Archive for the 'Society' Category

So if marketing works on preschoolers… what on earth are we doing to them?

Children as young as three years old are vulnerable to advertising, contrary to past research that suggested such marketing only had an impact on older kids, according to a new U.S. study.

Researchers at the University of Wisconsin and University of Michigan found that children aged three to five succumbed to the same marketing pressures as young adults, in that they understood the advertiser wanted them to buy something and that buying the product could make them happier.

“Young children are able to identify brands, to know what it stands for, know what this company sells,” co-author Bettina Cornwell, a marketing professor at the University of Michigan, said Monday during an interview with CBC Radio’s As It Happens. “They have a relatively profound understanding of brands that are marketed to them.”

This is contrary to past research that suggested children weren’t affected by brand symbolism until they were between the ages of seven to 11, she said.

However, Cornwell explained that the previous understanding was based on past studies that focused on the brands and products that generally had no relevance to children.

“But when you talk about the toys and foods they enjoy and that are marketed toward them, they really do have a strong understanding,” Cornwell said.

In the two-part study, published in the journal Psychology & Marketing, researchers first assessed brand recognition levels in 38 children aged three to five. Children were shown 50 well-known brand names on cards and were asked if they were familiar with them.

“Almost all of the children, 93 per cent in our study, were able to recognize McDonald’s readily, but they can also recognize Shell Oil or Pepsi, or even Toyota,” said Cornwell.

Cornwell explained that brands such as Shell might be associated with adult products, but more likely the children recognized that Shell also had stores that sell nicknacks and junk food.

In the second part of the study, researchers found children were more likely to associate related products to brands that had been specifically marketed toward them.

“What I can say is we now understand more about how the young child develops his understanding, in the sense that their ability to understand the brand is also related to their social development. Now we can say the child understands, if you will, the mind of the advertiser. ‘The advertiser wants me to understand this brand as carrying meaning, not just something that I want or that I have.’”

Cornwell said she didn’t know if such early understanding of brands could result in a long-term brand loyalty, which is what many marketers are trying for when they reach out to children.

“We don’t have longitudinal data, but one could argue that early child associations to an experience and a brand could have a positive influence on what they want to purchase in the future,” she said.

Her hope is that the research and understanding it brings will be used by government regulators to protect preschool-aged children from undue marketing pressures.

“[The children] make decisions about what they need and want based on this brand-symbolic communication. It’s a brand they need because ‘I want to be liked by other children, I want to be popular,’ and yes, that could expand the repertoire of purchases they might be interested in,” said Cornwell.

via cbc.ca

I think as parents we already knew this. My little boy was able to differentiate all the logos well before he turned 3. In fact he knew which family member had which account at which bank.

I can’t even imagine that past research even thought that children weren’t affected by brand symbolism until the ages of seven to 11. Can you believe that?

This is with brands … what about all the other messages? Sexual content? More and more cartoons have lines and messages not appropriate for the little ones watching them.

What are we doing to our children?

So if art imitates life… and the art in media is an imitation of adult life… and then our children imitate that. How much of their innocence are we robbing them?

What on earth are we doing to our kids?

Posted from Press On

A Heart Divided – Reflections of Society

From the actual site – We contacted heart specialist, Chris Thornley, and had him create a “highly accurate” map of modern human passions for a new tshirt. After years of research (and several transplants), Chris developed the above: a definitive map of human passions. While the items included apply to all… proportions may vary. For this reason, we are considering increasing the size of the region allocated to the Original Star Wars Trilogy.

I saw this through another Posterous that I follow for work reasons … but I thought it should be posted here for future reference and perhaps a lesson or two at church.

To me it is a scary picture of us.
Luke 6:45 says it well…
“The good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good; and the evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth that which is evil: for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh.”

What do we think about?
What consumes our thoughts?

Posted from Press On

‘Google’ is American Dialect Society’s Word of the Decade

Technology drives the astounding pace of contemporary language change, so it’s hardly surprising that most landmark words today come out of tech. That and the fact that this industry is responsible for the production of 9/10s of the world’s neologisms.

No matter what, 2009’s top words came from tech. The American Dialect Society’s word of the decade is ‘google,’ and ‘tweet’ is the ADS’s word of the year.

“Both words are, in the end, products of the Information Age, where every person has the ability to satisfy curiosity and to broadcast to a select following, both via the Internet,” said Grant Barrett, chair of the New Words Committee at the American Dialect Society.

“I really thought blog would take the honors in the word of the decade category, but more people google than blog, don’t they?” Barrett said. “Plus, many people think ‘blog’ just sounds ugly. Maybe Google’s trademark lawyers would have preferred it, anyway.”

Posted from Press On

¿Lo Sabias?

(Did You Know?/Shift Happens, Versión en español)

Treating Symptoms

We do it all the time.

Eat poorly and then take the antacid.

We do it in our personal lives and in our deepest thoughts as well.

What we need is for our hearts to be transformed.  Our hearts to be changed.  There is only one way.

God through the redemptive work of Jesus Christ.