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Subject: AEJ 95 HeimanS ADV Globalize advertising curriculum with trip
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Sun, 4 Feb 1996 15:08:18 EST
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Don't Settle for the Next Best Thing to Being There:
Globalize Your Advertising Curriculum
with an International Trip
 
A Paper for the
Teaching Standards Competition
Research in Brief
 
 
Submitted By
Suzette Heiman
University of Missouri
School of Journalism
P.O. Box 838
Columbia, MO 65205
314-882-6771
 
 
 
Abstract
 
 
        Videos, guest speakers and case studies are all excellent ways to
 
        familiarize your students with how advertising is managed in other
 
        cultures, but they are no substitute for experiencing international
 
         advertising firsthand. This paper discusses an international
advertising
 
            seminar offered by a large Midwestern university. Agencies and
clients
 
            in three cities, New York, Amsterdam and London, were visited during
the
 
            break between the fall and spring semesters.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Don't Settle for the Next Best Thing to Being There:
Globalize Your Advertising Curriculum
with an International Trip
 
 
        Videos, guest speakers and case studies are all excellent ways to
 
        familiarize your students with how advertising is managed in other
 
        cultures, but they are no substitute for experiencing international
 
         advertising firsthand. Sponsoring an international advertising seminar
 
            can help your students not only identify the similarities and the
 
       differences of various campaigns and discuss their rationale with those
 
            who created them, but also help agencies become familiar with your
 
        program and the quality of your students. An added benefit is the
 
       opportunity to strengthen ties with alumni.
        International advertising is growing in importance. An article in the
 
            March 20, 1995 issue of Advertising Age International reports that
 
        worldwide advertising spending was up in 1994 and is expected to rise
 
           this year. The explosive growth of new free market economies in
Eastern
 
            Europe, South Africa and Russia is fueling advertising growth in
these
 
            areas, among others. Editorial content of this publication
consistently
 
            discusses the problems and opportunities when United States brands
are
 
            expanded into established and emerging international markets.
        The Journal of Advertising devoted the entire March 1994 issue to the
 
            subject of international advertising. The effects of the country's
 
        culture, language, laws and market conditions on advertising were among
 
            the issues studied by researchers. The general consensus was that
global
 
            markets are not homogeneous and that advertising must be tailored to
its
 
            intended audience. This breakdown can not only occur on a
            country-by-country basis, but also within different areas of the
same
 
           country.
        Thus, it is of critical importance that today's advertising students
 
           understand issues related to international advertising. The
likelihood
 
            of them working in an advertising agency or with a client seeking to
 
          build or to increase a global presence is high and a challenge they
must
 
            be prepared to meet.
        This paper discusses an international advertising seminar offered by a
 
            large Midwestern university. Agencies and clients in three cities,
New
 
            York, Amsterdam and London, were visited during the break between
the
 
           fall and spring semesters.
 
Planning
        The idea for the international advertising seminar originated with two
 
            alumni who were lunching in New York. They shared with each other
how
 
           much they would like to help the students at their alma mater learn
more
 
            about the advertising business, but how distance made it difficult
to do
 
            this. One thought led to another and soon they found themselves
 
     outlining a trip. The overall goal would be to select multinational
 
         accounts and visit their advertising agencies on both sides of the
 
        Atlantic.
        Regardless of how the idea for an international seminar originates, the
 
            following steps provide an outline for planning an activity of this
 
         nature.
        Step One: Identify learning outcomes for an international advertising
 
            seminar. Knowing what you want to accomplish will help you evaluate
the
 
            value of the many options you will have during your planning. Our
 
       learning outcomes were three-fold:
y To gain a clearer understanding on the branding of products on a
 
             domestic and an international level by visiting advertising
agencies,
 
                attending presentations and participating in seminars on the
various
 
               brands that those agencies represented;
y To identify strategic and tactical differences between advertising
 
               developed in New York and advertising developed in Amsterdam and
London;
 
                 and,
y To highlight research opportunities for students interested in
 
           multinational advertising.
        Step Two: Generate a rough overview of the trip: dates, cities to
 
        visit, cost, accounts to review. Leave room for flexibility to allow
 
          yourself to take advantage of opportunities that will arise as you
 
        continue planning.
        Step Three: Enlist the support of your school's administration.
 
