Preview

The Devices of Ads

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1102 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Devices of Ads
Alexus Neal
April 15, 2013
English 101
The Devices of Advertising
In his essay “With These Words I Can Sell You Anything” William Lutz informs readers about devices companies use to get people to buy their product. He explains many devices and techniques used in ads or commercials and how each of them work. There are many devices explained but there are 7 devices that are used most frequently. A dramatic claim uses a word and presents a dramatic claim after. Meaningless words are verbs that make it seem as if the product is performing an action. Undefined words leave customers to define words them self’s. Misdirection words cause consumer to focus on something bigger and better. Unfinished comparisons are statements that compare similar products without saying the name of that product. New and improved are two words that make consumers believe that the product is new but unfortunately it does not have to be to be advertised as new. Scientific words make consumers believe that there is science behind their product. I have watched some commercials after reading this essay and I have noticed what Lutz explains. Advertisers use a variety of weasel words to make customers believe that there product works.
For example, a recent ad for Nurofen Cold & Flu medicine begins with a woman sitting on her bed. She looks sick and her body is aching. The narrator begins “When you’re suffering with the aches, pains and congestion of cold and flu, it can be a real struggle” her day is going by and she is still sick and aching. The scene changes and Nurofen Cold and Flu box appears on the screen as the narrator speaks again “Introducing Nurofen Cold and Flu.” The scene changes back to the women and it shows her body and how the medicine targets the aching areas. The narrator says, “It’s dual action works with your body to target aches and pains and help clear nasal congestion” Now the women is smiling and helping her students as the narrator is talking “So to get on with

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Commercials often take their viewers to another world. As a rule, this world must imitate our own for any sense of understanding and purpose. Advertisers take advantage of this aspect of video storytelling to help people connect with their products and view them in ways which are desirable for the company. A myth is created around the product being advertised to position the item favorably in the consumer's mind. Two commercials which display examples of mythologizing products and our society are Slim Jim's, "Camouflage, and GM's, "Elevation."…

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He also stated that the claim that advertisers use are usually incomplete words and to make the ad more effective they provide influential visual images along with it. Sometimes different “weasel words” are joint or altered to make a tagline. Nowadays advertisers are using technological and scientific way to promote their product.…

    • 527 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    PHI445 Week2 Discussion 1

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In advertising today, there are many misconceptions and falsity in advertisements. We are exposed to countless commercial messages every day persuading us to buy brand name products, creating images for us to adopt, and convincing us that we need and want more. Because of this, it's important for us to carefully examine ads to determine exactly what they are saying. Advertisements can be very misleading and it is not fair to the consumer. Advertisers will make claims about their product or service to convince the consumer because consumers are influenced by advertisements urging them to purchase products that they may or may not need or want. While many of these advertisements honestly inform and educate consumers, some are false, deceptive, and even illegal.…

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Killing Us Softly

    • 467 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Sociology of Consumption: “Killing Us Softly” Course Code: AHSS 1050 “Killing Us Softly”, is a documentary that explains the effects of advertising. As mentioned in the video, on a daily basis we are exposed to nearly 1 500 ads a day, and it is evident not all the ads are watched, however they do manage to make it to the back of our heads. So even if we do not pay close attention to what the ad is saying, if the product that was being advertised comes in front of us we still manage to remember that we had seen the product advertisement earlier. The documentary takes a further look at the main reason why ads are made, and the conclusion made is that when products don’t sell, ads are made in the sense, telling their customers they need the product or else they are incomplete. I believe this is a general fact, everyone know that the main needs of any person are, some type of clothes to cover their body, food to eat, water to drink and some sort of shelter. However, when these ads are presented they create an urge in the sense the person believes that have to have the product being advertised. The example given in the documentary was of ageing creams. They are advertised in a way that older aged women feel they have to have the cream or else there is something wrong with them. Another example, is straightening irons, the traditional way of straightening hair is using a hair dryer, or any ordinary straightening iron sold at the store. However, there certain brands advertised in which people believe they are better which is not true. Even though all brands are the same, just because of the ad people believe one is better than the other and that is the only one they want. So when markets say ads sell more than product, concepts, thoughts and values, this is what they refer to. Overall, ads are made in the sense to tell their customers that the product being advertised is a need to them or else they are missing out on something and they are not normal. Many people do…

    • 467 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Holo Chef

    • 426 Words
    • 2 Pages

    1. This advertisement is targeted towards adults who can afford this luxury item, which is an item that isn’t necessary in order to live but it’s desirable to have. My motivator in this magazine ad is recognition. The price tag on this system is a bit hefty so it attracts those who can actually afford it, which are most likely people who have a successful career and can afford to blow off their money. The propaganda device I used is loaded words. “Innovative” appears a few times and I used it to further associate the word to a deeper/bigger meaning such as the newer age, ingenious, contemporary, etc. My persuasive device is logos because I’ve written unchanging facts. A literary device I used is an idiom, to refer that the Holo Chef system is so simple in design that it’s easy to use.…

    • 426 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Words That Work Outline

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This book by Dr. Frank Luntz is about how slight changes in vocabulary can, and do, have an effect on what the audience takes from a speech or written address. The author uses three main points to bring his message to the reader. First, the main theme of this book is defined by the phrase, “It’s not what you say, it’s what people hear.” The author also introduces his set of “Ten Rules for Effective Communication” which serves as a set of guidelines to align the “what you say” and the “what people hear” aspects of the main theme. Thirdly, the author talks about advertisements that “stick” with consumers and why they are so memorable. Finally, to bolster these statements, the author gives numerous examples from his real world experiences.…

