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#the5
...because people aren't moved by someone trying to push an agenda- selling more units, getting 60 seats in the senate. They're moved by other people who are passionate- believing in their product enough to make ads that are comedy sketches, not hard sells. Believing in a cause enough to not care about re-election or poll numbers.
...because when you sell to someone, they know you're trying to take advantage of them. When you engage, entertain, or enlighten someone, they want more.
We hate it when someone invades our "space" with their activities.
However, when we choose to experience the every same thing it is just fine.
The thing that confuses me is when someone who normally is neat at home, but when outside doesn't even hesitate about littering wherever they go. What gives?
In the case of the street fair, on some level it's about the community coming together. Every year in my hometown they have a 4th of July picnic, full fair style (rides, food, music, etc). It's loud, hot and the tickets for rides are outrageous. But it's where the community celebrates every year. In some cases, it's where people see friends that they don't get to see very often. Not every street fair has this type of community involvement, but I can think of three in the cities I've lived in that do.
As Ann mentions, giving us the opportunity to talk about the ads around the watercooler the next morning are about community and sharing an experience with others.
As far as the barkers go, personally I dislike amusement parks. There's no engagement.
Sitting down to dinner and a darn politician calls you about some upcoming political election. All automatic, of course. Or, you go to a page on the net and a new kind of pop-up flops across the screen, forcing your attention away from what you are trying to accomplish.
This is totally maddening, as I'm usually trying to BUY something from a merchant and this new pop-up tells me something I didn't want to know, and don't care about.
Unfortunately I believe bad salespeople are pushing the public to where we'll make it illegal to solicit. I think public hanging for any phone solicitation is perfectly reasonable. Not totally serious, but I work for people whose phone rings every thirty minutes 7 days a week! There are precious few messages left on their service!
Amazon.com has it right. They send you email, when you ask them to do so. You go to their site, search for what you want, or look over their recommendations and buy. No pop-up nonsense, or unwanted videos.
With a smile,
s13cybergal
The adventure.
We hate high pressure sales but we love going to expos like the Big E where barkers shout out the highest pressure pitches you could possibly ever receive. Why?
The experience.
We hate advertisements of all kind in our media but we love tuning into the Super Bowl for the ads. Why?
The gathering.
Come to think of it, I hate a lot of those examples.
Good question this. I bet there is some marketing PhD in training that would love to do it. Of course, even if they did find that the premise of conflict is correct, it would be a more difficult matter to prove why it happens. Other postings here have suggested entertainment or experience, the control over the situation, inbound vs. outbound nature of the events, etc. All worthy of being tested as well, just harder to get a valid result. Lots of good research could be done around this. I take it back, this isn't a good question, it's a GREAT question. ;-)
If you tell me to like it, I won't. If you tell me not to, I will. If you tell me it's forbidden, it becomes my obsession.
Carnivals, even things like the Car Show or Home Expo with its more high pressure and niche pitches have brought their share of ginsu knives into my house (And I have to admit I still love those silly knives- they work as promised.) I am not big on high pressure pitches, but I do know what to expect in those places, so I am prepared, and if I decide to bite, I know what I'm doing.
The Super Bowl ads, in contrast, I think have become the academy awards of the advertising industry- it's the largest and most expensive platform in TV, so we watch to see how people are using this short-format to try to win the prize- and to see what the long tail effect it has (or doesn't) for the company. We're even less concerned about the actual products than we are on how they pull off the creativity required for this high stakes game. It's "Advertising Survivor" (tm) - boom or bust for the ad agency and the client.
But the heart if the question is this- people are perfectly happy to opt in to situations where they have an opportunity to buy or engage with something new or unique. It's time limited, it's not every day. It's what Seth Godin talks about in permission marketing.. People who show up to these events know what's in store and give their permission to market your socks off to them- but that's not the case with most interruption methods of ads.
I might argue that the Superbowl commercials example is not as good an example. Perhaps what happens outside the stadium/inside is a better comparison (not so much on TV).
2. Barkers are AWESOME and we all wish we could do that.
3. Super Bowl ads are HILARIOUS! We normally hate advertising because it is not entertaining and not relevant. Here, they are vastly entertaining, sometimes even more than the main program!
For me...
Each example has a social component to it. We choose to engage, to interact, to experience. It's why inbound marketing works well. Provide the right medium (maybe one, maybe more) and let your customers come to and/or find you.