Masterarbeit, 2013
58 Seiten, Note: 9.0 (out of 10)
Medien / Kommunikation - Public Relations, Werbung, Marketing, Social Media
1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Conceptual Framework
3.1 Placement Modality
3.1.1 Implicit Recall
3.1.2 Brand Image
3.2 Perceived Congruence
3.3 Prior Notifications
4. Research Design
4.1 Preliminary Study
4.1.1 Methodology
4.1.2 Data Analysis
4.2 Main Study
5. Data Analysis
5.1 Results
5.1.1 Reliability, Validity, Assumptions and Preliminary Calculations
5.1.2 Main Findings
5.1.2.1 Implicit Recall
5.1.2.2 Brand Image
6. Implications
6.1 Theoretical Implications
6.2 Managerial Implications
7. Limitations and Directions for Further Research
8. Summary
This study aims to examine the effectiveness of product placement (PP) in television shows by analyzing the impact of different placement modalities on implicit recall and brand image, while also evaluating the moderating roles of perceived congruence and prior notifications.
1. Introduction
"With ordinary advertising you can only say so much. With placement you can hint at what kind of product it is far more effectively" – Advertising Agency Executive (as quoted in Murdock, 1992, p. 19)
“Chuck: To finding the love of your life! (cheering and drinking) Lester: Happy bachelor party, my friend! We got you half a dozen five-dollar foot-longs from Subway. That’s six feet of meat! Jeffrey: (whispering) Five - I ate a foot. Lester: What’s the matter with you? Devon: Thanks boys! It's gonna be quite a tasty event… Thank you! (He grabs the sandwiches)”
While the latter quote could be a perfect script of a TV commercial for the fast-food chain Subway, it is in fact a dialogue taken from the popular NBC action comedy Chuck (S02E18, aired on March 30th, 2009), in which a bachelor party is going to get started by bringing in a couple of Subway sandwiches. This integration of a brand into the storyline of a TV program is an excellent example for a popular and ever-growing phenomenon in the movie and television industry: product placement (PP).
1. Introduction: Outlines the growing phenomenon of product placement in the television industry and defines the core problem statement regarding placement effectiveness.
2. Literature Review: Provides an overview of existing academic research on product placement, covering definitions, effectiveness measures, and key characteristics like prominence and modality.
3. Conceptual Framework: Establishes the theoretical foundation and derives ten hypotheses concerning the relationships between modality, congruence, prior notification, implicit recall, and brand image.
4. Research Design: Details the empirical methodology, including the two-step approach of a preliminary study followed by a main study using video clips from Modern Family.
5. Data Analysis: Presents the statistical findings from the online questionnaire, testing the developed hypotheses through regression analyses.
6. Implications: Discusses the academic and managerial consequences of the study, offering insights for marketers, agencies, and producers.
7. Limitations and Directions for Further Research: Reflects on the study's constraints and suggests future academic research paths.
8. Summary: Recaps the main findings regarding modality impacts and the relevance of congruence and prior notifications in product placement.
Product Placement, Implicit Recall, Brand Image, Modality, Perceived Congruence, Prior Notification, TV Shows, Consumer Electronics, Brand Awareness, Marketing Effectiveness, Human Associative Memory, Reactance Theory, Empirical Study, Modern Family, Apple iPad
The research investigates the effectiveness of product placement (PP) in television shows, specifically focusing on how different modalities of placement influence implicit brand recall and brand image.
The study centers on the interaction between placement modality, consumer perception (measured via implicit recall and brand image), and the moderating effects of story congruence and prior viewer notifications.
The objective is to answer how modality affects the success of PP in TV programs and whether factors like perceived congruence and prior notifications significantly alter these relationships.
The author uses a quantitative empirical approach, conducting an online survey with 257 respondents who were shown specific video sequences from the TV show Modern Family featuring the Apple iPad.
The main body covers the theoretical background of PP, the development of hypotheses based on models like HAM and KPM, the experimental design, and an ordinal and multiple regression analysis of the collected data.
Key terms include product placement, implicit recall, brand image, modality, congruence, prior notification, and consumer brand awareness.
The study finds that audio-visual placements generally have the strongest positive impact on brand image, followed by audio-only placements, while visual-only placements had no significant effect in this study.
No, the findings indicate that prior notifications (warnings) have no significant impact on either implicit recall or brand image, suggesting they do not effectively warn or manipulate the audience as theorized.
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