Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Advertising Impacts Your Choices More Than You Think


What made you choose to stop at Tim Horton’s this morning? (Yes, I said “choose to” because although you may think it’s just a normal part of your day, it is a choice.)  What made you by that particular box of hair dye or lipstick?  Think for a second about how much advertising really affects your daily purchases without  you even realizing it.

Let’s try an experiment.  Turn off your TV, radio and internet for a month.  Don’t look at a magazine, newspaper or any form of media for that time.  I doubt very many people could that for even a day, let alone a week or a month, or God forbid… a year!!

I’ve been doing a lot of family history research lately and I’m fascinated at how my ancestors lived their lives.  And as my hometown, the City of Timmins celebrates its hundredth anniversary this year, I’ve been interested in how people lived during that time.  A hundred years ago, my grandfather was a 3 year old little boy growing up on a farm just outside of Brodhagen, Ontario.  At that time, he didn’t have a TV, a computer, magazines or video games.  His parents were farmers living away from any sort of “city life” with really only the radio to keep them up to speed with what was going on in the world.

They went into town when it was necessary to buy what they needed.  That was it.  But, of course, once at the store, the manufacturers had their own “advertising”, like packaging to entice you to buy their product over another.  The store owner could have been having a sale, maybe to get rid of old product.  But unless my great-grandparents went into the store in the first place, they weren’t aware of the different products that were available or any sales that might be happening.  And if it wasn’t in the budget, they just didn’t buy it.

My great grandparents were not educated people.  In fact, even my grandfather only had a great eight education.  But even, today, with so many of us being much more highly educated, we’re not even fully aware of all the marketing activities companies do to entice us into buying their products.  That takes me back to our experiment.  If you lived like my great-grandparents did a hundred years ago, with limited access to media, how would your purchase decisions be different from how they are now?  Would you spend less?  Of course, this is only hypothetical because as we all know we can’t fully escape advertising.  But then again, do we even want to?
http://www.s-b-m-s.ca/

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