home page Home | Shopping Cart | Wish List | Search  

  Login    You have 0 item(s) in your Shopping Cart  
30-Day Preview On All Items!
Marketing, Media, Persuasion - Brand Marketing  
Search
Search:
Special Sections
 New And Revised!
 Leeds Animation
 Life Skills
 Magna Systems
 MyPyramid
 Posters
 Software
Browse By Subject
 Careers
 Child Development
 Clothing, Fashion, Fabrics
 Communication Skills
 Consumer Economics
 Design & Housing
 Food & Nutrition
 Guidance
 Marketing, Media, Persuasion
 Multicultural Topics
 Professional Development
Help
FAQ
Contact Us
Previews And Returns
Shipping Info
International Orders
Order Form
MARC Records
Digital Rights
previous | up | next
 
Brand Marketing  

 E-mail this product to a friend

Get the Flash Player to see this player.

Free Resource:
Teaching Guide (PDF)


Why We Eat, Drink, And Wear Brand Names

Are we branded for life? Branding is a revolution in marketing as well as a shift in how we view the world. Marketers create a world in which objects have personalities. One cannot understand youth culture, marketing, or our consumer society without an in-depth exploration of the power of brand names.

Use Brand Marketing for units in marketing, business education, advertising, persuasion, and consumer education. Learn about brand equity, brand and line extensions, co-branding, and celebrities as brands.


Learn:

- The power of brands
- How brands serve to bring things to life and change how we view the world.
- What is brand quality, brand extension, line extension, and co-branding.
- How celebrities establish themselves as brand names.
- Why brands have the power to shape our judgements and perception.

Runtime: 19 minutes

Copyright 2000 Learning Seed


DVD
SKU:LS-1244-00-DVD
Description:ISBN: 1-55740-938-2 Closed Captioned
Weight:1 lbs.
Price:$99.00

Quantity:   


VHS
SKU:LS-1244-00-VHS
Description:ISBN: 0-917159-04-7 Closed Captioned
Weight:1 lbs.
Price:$99.00

Quantity:   




Why Ads Work:

The most important words in advertising are the ones you don't see or hear. Ads are carefully crafted to allow viewers to deceive themselves.

Free Resource:
Teaching Guide (PDF)



The Power Of Self-Deception

The most important words in advertising are the ones you don't see or hear. Why Ads Work proposes that ads rarely lie, they merely allow plenty of room for self-deception. Ads use humor, drama, and entertainment because people being humored and entertained are not critical - they "suspend their disbelief." In short, they become the perfect consumer.

Why Ads Work will help your students reclaim their critical powers. Think of this video as a re-training of listening and reading skills. The technique is to focus on claims made by ads - the actual selling part that "claims" some benefits or value for the product.

Learn:

• How claims are devalued by small words or phrases such as up to, as much as, from, can, or fights. These phrases can completely change the meaning of a claim, yet most listeners fail to hear them. They see "works to fight wrinkles," but hear "prevents wrinkles."

• When "best" means "better" and "better" means "best". Why so many products can claim to be the best, the strongest, the most powerful, etc.

• The meaning of puffery and the difference between facts and opinions.

• The "magic" of Water is Wet claims. These are claims true for all brands but phrased in such a way as to make it sound unique and exciting.


Runtime: 21 minutes

Copyright 1996 Learning Seed



Why You Buy:

If your advertising videos were produced back in the 20th century, it's time to update and discover Why You Buy: 21st Century Advertising. Advertising once aimed to persuade or claim product superiority. But today's ads often make no claims for the product and use subtle tactics to get around our substantial defenses against commercial arm twisting.

Free Resource:
Teaching Guide (PDF)


21st Century Advertising

If your advertising videos were produced back in the 20th century, it's time to update and discover Why You Buy: 21st Century Advertising. Advertising once aimed to persuade or claim product superiority. But today's ads often make no claims for the product and use subtle tactics to get around our substantial defenses against commercial arm twisting.

This new video looks at person-to-person selling, direct mail, ads and emotions, and TV commercials to reveal how they sneak under our persuasion radar.

- Person to person selling: Watch a phone call in which an unsuspecting homeowner agrees to a sales call without realizing he a target of a pitchman.
- Direct mail advertising: Examine a bushel of "junk mail" in search of a sneaky sell.
- Television commercials: Learn that music and entertainment are disguises ads wear to bypass your persuasion barrier.
- Advertising tomorrow: Learn how the Internet can now integrate ads into programs.

Runtime: 23 minutes

Copyright 2002 Learning Seed


Home | Contact Us | Previews And Returns | Site Map | Copyright © 2005. All Rights Reserved.