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Leadership Style
Leadership Style
Leadership approaches and theories
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A Comparison of Two Advertisements I am going to compare the two advertisements l have been given, one is 'Save the children' and one is 'Barnardo's'. The points I am going to discuss are logo and contact information, slogan use of emotive language, use of repetition, pictures, use of 'you', message, appeal and target audience. The logo in the 'Save the Children' leaflet is the upper half of a body reaching upwards. It is encircled by a thick line with a gap before it reaches the body. The contact information is not clearly seen, it is in small print, in white writing, against a grey background below one of the logos and slogans. It is in a clear font style and states all of the necessary information. It includes the 'Registered Charity Number'. The logo is usually blood red on either a grey, white or black background. It is placed a lot throughout the leaflet but on the last page it is placed next to the contact information in a clear place so that the contact information follows the solution having a bigger impact on YOU making a donation. The logo on the 'Barnardo's' advertisement only appears once. It is three people holding hands; they are positioned so that they look like they are running. Two of them are bigger than the middle one, which looks as if it is running and being lifted by the adults. It looks as if the one having fun and as it they are free. It is in a light colour, most probably white (I have a black & white copy) and the background is black. The contact information is clearly stated in an 'easy read' font size and it is strategically placed at the bottom of the page so you see it last and it becomes the last thing on your mind so you remember it. The contact information is clearly stated in an 'easy read' font size and it is also placed at the bottom of the page. The sentence 'Make a donation' is placed just before the phone number.
A Comparison of Two Advertisements I am going to compare two advertisements which I took from the magazine 'Marie Claire.' 'Marie Claire's target audience is young, sophisticated women, aged 18-30s. In the magazine, there is lots about fashion, beauty, relationships and general women's issues. I have chosen two different advertisements to compare. Both advertisements have very different, effective persuasive techniques which I am going to discuss. I am going to begin by describing the
A Comparison of Two Advertisements I have looked at 2 advertisements, one is from 'Sugar' magazine and the other from 'Style' magazine. The advertisement from Sugar, is for 'L'Oreal Paris Colour Pulse Hair Dye'; the advertisement from Style is for 'Clinique Autumn 2004 close up on lips: modern metallics'. All advertisements are aimed at specific target audiences and as such require different ideas, linguistic devices and presentational features to attract them. The two advertisements I
Comparison of Two Advertisements First of all, I will look at the history of advertising. Most historians believe that the first adverts were signs hung above shop doors in Babylon, now Iraq. This was as early as 3000 B.C. Many people could not read, so these early adverts were often symbols, for example a boot indicated a shoemakers shop. The first mass advertisement in Britain was in about 1472, after Johannes Gutenburg had invented movable type. It was a poster advertising the sale
A Comparison of Two Advertisements Advertising is a tool used by businesses to inform us about their products and to persuade us to buy them. Advertisements are all around us: on billboards, in magazines, in newspapers, on the Internet, on airplanes, in shop windows, on posters and banners, on leaflets and so on. Advertisements attempt to persuade the subconscious that our lives would be improved if we bought the product on offer. Advertisements affect our lives because we see a product
A Comparison of Two Advertisements In the Persil advert there is a woman that covers more than eighty percent of the A4 page. The whole of the advertisement follows a yellow theme. At the bottom right hand corner, there is the products picture- a box of washing up tablets, but this is small in comparison to the size of the woman. There is some writing, which suggests that if you use this brand of washing tablets help to keep your skin soft. We can tell that she is married because she is
A Comparison of Two Advertisements Introduction Advertising and media are part of everybody’s everyday life, with or without them realizing. Each day we see adverts on the television showing us new lifestyles that look glamorous, we hear adverts on the radio, we see slogans emblazoned on people’s clothes, on the side of buses, on billboards, everywhere!! Big companies know that they need to make their product appeal to as many ‘niche markets’ as possible and they do this by ‘audience
A Comparison of Two Advertisements Advertisements are messages that are intended to influence and persuade their audience. Their purpose is to raise awareness of the existence of their product in the people whom they target and to promote the benefits of buying or using it. Adverts are paid for by the advertisers and is a major source of income for magazines - approximately 40% of revenues. Without money from advertising, much of the modern media would not exist. Therefore advertising
A Comparison of Two Advertisements The female advert could be aimed at middle aged women. This is because it is not showing a really young person in the mirror such as a teenager, and it looks like someone in their mid-twenties or early thirties. This might make it less appealing to younger people, because it does not have the “fun factor” such as funky designs. The male advert could be targeting an age group between 18 and 30 but older people possibly will be tempted to purchase the product,
A Comparison of Two Print Advertisements For this advertisement I will be analyzing and comparing two recent advertisements selling similar products from the same company. They are both advertising Nokia mobile phones. The first advertisement I shall be analyzing appeared in November 2004 from a Campus a popular university newspaper. The commercial that I will be comparing the first one to, comes from a business magazine entitled Arabian Business and appeared in December 2004. In fact, the
A Comparison of Two Television Advertisements Television is the most important medium for advertising, and advertising is a vital component of traditional TV business models. It has always been difficult to assess the benefits of TV advertising as advertisers have traditionally had only a vague idea of who may have seen a particular advert and the actual impact on them. However, they can try and target an audience specifically e.g. time, channel of advert, etc. Most channels gain over 50%
A Comparison of Two Sets of Media Advertisements For this media assignment I have chosen two adverts that are promoting similar places, I have particularly chosen to focus no print media rather than film media as I feel I am more experienced in analysing them. Also the number of adverts that we are subjected to are mostly in print than moving adverts. Places are advertising similar leisure and entertainment places, one is an aquarium and the other is an interactive leisure complex. I
A Comparison of the Representation of Charities in Two Different Television Advertisements An advert is usually used to promote or sell a product. The two adverts I will be analyzing are different as they are not trying to sell something, but they are trying to promote their charities. In this essay I will compare how they represent their charities. Both adverts were shown during a soap opera before the watershed period so they attract different audiences. The National society of prevention
A Comparison of Two Car Advertisements: Ford Focus and Renault Megane Advertising is a way of life and like it or not advertisements are going no where. What ever you do there will be some kind of advertising near by. For example, listening to the radio on the way to work is a way of advertising as advertisers use the radio as a common way to advertise. Some people take notice of these advertisements where as others believe they should be scrapped. In this essay I am going to compare to
dimensions. These dimensions relate to the type and objective of comparison, claims of superiority over or parity with the competitor, the kind of products that use comparative advertising, whether the comparisons are made with single/multiple competitor(s), the valence of comparison, and whether dominant or weak market share brands use comparative advertising more often. a) Type of Comparison (Direct/Indirect): In direct comparative advertisements, commercials will specify a competing brand or product by
through misidentification of brands named in the advertisements. Such unscrupulous activities could tarnish the image of the advertising industry in general, putting the credibility and future of advertising at stake. Critics also argued that this would lead to competitive brands coming out with comparative advertisements of their own, thereby producing a ‘boomerang’ effect. Many of them could take the legal route to pull competitor advertisements off the screen, leading to long and protracted public