerner (Eds.), Handbook of psychology:
Personality and social
psychology (Vol. 5, pp. 353–382). New York: Wiley.
This could have been more comprehensive but the analysis is fine.
ReplyDelete