The
advert above “Be careful not to cut your stoma” is one that I find quite
shocking and somewhat disturbing to look at. The technique that the advertisers
are trying to use here is fear appeal. They are attempting to link an undesired
action, in this case smoking, with a severely negative consequence; having a
stoma, a surgically created opening in the throat. It is thought that the
arousal of fear will create an aversive state in the person looking at the
advert that must be avoided, by stopping the undesirable action targeted. In
this case I feel that the advert may be creating too much fear, so much so that
people will simply avoid looking at the advert, thus not reading the
information below about why they should stop smoking. They may simply switch
off to the image.
In a
study by Keller (1999) it was found that people who were unconverted to the
cause in question (in the case of the experiment the adverts were health
related brochures) participants were more likely to be persuaded by adverts that
aroused low levels of fear. Whereas those who were already converted to the cause
were more likely to be persuaded by the moderately fear arousing adverts, as
shown in Table 1. The unconverted participants had higher mean scores for
persuasion after viewing the lower fear appeal advert compared to the
moderately fear arousing advert. In the experiment they measured persuasion on
a 7-item scale of how likely to person would be to comply with the message they
had just read about in the brochure. As also shown in Table 1 the unconverted
were less persuaded by the moderately fear arousing message in terms of lower
susceptibility to the brochure, lower response efficacy and more refutations,
as well as less supportive thoughts, in comparison to the low fear condition. This
demonstrates on a number of different scales how for people who are unconverted
to a message lower levels f fear in advertising are more persuasive.
Table 1
In terms
of the anti-smoking advert above then this research suggests that the fear used
may be too strong to get those who are smokers, and therefore unconverted, to
be persuaded by the advert. As the research suggests an advert that is low in
fear appeal would be more persuasive in getting people to stop smoking. The
advert above may simply do more in terms of scaring people away from the
message, than scaring them into quitting smoking.
Reference
Keller, P. A. (1999). Converting the
unconverted: The effect of inclination and opportunity to discount health
related fear appeals. Journal of Applied
Psychology, 84, 403-415.
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