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FEAR APPEALS

FEAR APPEALS. What are Fear Appeals?. Fear appeals are the persuasive messages that emphasize the harmful physical or social consequences on failing to comply with the recommendations of the message.

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FEAR APPEALS

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  1. FEAR APPEALS

  2. What are Fear Appeals? • Fear appeals are the persuasive messages that emphasize the harmful physical or social consequences on failing to comply with the recommendations of the message. • Fear appeals draw attention to common fears and/or risks and then associate them with not using the product or service or with not performing a certain action.  • Fear appeals play on a person’s emotions in a negative manner. • Advertising using fear appeals suggest that if the consumer does what the ad recommends, then the suggested harm will not occur

  3. A television commercial portrays a terrible automobile accident (the fear appeal), and reminds viewers to wear their seat-belts (the fear-reducing behavior).  A letter from a pro-gun organization begins by describing a lawless America in which only criminals own guns (the fear appeal), and concludes by asking readers to oppose a ban on automatic weapons (the fear-reducing behavior).  A pamphlet from an insurance company includes pictures of houses destroyed by floods (the fear appeal), and follows up with details about home-owners' insurance (the fear-reducing behavior). 

  4. Advertisers Must Be Careful When Using Fear Appeals… • If the level of fear is too low, a more careful evaluation of the message can occur (you may not buy into the fear). • If the level of fear is too high, it might induce self-mechanisms preventing the person from further responding to the message or it might produce aggression toward the brand (the message may freak you out to the point that you tune it out, or you might be angry towards the brand).

  5. Fear Appeals Are Often Used In… • Political Campaigns • Public Health Campaigns (ex: drugs, alcohol, medications, diseases, etc) • More subtle advertisements (ex: persuading teenagers to purchase something to fit in)

  6. Four Elements to a Successful Fear Appeal 1. A Threat 2. A specific recommendation about how the audience should behave 3. Audience perception that the recommendation will be effective in addressing the threat 4. The audience perception that they are capable of performing the recommended behavior.

  7. Two Main Components Seen in Public Health Campaigns • Threat Component -Magnitude of Threat (how serious is it?) -Susceptibility to Threat (possibility of experience threat, can it happen to me?) • Recommended Response -Response Efficacy (does response work?) -Self-efficacy (can I do response?) -Barriers to Self-Efficacy (what blocks me from doing response?)

  8. This ad uses Fear Appeals to show the potential physical consequences (yellow eyes!) of getting Hepatitis, if you fail to comply with the recommendations of the message (get tested).

  9. This ad uses Fear Appeals to show the potential physical consequences (fried brain) of using drugs, if you fail to comply with the recommendations of the message (don’t do drugs).

  10. This ad uses Fear Appeals to show the extreme potential consequences (heart attack and dying) if you do not use Bayer.This ad focuses on both threat and efficacy. This ad will obviously have more of an effect on a person who has a history of heart problems, and may not capture the attention of someone who does not.

  11. Ads That Successfully Use Fear Appeals • Truth uses fear appeals to discourage teenagers from smoking Their commercialsdemonstrate the consequences (dying) of failing to comply with the recommendations of the message (stop smoking cigarettes). • Volkswagen uses fear appeals to show that VW is the brand to use for automobiles when it comes to safety. This commercial demonstrates the implied consequences (dying) of failing to comply with the recommendations of the message (VW is the automobile to use when it comes to safety)

  12. Ads That Do Not Successfully Use Fear Appeals • Political advertisements often use Fear Appeals to persuade the viewer to vote a certain way. In 1964, Lyndon Johnson created a television advertisement Daisyin his attempt to defeat Barry Goldwater in the presidential election. Although he won the election, the ad only aired once and Johnson was widely criticized for using the prospect of nuclear war. • Ads that do not successfully use fear appeals may make the politician or brand seem manipulative and less credible.

  13. Politicians and Fear Appeals • "The streets of our country are in turmoil. The universities are filled with students rebelling and rioting. Communists are seeking to destroy our country. Russia is threatening us with her might, and the Republic is in danger. Yes - danger from within and without. We need law and order! Without it our nation cannot survive." - Adolf Hitler  • When a propagandist warns members of his audience that disaster will result if they do not follow a particular course of action, he is using the fear appeal. By playing on the audience's deep-seated fears, practitioners of this technique hope to redirect attention away from the merits of a particular proposal and toward steps that can be taken to reduce the fear. • This is also how George Bush approached the election (with the War on Terror).

  14. Contemporary Politics In contemporary politics, the fear-appeal continues to be widespread. When a politician agitates the public's fear of immigration, or crime, and proposes that voting for him will reduce the threat, he is using this technique. When confronted with persuasive messages that capitalize on our fear, we should ask ourselves the following questions:  • Is the speaker exaggerating the fear or threat in order to obtain my support?  • How legitimate is the fear that the speaker is provoking?  • Will performing the recommended action actually reduce the supposed threat?  • When viewed dispassionately, what are the merits of the speaker's proposal? 

  15. Effectiveness of Fear Appeals Social psychologists and communication scholars have been conducting empirical studies in order to learn more about the effectiveness of fear appeals. Some have criticized the conceptualization of the studies, and others have found fault with the experimental methods, but the general conclusions are worth considering, if not accepting.  • "All other things being equal, the more frightened a person is by a communication, the more likely he or she is to take positive preventive action."(Pratkanis and Aronson, 1991)  • Fear appeals will not succeed in altering behavior if the audience feels powerless to change the situation.  • Fear appeals are more likely to succeed in changing behavior if they contain specific recommendations for reducing the threat that the audience believes are both effective and doable. 

  16. Conclusion “As a theory, Fear Appeals explains how fear can be used as a motivator for positive behavior, a reaction, or even lifestyle change. This theory is very useful among those who must persuade others to make a change in their life when they really do not want to” 

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