      Identify how this trip will help your department, school and university
 
            achieve its goals.
        Step Four: Determine the interest of students. You could use existing
 
            organizations such as the Ad Club to conduct a survey, or you could
 
         organize a meeting to poll them. While interest may be high, not all
 
          students will be able to afford the trip. But, don't underestimate the
 
            power of students to find money for something they would really like
to
 
            do.
        Step Five: Contact your alumni relations staff to learn of any
 
     graduates who might be working in international advertising. Select
 
         several names and telephone them to assess their interest in
 
  coordinating your visits for that city. Ask for their suggestions
 
       regarding alumni to contact in other cities or interesting international
 
            advertising campaigns to study.
        Step Six: Work with alumni and others to contact potential agencies and
 
            determine your itinerary.
        Step Seven: Assign to the students agencies and accounts to research.
 
            Share findings with other seminar participants.
 
 The International Advertising Seminar
Day One: Opening Luncheon - New York
        Overview: An editor from International Advertising Age and a
 
   representative from the International Advertising Association provided
 
            an overview of what they felt students would experience during the
 
        seminar.
        Key points included: (1) Obvious and subtle cultural differences exist
 
            between the United States and other countries. Advertising must
reflect
 
            the culture of the targeted country. (2) Growth is occurring in
various
 
            geographic areas. Advertising must coincide with this trend.
(3) Research plays a major role in determining how multinational brands
 
            need to be introduced and promoted to an individual country.
        Students were advised to accept the practices, attitudes and other
 
         aspects of another country, recognizing their importance in what makes
 
            that country's culture unique and special.
 
Day Two: Wunderman Cato Johnson - New York
        Overview: The role and impact of direct marketing in an integrated
 
         marketing communications was discussed, using AT&T World Plus program
as
 
            an example.
        Key points included: (1) Direct response is any communication with a
 
           call to action. (2) The line between what is considered traditional
 
         advertising and direct response has been blurred. (3) Without strong
 
          branding through advertising, direct response cannot be successful.
(4)
 
            Direct response has the ability to eliminate waste circulation in
mass
 
            media and to truly concentrate a campaign's resources on the best
 
       prospects.
        Students were advised to think beyond traditional advertising in
 
       campaign development and to include direct response.
 
Day Two: Young & Rubicam - New York
        Overview: Agency officials presented the "Zero Cavities" campaign for
 
            three different markets: Latin America, India and Europe.
        Key points included: (1) While the same positioning strategy may be
 
          used to reach consumer segments with similar attitudes and values in
 
          different areas of the world, the creative execution of that strategy
 
           needs to be tailored to each market. (2) Research is essential to
 
       determined a market's perception of a brand and its competition.
        Students were advised to learn more about efficient brand marketing
 
          across the globe and to integrate more research into a campaign's
 
       strategic direction and creative execution.
 
Day Two: BBDO - New York
        Overview: Agency officials discussed how PepsiCo products are
 
    advertised on a domestic level.
        Key points included: (1) Stick with advertising that has worked for
 
          you. Pepsi alienated their younger audience with ads that resembled
 
         Coke's feel-good commercials. They later returned to their successful
 
           niche of the "young have fun" theme. (2) Product endorsement by
 
     celebrities can be a very successful advertising tool and is one PepsiCo
 
            has used for more than 30 years. Two celebrities PepsiCo has used,
 
        Michael Jackson and Madonna, have global appeal.
        Students were advised to thoroughly analyze research and other critical
 
            information before changing a campaign's strategy.
 
Day Three: KLM Airlines, PMSvW/Y&R - Amsterdam
        Overview: The importance of brands and branding and the development of
 
            a consistent corporate identity for KLM Airlines was discussed.
        Key points included: (1) A company's most important function is to
 
         serve its customers. One way to communicate this goal is through the
 
          development of a service-oriented corporate identity. (2) Corporate
 
         identity must be visible, coherent, consistent, recognizable and
 
      memorable. (3) Consistent house style design is one of the critical
 
         tools in the development of a corporate identity. This style must be
 
          flexible enough to withstand a multitude of applications over a long
 
          period of time and changing market conditions. (4) The perception a
 
         customer has of your company is the only element that matters.
        Students were advised to truly understand the value of the brand,
 
        recognizing that a brand name is a direct reflection of a company's
 
         reputation and that it influences it long- and short-term ability to
 
          compete in the marketplace.
 
