How Advert Placement Influences its
Impact

If you've read The Secret of Selling you'll already know about the way in
which apparently peripheral elements can have a dramatic influence on consumer behaviour.
It all stems from the fact that the different areas of our brains get involved in shaping our behaviour in ways
that we don't always identify accurately. Something reaches part of the brain and triggers a response, whilst the
conscious mind is busily occupied elsewhere.
In much the same way that a magician uses our inability to focus on more than one thing at once to make the card
disappear, we're left oblivious to what's happened.
When it comes to advertising it's no surprise that the same principles come in to play. What's interesting is
the way in which some very basic 'logic' influences just how that unconscious influence occurs, and it's something
that is very useful for anyone involved in marketing communication to know.
You might think that, if you're advertising something it makes sense to have your advert placed near an article
that relates to the same subject. The associations from the article can be related to your product.
But it doesn't always work like that.
Researchers investigated how people responded to adverts whilst manipulating the difficulty of the article that
they encountered beforehand in a magazine.
What they discovered was that if the article was difficult to read (something they manipulated by the type and
size of font selected rather than the slightly more subjective adjustment of the content itself) then people
responded more favourably to a subsequent advert that was easy to process.

It seems that, in the context of the difficult article, the positive relief of being able to understand the ad
easily is inadvertently projected onto the advert.
But that's not all.
When the advert had a connection to the article of the content the ad was liked less even if it was easy to read
in comparison. The unconscious associations between the company and the difficult article cause the reader to like
the advertised product less too.
So if someone says, "You should advertise in my magazine because it is all about products like yours", you would
do well to check the editorial style first.
Similarly, if you have sales pages on-line, it's worth checking that it is as easy to read as possible.
Otherwise, by the time you introduce your product you may well find that potential customers are feeling less good
about whatever you're selling.
Source: Shen et al. Contrast and Assimilation Effects of Processing Fluency.
Journal of Consumer Research, 2009;
090820054939078
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