campaign advertisements

(noun)

Television ads sponsored by political campaigns to reach broad audiences and convince the masses to vote for the sponsoring candidate.

Related Terms

  • social media

Examples of campaign advertisements in the following topics:

  • Campaigning: Traditional Media, New Media, and Campaign Advertisements

    • Engaging with the media is an essential part of any presidential campaign.
    • Throughout the history of American elections, journalists have followed candidates as they advertised their positions, gave speeches, and visited American towns.
    • Campaign journalism has developed with the times.
    • The campaign relied heavily on social media to engage voters, recruit campaign volunteers and raise funds.
    • But even with the rise of new media, campaigns continue to spend hundreds of millions of dollars buying air time on television networks to put on campaign advertisements.
  • Defining Campaign Objectives

    • The hierarchy-of-effects model clarifies the objectives of an advertising campaign and each individual advertisement.
    • In this case, the objective of the advertising campaign would be to build consumer preference by promoting the quality of the water.
    • It clarifies the objectives of an advertising campaign and for each individual advertisement.
    • Even though it is just one of several theoretical frameworks that is useful in developing an advertisement for an advertising campaign, it shows clear steps of how advertising works.
    • If the unfavorable view is based on real problems, a communication campaign alone cannot solve it.
  • Advertising

    • Facts, statistics, consumer images and scenarios are used to corroborate a campaign's premise.
    • A campaign must fit the image of the marketer to ensure that its public perception remains intact.
    • Its "aperture," or the proper timing and placement of an ad, can maximize a campaign's success.
    • The media plan is an integral part of the advertising campaign and is developed simultaneously with the creative strategy.
    • No longer is a product limited by the scope and time-frame of a conventional advertising campaign.
  • Political Advertisements

    • Political advertising is a form of campaigning used by political candidates to reach and influence voters.
    • Political advertising is a form of campaigning used by political candidates to reach and influence voters.
    • It can include several different mediums and span several months over the course of a political campaign.
    • One of the first negative political advertisements was titled "The Daisy Girl" and was released by Lyndon Johnson's campaign during the 1964 election.
    • Bush and Senator John Kerry's campaigns, and both campaigns hired firms who specialized in the accumulation of personal data.
  • Media Types and Scheduling

    • In terms of overall advertising expenditures, media advertising is dominated by press and TV.
    • Advertising runs steadily with little variation over a campaign period.
    • Program or plan that identifies the media channels used in an advertising campaign, and specifies insertion or broadcast dates, positions, and duration of the messages.
    • Series of commercials appear as a unified campaign on different media vehicles.
    • Compare the types of media and types of scheduling used in advertising campaigns
  • Types of Internet Advertising

    • Online advertisers can customize advertisements, making consumer targeting more efficient and precise.
    • Within the scope of Internet marketing, online advertising includes display advertising, affiliate marketing, search engine marketing (SEM), and mobile advertising.
    • Affiliate marketing is a form of online advertising where advertisers place campaigns with a potentially large number of publishers, who are only paid media fees when the advertiser receives web traffic.
    • Web traffic is usually based on a call-to-action or measurable campaign result such as a submitted web form or sale.
    • Social network advertising is a form of online advertising found on social networking sites such as Facebook.
  • Types of Advertising

    • Examples of online advertising include:
    • Press advertising describes advertising in a printed medium such as a newspaper, magazine, or trade journal.
    • In-store advertising is any advertisement placed in a retail store.
    • Street advertising first came to prominence in the UK by Street Advertising Services to create outdoor advertising on street furniture and pavements.
    • Celebrities are often involved in advertising campaigns such as television or print ads to advertise specific or general products.
  • Assembling a Campaign Staff

    • The campaign manager focuses mostly on coordinating the campaign staff.
    • Successful campaigns usually require a campaign manager to coordinate the campaign's operations.
    • Apart from a candidate, the campaign manger is often a campaign's most visible leader.
    • The communications department oversees both the press relations and advertising involved in promoting the campaign in the media.
    • This department must approve press releases, advertisements, phone scripts, and other forms of communication before they can be released to the public.
  • Trends in Advertising

    • Advertising spending as a share of GDP was about 2.9 percent.
    • By 1998, television and radio had become major advertising media.
    • This leads to ads that are more relevant to viewers and more effective for companies' marketing campaigns.
    • Particularly since the rise of "entertaining" advertising, some people may like an advertisement enough to wish to watch it later or show a friend.
    • Congress, campaigning with a Tennessee farmer.
  • Corporate Advertising

    • Advertising designed to win an audience over to a specific point of view is called institutional or corporate advertising.
    • Beyond the initial campaign to extend help to individuals harmed by the spill, BP used a series of corporate advertisements to highlight its environmental concerns, actions it would take, and how it would donate and support various causes to mitigate loss and prevent future disasters.
    • Such advertising is called institutional or corporate advertising.
    • How a company advertises projects that image.
    • Advocacy advertising is related to institutional advertising.
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