Media trend match

The author argues that there is an increasing need for qualitative criteria for media selection in advertising. A number of guidelines for qualitative media selection are proposed and illustrated by an explica. tion of Media Trend Match, a media selection system which has been developed in South Af...

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Main Author: Clive Corder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Johannesburg 2022-11-01
Series:Communicare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2189
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author Clive Corder
author_facet Clive Corder
author_sort Clive Corder
collection DOAJ
description The author argues that there is an increasing need for qualitative criteria for media selection in advertising. A number of guidelines for qualitative media selection are proposed and illustrated by an explica. tion of Media Trend Match, a media selection system which has been developed in South Africa. A large number of factors are taken into account in media selection for advertising. Most of these factors can be expressed in quantitative terms, for example circulation figures, incidence of radio and TV sets, coverage, cumulative reach and frequency over a stated time period, and audience composition in terms of demographics and user group categories. Other quantitative factors, such as page readership, Starch and DART scores, and thoroughness of reading and viewing, may be considered. Much less attention is, however, paid to qualitative factors, and these are usually evaluated subjectively. The qualitative aspects involved in determinants of media selection should not be underestimated. While most advertisers and media users seem to recognise that the medium can have a considerable influence over the ways m which a message is interpreted, limited interest is nevertheless paid to the psychological characteristics of media audien- ces. In a recently published paper, Caffyn (1980) noted that the use of statistically reliable measures of social attributes to describe people, is a useful and perhaps even a necessary way of distinguishing between various media exposure groups. But even when this is recognised as important, very little qualitative data, on which media selection deci- sions could logically be based, is presently available. Media Trend Match, a system which has been developed in South Africa, can provide guidelines for qualitative media selection. The present paper is a brief description of Media Trend Match
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spelling doaj-art-f31935b1bbc2477ab5de33e35e2843cc2025-01-20T08:42:20ZengUniversity of JohannesburgCommunicare0259-00692957-79502022-11-012110.36615/jcsa.v2i1.2189Media trend matchClive Corder0Market Research Africa The author argues that there is an increasing need for qualitative criteria for media selection in advertising. A number of guidelines for qualitative media selection are proposed and illustrated by an explica. tion of Media Trend Match, a media selection system which has been developed in South Africa. A large number of factors are taken into account in media selection for advertising. Most of these factors can be expressed in quantitative terms, for example circulation figures, incidence of radio and TV sets, coverage, cumulative reach and frequency over a stated time period, and audience composition in terms of demographics and user group categories. Other quantitative factors, such as page readership, Starch and DART scores, and thoroughness of reading and viewing, may be considered. Much less attention is, however, paid to qualitative factors, and these are usually evaluated subjectively. The qualitative aspects involved in determinants of media selection should not be underestimated. While most advertisers and media users seem to recognise that the medium can have a considerable influence over the ways m which a message is interpreted, limited interest is nevertheless paid to the psychological characteristics of media audien- ces. In a recently published paper, Caffyn (1980) noted that the use of statistically reliable measures of social attributes to describe people, is a useful and perhaps even a necessary way of distinguishing between various media exposure groups. But even when this is recognised as important, very little qualitative data, on which media selection deci- sions could logically be based, is presently available. Media Trend Match, a system which has been developed in South Africa, can provide guidelines for qualitative media selection. The present paper is a brief description of Media Trend Match https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2189media selection in advertisingqualitative mediaMedia Trend MatchSouth Africaquantitative termsStarch and DART scores
spellingShingle Clive Corder
Media trend match
Communicare
media selection in advertising
qualitative media
Media Trend Match
South Africa
quantitative terms
Starch and DART scores
title Media trend match
title_full Media trend match
title_fullStr Media trend match
title_full_unstemmed Media trend match
title_short Media trend match
title_sort media trend match
topic media selection in advertising
qualitative media
Media Trend Match
South Africa
quantitative terms
Starch and DART scores
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2189
work_keys_str_mv AT clivecorder mediatrendmatch