MyFox
 

CrabbiePants's Blog

by CrabbiePants from Bottoms, Ga

Last Post 305 days, 23 hours Ago


Picture in your mind  the most wonderful, pleasant, place you have ever seen. Maybe a vacation.  The mountains.  The sea.  The desert. The ocean.  Whatever flips your switch.

Picuture your most favoirite thing to eat. Pizza.  Chocolate cake.  Chess pie. Whatever makes you drool.

If you picture these---have you?   

You are now  more 'open' to vice...or greed...or  self-centeredness.

That is,  you 'want' that thing.

Mind you. That is what Advertisers want to make happen.

They want you to be 'open' to their product.

This 'appetitive stimuli'   can make me and you  more  impulsive---even in  areas unrelated. It does not have to be 'good' things or thoughs...it can be 'bad' things or thoughts.

  For example, if we have a bad evalution at work...a bad stimuli....we transfer that to a behavior...like   'having a drink or two'  or  'have a dozen or so donuts'---to   'reward'  ourselves....

Do you believe it?

 

 

11 Comments |  Add a Comment

Member Comments Total Comments: 11
Page 1 of 1
realism4u2 read my blog
Jan 29, 2008 | 12:01 PM

OK, so Little Ceasars shouldn't show pizzas in their advertising?

And Expedia should not show vacation destinations in their advertising either, I suppose.

Perhaps Chrysler should not show their cars in their advertising, but rather show people walking their dogs?

COME ON! I love how people try to blame someone else for their impulsive buying habits. "it's not my fault...the advertising enticed me!" PLEASE!

Advertisers are doing what they are supposed to do: showcase their goods and services. Are they covertly attempting to coerce you into a purchase? No. They are showing you what they manufacture. Consumers make the decision of the purchase. Any impulsive "stimuli" is easily managable if you have any self control.

CrabbiePants read my blog
Jan 29, 2008 | 2:50 PM

realism
the drug companies advertise with billions of your drug dollar monies every year...they tell you on tv to ask your dr. if this drug is for you...and then they take the dr. to a champagn lunch ...and give the dr. a bunch of free samples...and tell the dr. all sorts of positive thing.s....and then the dr. gives them to you....oh yeah.....might cost you $400 for that little bottle of x-brand that just came out...instead of the dr. using his own sense of ...decency...and judgment...for the patient of course...and give the patient a generic presprcition that cost the patient $30 instead of $400....so....what do you say about that one?
20-30 years ago it was not even allowed...not even considered decent for dr. and lawyers to even advertise their names on the tv.
...there is bad ads and good ads...but when the cost of the product is increased by 22 percent..on average...because of the ads...what say ye?

realism4u2 read my blog
Jan 29, 2008 | 4:30 PM

I say: GOOD! (BTW, I work for a major ad agency)

As for the drug companies, I don't understand why you took this discussion on that tangent. You were talking about food and vacation advertisements when you started this thread, now all of a sudden it's the big, bad, evil drug companies.

Anyway, back to advertising:

This is called free enterprise. A company may charge whatever price they feel their product is worth, basing that price on their operating costs and projected earnings. If you, as a consumer, feel the price is too high, don't buy the product.

A company is also free to pay whatever they wish for their advertising. They have an operating budget and ear-marking advertising costs is part of that budget. How a company spends its ad dollars is none of your business, unless you are a stockholder. Again, if you think the price is too high (and you equate it to the advertising) don't buy the product.

Simply put, every company is in business to turn a profit...that is the goal of every company. Advertising is how companies communicate with consumers and hope to get them to try the company's product, thereby contributing to said profit. It's really not that difficult of a concept.

Do you think companies like Dell or General Motors or Office Depot or Kroger would generate the same amount of profit if they did not advertise?

And the cost of advertising isn't cheap. There is market research, consumer focus grouping, print production, radio and TV production, actors, directors, voice-over talent, copywriters, etc. Advertising is a service, but it certainly

CrabbiePants read my blog
Jan 29, 2008 | 5:19 PM

realism
I say ok to advertising--as long as reasonable
..the reason i got off on drugs is the reason I said...
a lots of dr.s are in cohoots with the drug companies...some more than others...and it is not NOT to the benefit of the patients, altogether. Do you agree or not agree with my take on this particular issue?
But, of course if you are making your living at ads, i can certainly understand why you say this...it is like I used to work for an oil company...you know those big, bad companies who hold the world captive to the gas and oil? LOL
well, they advertise too....of course...
..its the drug thing I'm one here...

realism4u2 read my blog
Jan 30, 2008 | 8:02 AM

Crabby, the reality is that all business is "in cahoots" with other businesses. That is the price of doing business.

Is it not just as likely that the buyers for Kroger are "in cahoots" with their vendors? Of course they are! Is it not likely that movie theaters are "in cahoots" with the major studios? Of course they are! Is it not likely that Wal-Mart is "in cahoots" with various manufacturers? You know that they are.

The point is, businesses thrive and survive by favors to one another...they call it "good will", but it's really a way of establishing business relationships. A doctor gets solicited by drug companies for endorsement just as a union gets solicited by a candidate. Favor for favor. If you were in that position, you would have to do this as well to survive in the ultra-competitive business world. Granted, it's not the most ethical practice, but unfortunately it is the only means of survival for business. You can do the "right thing" and not partake and risk going out of business, or you can play the game and survive. That, my friend, is reality.

CrabbiePants read my blog
Jan 30, 2008 | 9:17 AM

realism
You are of course right. This is reality.
It's interesting that we have gotten no more discussion on this. Discussion --the pro's and con's usually is the reason I post something.
You sound like some of my college professors---back in the 50's===yeah, I'm an ole timer--and I remember.... LOL....then hardnosed Econ and Accounting Professors argued like you do....and the Sociologist Profs argued sort of with a sprinkling of Socialism...
...you ever get that in your college?

realism4u2 read my blog
Jan 30, 2008 | 9:28 AM

My college days were in the early 80's, but yes, that would be an accurate assessment of professors of those subjects. LOL!

Anyway, back to work. Got to tell the American public how white their teeth can be! (HA-HA)

LocalBlogger read my blog
Feb 14, 2008 | 12:11 PM

CrabbiePants - no idea what your point is with this LOL.

LocalBlogger read my blog
Feb 14, 2008 | 12:11 PM

CrabbiePants - no idea what your point is with this LOL.

CrabbiePants read my blog
Feb 14, 2008 | 4:06 PM

Local
That humans are open to 'suggestion' from the time he is out of the womb.
Info teaches us, sways us---sometimes for the good, and sometimes for the bad.
Depending on your Control of Mind and Emotions--you will Control or Be Controlled.

LocalBlogger read my blog
Feb 15, 2008 | 9:23 AM

Crabbiepants - you are stating the obvious here.

Welcome to life since the inception of printed material, radio and TV.

Page 1 of 1


Write your comment below:




CrabbiePants

I've been here and there, and have seen this and that; have met these and them; and have done most things from there to here. It all accounts to not too much.

Member Since: 10/11/2007