TV Ads during a Pandemic

Are you watching more TV than you used to? If yes, you’re not alone: all across America, people are watching more TV and as a result, seeing more ads, during the pandemic. Some of the ads are from ‘before times’ when people could still shake hands and hug; many of them, though, reflect the new normal of social distancing, online car shopping, and being in this all together.

Our newest White Paper investigates consumer reactions to different types of TV messages that they’ve recently seen. While at the moment it seems that all types of messages are seen as appropriate, we seem to be approaching a ‘wear out’ situation when people become tired of the constant stream of Covid-19 messages.

We’ll be collecting data on this again in a few weeks to see if this type of wear out is occurring. In the meantime, we hope you find this report interesting.

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/mabr/files/2020/04/MABR-Whitepaper-TV.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Brands and Brand Responsibility in China: Austin Willhoft

Our MABR student Austin Willhoft offers a perspective on BR in China.

I wrote a short paper while taking a “Reading” course with Kim and wanted to share the findings with you. As most of you know, I bring up China a lot. I do it because the Chinese market will expand going into the future, with various industries growing to a capacity where communications will be vital in maintaining the authentic and positive connection with both local and global consumers. We are in the communications industry, and as such, I believe understanding aspects of the culture will equip us with a better sense of tapping into the Chinese consumer. In Chinese culture, individuals live by a set of values based on “preserving face, understated in expressing opinions, and supremely hierarchical” while uprooted in a Confucian society. More importantly, though, Chinese culture involves a series of social rules and dictations, reinforcing the individual as subservient to the advancement of his or her family.

Brands pursuing the Chinese market must balance advertisements projecting one’s social status, while also cognizant of frugal and price-sensitive consumers. The Chinese consumers benefit from purchasing products boil down o externalizing one’s social, financial and governmental status. Securing a relationship with the government matters in an authoritarian country, like China, while maintaining it depends on the balance of messaging from brands. What ticks and drives curiosity for Chinese consumers boils down to communicating single-minded messages, including leveraging professional and societal advancement as tied to the advertisement. In the end, Chinese consumers struggle to accept the Confucian lifestyle and conforms they must abide by and the individualistic allure of the modern world, often tied to the West. Advertisements infusing a strong sense of individualism as a means of advancement with an underlying Confucian tone related to family and social stability will succeed in tapping into the consumer’s psyche.

Read the entire report here:

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/mabr/files/2020/04/Guide_Chinese_Consumer.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

 

 

Our Second White Paper: how do consumers respond to brand emails?

If you’re like us, you received a LOT of emails from brands in the past few weeks. How do most consumers view these messages? And what should brands do? Our second white paper addresses brand emails, and includes mini-case studies of brands that we think did it right. Enjoy!

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/mabr/files/2020/04/MABR-Whitepaper-Brand-Emails.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Our first White Paper: Brands Messages on Twitter during the Coronavirus Pandemic

I’m happy to share our first MABR White Paper with you: Brand Messages on Twitter during the Coronavirus Pandemic. This is the first in a series of White Papers that will address how brands message during these challenging times, and how consumers react to these messages. Following this White Paper on message on Twitter, we will be providing White Papers on email messaging and TV advertising. We will also be doing time-series studies to see if attitudes change.

We hope you find this helpful.

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/mabr/files/2020/04/MABR-Whitepaper-Twitter.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

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