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Motivation

Motivation. Copywriting for the Electronic Media (Meeske). What is Motivation?.

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Motivation

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  1. Motivation Copywriting for the Electronic Media (Meeske)

  2. What is Motivation? • Eg: You may say that you have joined a gym spending money for fees, shoes, clothes, etc, to keep in shape. The real reason however, might be that you think going to a gym will be help you meet attractive men or women who work out there. Both reasons are real: One is stated, other is subconscious

  3. Consumer Behavior: Elements • Structure of Motivation • Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs (Ascending order) • McGuire’s Psychological Motives: Self-expression, Novelty, Reinforcement, Affiliation, Modeling, Ego-Defense • Categories of Appeals: Emotional Appeals, Rational Appeals, Moral Appeals, Other Appeals • Features and Benefits

  4. Structure of Motivation? • Motive is the reason a person behaves in a given way. It is an internal force that stimulates you to behave in a specific manner. • Motivation is the justification for the behavior.

  5. Needs and Wants • Needs and wants motivate us. • Needs are the basic forces that motivate us to do some thing. • Needs are more basic than wants. Wants are needs that we learn during our lives. • For instance, we have a basic need for water - but some people have learned to want a bottle of Perrier.

  6. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Physiological: Needs for water, food, and shelter are physiological motives. This is the most basic level of human needs. Because physiological needs are essential to survival, these needs must be satisfied first. • Products: Medicines, low-cholesterol foods, health foods, special drinks

  7. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Safety: Needs pertaining to stability, physical safety, comfy environment, etc • Products: Insurance, retirement investments, smoke detectors, preventative medicines, automotive tires

  8. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Social Needs: Motives that illustrate a desire for friendship, group acceptance, affiliation, or love • Products: Clothing, entertainment, foods, personal grooming, and others

  9. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Esteem: Self-respect, superiority, prestige, and status. Esteem motives relate to a person’s desire for accomplishments and usefulness. • Products: Cars, furniture, clothing, hobbies, liquors, and many others

  10. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Self-actualization: The need for self-fulfillment, of becoming all that one is capable of becoming • Products: Hobbies, sports, education, gourmet foods, and some vacations. Maslow felt that few people reached this level, but advertisers nevertheless focus on it.

  11. McGuire: Self-expression • We want to let others know by our actions including the purchase and display of products, what we are and who we are. This brings the notion of self-concept into play (attitudes you hold toward yourself). It can be divided into actual and ideal: who I am now (actual) and who I would like to be (ideal)

  12. McGuire: Self-expression • Certain products serve as social symbols, communicate meaning to one’s self and to others; enhance our need for self-expression. Outcome is that we often purchase and use services, products, and media to maintain a desired self-concept. Thus, a man might wear a Ralph Lauren shirt because others may recognize it as a brand of quality, a factor that could also reinforce self-image of the wearer.

  13. McGuire: Novelty • In consumer purchasing, this need could relate to impulse buying and brand switching. Eg:, an individual buying a car might believe the top consumer choices to be Toyota/ Honda. However, this person might react to the need for novelty by purchasing another brand that’s attracting attention.

  14. McGuire: Reinforcement • Products designed to be used in public (cars, clothing, furniture) are often advertised to emphasize the amount and nature of reinforcement that will be received. This relates to the need individuals have to enhance their self-image

  15. McGuire: Affiliation • This need emphasizes the development of satisfying & helping relations with others. Focus is on need to share and be accepted by others.

  16. McGuire: Modeling • Modeling is the need to base behavior on that of others. Individuals seek satisfying relationships with others, and reflect on the desire to maintain conformity with reference groups. Advertisers apply this motive by depicting celebrities using their brands

  17. McGuire: Ego-defense • We use defensive behaviors and attitudes to protect our self-concepts when our identities are threatened. Many products are advertised to provide ego-defense. Consumers who are hesitant about their purchases of socially visible products may rely on well-known brands to avoid possibility of making a socially incorrect purchase.

  18. Appeals: Emotional • Used to generate either positive or negative emotions to generate purchase • Emotion Arousal: Joy, love, pride • Emotion Reduction: Shame, guilt, fear • Eliciting Particular Emotions: Warmth of credit card paying for romantic getaway

  19. Appeals: Rational • Performance, economy, quality, safety, design, price • Price and Quality appealed together • Spend less money, more quality • Spend more money, more quality

  20. Other Appeals • Humor: To establish product identification, not for complex sales goal • Celebrity: Trust in spokespersons • Five Senses: How do you communicate smell, touch, taste etc? By descriptive terms and demonstrations

  21. Features and Benefits • Remarkable McPherson struts = A more comfortable ride (Subaru car) • Active infrared autofocus system = Gives you pictures that are always in sharp focus (Olympus AFL camera) • Comes complete with Hi-Vac = Vacuums grass into an upright position (Snapper Lawnmower)

  22. Points to Remember • Understanding motives and behaviors enables advertisers to focus on the forces that lead consumers to make buying decisions • Maslow’s hierarchy of needs states that basic motives must be minimally satisfied before more advanced motives can be activated

  23. Points to Remember • The self-concept is one’s beliefs and feelings about one’s self • The self-concept is important to advertisers because consumers purchase products to enhance, express, and maintain their self-concepts • Consumers seek products whose primary or secondary benefit is to arouse emotion

  24. Points to Remember • Advertisers may seek to arouse, reduce, or elicit certain emotions • Rational appeals demonstrate that a product will deliver the desired results • Moral appeals aim at the consumer’s sense of right and wrong • As a copywriter, you must convert the features of a product into benefits that will create a desire in the consumer to purchase

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