Day Four: BBDO/Abbot Mead Vickers - London
        Overview: The advertising strategies and tactics of PepsiMax (a
 
      mid-calorie cola targeted at males in Canada and Europe and now being
 
           tested in the United States as Pepsi XL) in the United Kingdom and
 
        Europe were discussed.
        Key points included: (1) Companies often cannibalize their own lines in
 
            order not to lose market share to a competitor. (2) The creative
concept
 
            of a campaign used in one country can be adapted for use in another.
 
          PepsiMax Europe utilized the concept in the diet Mountain Dew
 
   commercials shown in the United States. (3) Not all new products are
 
          introduced in the United States before expanding to other countries.
        Students were advised to understand the particular niche a new product
 
            is expected to fill in a product line and a product category.
 
Day Four: Howell, Henry, Chaldecott, Lury & Partners - London
        Overview: Today's marketplace is characterized by over-communication,
 
            market saturation and hyper-competition. For an advertiser to be
 
      successful, a holistic, multidimensional approach must be utilized.
        Key points included: (1) Today's advertising climate makes for strange
 
            bedfellows. Witness Mercedes and Swatch, IBM and Apple, among
others.
 
           (2) Research is key, and should be used for illumination as well as
for
 
            support. (3) For an advertiser to successfully target its customers,
 
          database marketing must be utilized. Sweepstakes are good
list-builders.
        Students were advised to make advertising one part of their lives
 
        rather than their life. They should spend time with their families,
 
         travel, read and do other activities they enjoy. This agency's
employees
 
            regularly go home without work between 5-6 p.m. and rarely pull
 
     all-nighters. Howell, Henry, Chaldecott, Lury & Partners was voted
 
        Agency of the Year in the United Kingdom for 1994 and was named London's
 
            best place to work in 1993.
 
Day Five: The Daily Telegraph and West Ferry Printers
        Overview: This session compared and contrasted newspapers in the United
 
            States and the United Kingdom.
        Key points included: (1) The United Kingdom media is based on
 
    newspapers, reaching 75 percent of the population, while the United
 
         States is more dependent on electronic media and direct response.
(2) Deadlines are extremely important. A delay of an hour during a
 
        pre-production step multiplies itself during the production schedule.
 
           This has the potential to impact circulation guarantees and
 
 distribution.
(3) Automation in the printing press has reduced the number of people
 
           required to produce the final newspaper product.
        Students were advised to understand the role of various media in
 
       individual countries and to use this knowledge in selecting appropriate
 
            communications vehicles for news and advertising.
 
Day Five: Young and Rubicam - London
        Overview: This presentation explained how Colgate brands itself
 
      domestically through advertising campaigns, strategy and media, and how
 
            this differs from the worldwide approach.
        Key points included: (1) In managing a brand, the company and
 
    advertising agency must have a sense of the four primary pillars of
 
         brand growth: familiarity, esteem, relevance and differentiation. (2)
 
           Brand decline is not inevitable. A product can rejuvenate itself and
 
          revert the declining life cycle.
        Students were advised to study the position of the brand and to use
 
          this as a framework for understanding where the brand stands in the
eyes
 
            of the consumer.
 
Major Themes Stressed by the Agencies
        Certain themes were stressed throughout the week by all agencies and
 
           clients.
        The Value of the Brand Is Paramount
        Winning strategies protect the brand. A brand is not a one-time
 
      purchase, but rather a history of experiences. Brands offer
 
 opportunities for relationships that go well beyond the actual product
 
            or service, with Disneyworld, My First Sony and Chicago's Niketown
being
 
            examples.
        Research Is Essential
        Research is critical at all stages of campaign development. While it
 
           can guide and justify certain decisions, perhaps research's greatest
 
          asset is in identifying challenges and opportunities before they
emerge.
 
