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Truth, in the end is nothing more than an advertising commodity!Submitted by paul.ashby@yahoo.com Wed, 18 Jul 2007
And once again it is T.V. that confirms the fact!
Channel 4 has admotted there is something very fishy about the "The F word", the food show starring Gordon Ramsey. To cut a very long story short, Ramsey didn't catch all those fish that the programme claimed, and then showed that he did. The revelations are galling for channel 4. It was rebuked for attempting to cover up a racist incident. Another incident resulted in it being fined £150,000 for encouraging viewers to call a premium rate phone number after a contest winner had been chosen. The food show is the latest blow to the creditability of the television industry. And that on top of the BBC's very embarrassing recent gaffe over the Queen! OK, so why this article in the marketing section? Well please consider this, at the moment, rightly or wrongly, television is the main medium for the advertising industry. And you must admit that no advertisement is an island! If the television industry is losing the trust and faith of its audience, some of that has to rub off and affect the effectiveness of all those expensively produced TV commercials being aired! Is it not time the advertising industry attempted to clean up the television industry? After all these stations would not exist at all if it weren't for the huge profits generated by advertising. Maybe, just maybe, consumers are becoming weary of all th dishonesty and poor quality content emanating from the television industry and returning to the cinema for their better quality entertainment. Cinemas are reporting rcord figures at the box office thanks to big increases in attendance by the over-45s. The number of people aged 45 and over attending the cinema has doubled, despite the availability of DVDs and other forms of home entertainment. Previously experts predicted that high street cinemas would be in financial tatters by 2010. The arrival of DVDs, giand television screens and internet technology apparently signelled the end of the movies. Yet again the experts were wrong! It would seem that the taste for thinking cinema appeals to a better-educated audience with a lot of disposable income - just right for the advertisers. Now we all want is for the advertising industry to grasp a better understanding of the word "communication" and to start producing better quality advertisements written and produced for a better educated audience and then, perhaps, just perhaps, Clients would get some value for their money! Better still, if they started developing genuine interactive advertisements, then those porr, long suffering Clients could, substantially, reduce their heavy marketing investment and reap the benefits of totally accountable marketing communication...not that really would be something! Research published recently by Beyond Philosophy, a UK company specialising in customer attitudes, claims 82) trust retailers or manufacturers, while just 14% trust either the government or advertisers! About the Author
Paul pioneered interactive communication to the advertising/marketing community. He guarantees to be able to halve your marketing budget and be substantially more effective in all key marketing measurements including sales!He has produced events in Australia,Japan,The USA & The UK in addition he wrote and produced the worlds first Interactive Television Gameshow on Channel 7, Manila, the show was sponsored by P&G.
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