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Brand new!” “50 percent off!” Advertisements use slogans to catch people’s attention. People usually see the boom and bang of the item being sold to the consumers, but they do not see the minor details. These minor details sometimes hide what a person should actually see in an advertisement because a recent ad for a Hoover vacuum cleaner uses its background and the words of the ad to attract people to the item.…

    • 932 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Weasel Words

    • 1106 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Advertising is a way of producing commercials for products or services. In a fast paced world that we live in today, all types of information is thrown at us at an uncomfortable rate. On tablets, smartphones, computers, newspapers, radio and TV, we encounter ads for all kinds of products from a vast variety of large corporate companies almost every single day. In places like Manhattan, more specifically Times Square, there are a plethora of advertisements on grand billboards and on beautiful immersive screens that rest beside buildings. Ad’s have drastically increased since the turn of the twenty first century. Companies use clever tactics, such as weasel words and psychological tactics to differentiate them from other companies. Words like better, improved, new, fast and so forth play a deciding factor when buying a product, and it is up to the consumer to analyze the truth behind these words. In the article “With These Words I Can Sell You Anything” by William Luts, he states that “Advertisers use weasel words to appear to be making a claim for a product when in fact they are making no claim at all” (62). Companies want the consumer to feel the need to buy their products, as if it were drastically changing the person's life. Advertising is an effective method used by companies to promote their ideas through their…

    • 1106 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For example, oxiclean advertisements use a form of propaganda called “weasel words”; phrases like “new and improved”, “acts fast” and “like magic” make the product seem better than others. Using the phrase “acts fast” implies this product is faster than others. But what exactly does that mean? Does the product run fast, cook fast, drive fast? Advertisers don’t say what exactly the product does. Consumers just assume the product that “acts faster” is the best product. This oxiclean advertisement uses inflated language to mislead consumers. Inflated language is making ordinary seem extraordinary. To make everyday things seem impressive.…

    • 431 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Sleep Paper

    • 1412 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The economy is based on consumption and advertising is an indispensable motivator that persuades people to consume. Advertising is one of the biggest tools companies use to sell a product. Today if a product is not actively marketing, publicizing, or advertising itself the product will fail. It is essential for an advertisement to use rhetorical appeals to grab the viewer’s attention. Advertising can be so good that it can sell things to people using a picture alone. It is all in the eye of the beholder. So when I was flipping through the pages of Cosmopolitan magazine I stumble across an ad for ZzzQuil an - over - the counter sleeping aid. It was towards the middle of the magazine and it popped out like a huge billboard. The ad captures attention because the picture of the women sleeping looks so comfortable and makes peaceful sleep desirable and attainable. The ad shows a woman in her bedroom with her striped bedding sleeping in what appears to be a very deep sleep. She is lying face down, eyes shut, with mouth wide open in her bed with her curly hair pressed against the pillow and her arm dangling off the side of the bed. She is sleeping in her bed with a big caption saying “Because sleep is a beautiful thing” (“ZzzQuil”). The ad has amazing appeal and is a great attention grabber. The target audience is clear and defined and all three appeals are used well. The ZzzQuil advertisement is targeting women and they are using all three rhetorical appeals ethos, pathos, and logos to sell this product.…

    • 1412 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    An advertisement is something such as a short film or a written notice shown or presented to the public in order to help sell a product. Jib Fowles, a professor from the University of Houston, wrote an article describing the emotional appeals of an advertisement. According to Fowles, “The continuous pressure is to create ads more and more in the image of audience motives and desires” (Fowles 33). The goal of the advertisements is to relate to the needs and desires of the audience. Although the Kindle ad and the Energizer ad both have relatable pictures, they have different appeals: The kindle ad uses appeals to the need to escape and the need to satisfy curiosity because it targets young adventurous people, while the Energizer headlight ad…

    • 1209 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many propaganda techniques are used in advertising to influence consumers including snob appeal, euphemism, and big lie. The pregnancy test, the lotion, and the cloths use propaganda to persuade people to use and buy their…

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Lies, lies, lies, and lies. Advertisements have so many secrets and myths. There are procedures used by advertisers to make products look more tempting to have or try. Deceptive trickeries such as switching ice cream with mashed potatoes for a firmer shape, using hairspray to make fruits and vegetables look as if they’re fresh, using shampoo or glue as milk in cereals, refining a burger with brown shoe polish, or substituting honey and syrup with motor oil. McDonald’s and other fast food restaurants don’t have the same, pleasingly shaped burgers on their advertisements like the real, flabby burgers they serve.…

    • 1396 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Commercialization plays a major role in both aspects of producing and consuming. Spending is a big part of our everyday lives as consumers, whether we are buying a new shirt at the mall or a chocolate bar at the grocery store; everyone loves to shop. As explained by advertising historian and author of “Lead Us into Temptation” Twitchell, details how commercial speech plays a vital role in commercialization. In his book, Twitchell claims that commercial speech, the way we talk about manufactured items has become a “primary hotspot of modern culture” (Twitchell 456). As consumers, we make purchases primarily based on our senses. The things we see on television, the Ads we hear on the radio, how the item feels, etc. We idolize materials without…

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Power of Controlling Language Language has power and the speaker is presented with two options to use. Uplifting or controlling. Controlling is the more effective of the two, as it utilizes fear and lies to manipulate the victim. Uplifting language tries to persuade with positive remarks and is gentler to the audience. George Orwell stresses this thesis with Animal Farm, a story of rebellion and an allegorical story about a communist society that becomes corrupt.…

    • 526 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays