How Does Advertising Work? What Makes People Buy?

While researching the topic of advertising, I happened upon an infographic on How Advertising Makes Us Buy. The infographic below opens with the notion that companies are rich and have piles of money and they use it to manipulate their poor audience. I think that’s a rather disturbing, unfortunate, and unlikely notion.

The first notion that only rich companies advertise is a bizarre idea. Our company is not wealthy and, in fact, had a couple of years of losses – yet we still advertised. Advertising, especially via digital channels, is very affordable. You can deposit $100 into any social or search engine pay-per-click (PPC) account and push some highly targeted advertisements to drive awareness of your business.

Attitudes toward business don’t align well with the actual statistics in the social media world. About a quarter of all businesses fail within the first two years according to multiple studies. While people believe the average company makes a 36% profit margin, the average profit margin for the most recent quarter was 7.5% and the median profit margin was 6.5%.

Angie’s List, for example, continued to operate at a loss while spending $80 million on marketing – with a large portion of that going to the television commercials you repeatedly see on television. While a public company that’s increasing revenue quarter over quarter, they’re hardly rich. Not only are they not rich, but they’re also not advertising to make their customers feel rich. Angie provides a service to protect home services customers from getting ripped off by the plethora of shady providers out there.

Advertising works on different levels; it’s not as simple as trying to get someone to buy something. Over the last decade of content, search, and social marketing, I believe companies are becoming keener to the fact that advertising needs to be much deeper than manipulating a consumers’ insecurities. Targeted advertising to consumers who are similar to your audience increases profitability by acquiring and keeping great customers.

Why Use Advertising?

The basis for all advertising is simply awareness. Awareness is desirable to companies for a few reasons:

How Does Advertising Work?

Businesses and consumers alike are looking to improve the quality of life and efficiency of their businesses. While a small portion of the population may have insecurities that advertising capitalizes on, I believe that’s minimal. In my opinion, the majority of network marketing and multi-level marketing enterprises work in this arena. Have you ever been invited to one of these events? They’re massive celebrations of happy people paraded around the stage with promises of big checks, vacations, and even cars to persuade the guests to invest and begin selling for them. Vemma, an energy drink MLM, was temporarily shut down as a pyramid scheme.

While that’s extreme, it’s not the norm. Watch a typical Apple advertisement and you won’t see discounting and get rich quick schemes. Instead, you’ll watch stories of people unleashing their inner creativity utilizing Apple devices and software as tools. Observe Coca-Cola’s advertising and you’ll see a focus on the events and venues they advertise at, trying to build brand awareness where happy memories happen. Of recent, they’ve also had to work on the perception of sweet drinks and the health risks that arise.

Some advertising works on the motivation to save money (discounts), but there are many other reasons why advertising works:

And Let’s Not Forget

If the evil goal of advertising was to motivate a sale, the vast majority doesn’t work at all. If advertising were that sinister and manipulative, we’d all be running to Mcdonald’s to spend time with family and a box of McNuggets! Advertising is expensive and, more often than not, is a to change perceptions and increase awareness. Advertising, like many other marketing strategies, is a long-term strategy that has quite a bit of risk associated with it.

How Advertising Makes Us Buy?

I’m not questioning the tactics documented in this infographic, I’m questioning the motivation. Advertising isn’t there to trick or scare someone into buying. Advertising must tap into emotion for greater effect – but that doesn’t mean it’s manipulative… it means it’s relevant. Perhaps I’d feel more comfortable if the title was How Advertising Motivates Us to Buy. I’ve never seen an ad that forced me to click, but I have seen some ads that tapped directly into my needs that I clicked on.

So instead, advertisers have created a tried-and-true arsenal of different techniques that are all aimed at getting consumer attention. And even if we don’t realize it all the time, these strategies all work exceptionally well.

Here’s the infographic that I’m critical of from WebFX.

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