            Agencies that can deliver and interpret this kind of information
will
 
           always find their services in demand.
                Global Advertising Is a Myth
        While a brand may be advertised in many different parts of the world,
 
            the strategy, execution and audience will probably be different for
 
         every country and sometimes areas of those countries. The key is to
 
         understand the customers' needs for interaction and involvement and to
 
            develop strategies to maximize this.
        Advertising Must Be Open to a Holistic Approach
        The old way of doing advertising won't work in today's market: It's
 
          one-way communication, too impersonal and has limited responsiveness.
 
           Advertising agencies that survive will espouse integrated thinking,
 
         allowing them to be competitive, innovative, anticipatory,
collaborative
 
            and accountable. Reimbursement systems may have to be adapted to
 
      accommodate the use of numerous communication tools.
 
Evaluation
        All goals were met. Agencies and clients generously gave of their time
 
            and expertise. Multinational accounts were studied, case studies
were
 
           presented, agencies' and clients' offices were visited.
        Students were taught by the masters of advertising: presidents and
 
         heads of top agencies, worldwide creative directors, international
media
 
            planners and senior vice presidents.
        The hospitality was warm and sincere. Refreshments were served and the
 
            students received several gifts.
        Students spent approximately $1,100 for the international advertising
 
            seminar. Approximately half of this cost was for airfare.
        Promotion of the international advertising seminar is underway in the
 
            university's and school's alumni publications.
 Using the International Seminar in the Classroom
        An international advertising seminar will provide the accompanying
 
         faculty member with many materials to use in the classroom. These
 
       materials have multiplied the number of students who have benefited from
 
            the lessons learned on the trip.
        Agencies and clients generously shared their presentation materials.
 
           Audiovisual aides used in the presentations and case studies such as
 
          overhead transparencies, tapes of advertising examples, planning
 
      documents and research were given to the faculty member. These have
 
         numerous classroom applications from the formal presentation of
 
     international case studies to anecdotal examples of various points.
        The faculty member also had the opportunity to personally meet and
 
         visit with agency executives and clients. These contacts have proven
 
          valuable in securing additional advertising tapes for classroom use
and
 
            in providing information about current campaigns.
 
Some Other Lessons Learned
        y Keep your group size to about 12 people. You will fit into most
 
        meeting rooms, be able to stay together when walking and can
 
  economically share a few taxis.
        y Offer only one option for travel and other arrangements. It's amazing
 
            how many special requests you may receive from asking to stay at
 
      friends' apartments to save lodging costs to wanting to take an
 
     afternoon off to see long lost relatives. Denying such requests keeps y
 
            ou from being a travel agent, maintains your sanity and helps you
stay
 
            focused on the original goals.
        y Review tipping practices with the students. Most haven't much
 
      experience in this area.
        y Build in some free time. Our schedule did not allow for sightseeing
 
            and other tourist activities, and, in retrospect, it should have.
The
 
           hesitancy was three-fold: our desire to maximize the student's
exposure
 
            to international advertising; each day's meals and lodging cost
about
 
           $100; and the spring semester started two days after we returned
home.
        y Take some university gifts such as mugs and sweatshirts with you to
 
            give to the presenters.
        y If your trip will take place in early January, remember that most
 
          advertising agencies close between Christmas and New Year's Day. This
 
           could cause problems if you are trying to make final arrangements or
to
 
            confirm your meetings.
 
Future Trips
        Once the trip has been evaluated, the faculty should make a decision
 
           about future international trips. Some issues to be explored include
new
 
            locations, accounts to be studied, frequency, alumni to be involved
and
 
            timeframe.
        This seminar also helped identify other ways students could be exposed
 
            to international advertising. Obviously a trip overseas has a
built-in
 
            excitement factor not matched by these other methods. But, if the
goal
 
            is to increase your students' familiarization with multinational
 
      accounts, consider these less expensive alternatives.
        Guest speakers from advertising agencies or clients with an
 
  international scope could visit your classes and present case studies.
 
            An evening or weekend seminar would provide additional time for
in-depth
 
            discussion.
        A day trip to an advertising agency within driving distance or a
2-3 day trip to a regional site would allow students to personally visit
 
            the agencies' and clients' offices, meet those who have worked on
the
 
           campaigns and attend presentations for a variety of multinational
 
       accounts.
        Students could do case studies of international campaigns. A key
 
       component of such an assignment would be research on the country's
 
        people, laws, language(s) and customs. This would complement the actual
 
            presentation and discussion of the advertising campaign.

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