Why marketers need to stop pushing age stereotypes
A new study shows millennials and older people share many of the same characteristics, as it warns brands to stop peddling age stereotypes in their advertising.
A new study shows millennials and older people share many of the same characteristics, as it warns brands to stop peddling age stereotypes in their advertising.
Marketers need to focus more on consumer behaviour rather than segmenting people simply by generation, according to two new studies.
Second guessing what people want from advertising can be dangerous and brands need to go back to basics when considering the most effective routes to boosting loyalty and sales.
With Captain Birdseye returning to British TV screens today (8 April) as part of Birds Eye new £8m campaign, both brands and experts have warned that the risk can sometimes outweigh the rewards when it comes to bringing back an iconic advertising character.
Rather than only prioritising training for their teams, marketing leaders should carve out time for learning and rethink what ‘upskilling’ really means.
Analysing £1.8bn of media investments across the UK, a post-Covid/Brexit advertising effectiveness study found profitability varies greatly by media, with TV the greatest driver of overall profit volume.
While its tactics will evolve, the fast food giant believes the consistency of its overarching marketing strategy is what grounds the brand.
Agencies will complain pre-testing snuffs out the creative spark, but in reality it helps brands identify the best-performing ads and make them even better.