Product placement






















Product placement, also known as embedded marketing,[1][2][3][4] is a marketing technique where references to specific brands or products are incorporated into another work, such as a film or television program, with specific promotional intent.


While references to brands may be voluntarily incorporated into works to maintain a feeling of realism and/or be a subject of commentary,[5] product placement is the deliberate incorporation of references to a brand or product in exchange for compensation. Product placements may range from unobtrusive appearances within an environment, to prominent integration and acknowledgement of the product within the work. Common categories of products used for placements include automobiles and consumer electronics.[6] Works produced by vertically integrated companies (such as Sony) may use placements to promote their other divisions as a form of corporate synergy.


During the 21st century, the use of product placement on television grew, particularly to combat the wider use of digital video recorders that can skip traditional commercial breaks, as well as to engage with younger demographics.[7] Digital editing technology is also being used to tailor product placement to specific demographics or markets, and in some cases, add placements to works that did not originally have embedded advertising, or update existing placements.[6]


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Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Origins


    • 1.2 Movies and television


      • 1.2.1 Early film


        • 1.2.1.1 Later films




      • 1.2.2 Early television






  • 2 Types


    • 2.1 Re-placement


    • 2.2 Brand integration


    • 2.3 Product displacement


    • 2.4 Audio vs visual


    • 2.5 Advertiser-produced programming


    • 2.6 Self promotion


    • 2.7 Parodies


    • 2.8 Faux placements


    • 2.9 Reverse placement


    • 2.10 Music and recording industries


    • 2.11 Comics




  • 3 Sports


    • 3.1 NFL


    • 3.2 Auto racing




  • 4 Notable placements


    • 4.1 Automobiles


    • 4.2 Apparel and accessories


    • 4.3 Consumer electronics and computers


    • 4.4 Food and beverage


    • 4.5 Tobacco


    • 4.6 Airlines




  • 5 Radio, television and publishing


    • 5.1 Television


    • 5.2 Video sharing website


    • 5.3 Literature




  • 6 Legal considerations


    • 6.1 United States


    • 6.2 United Kingdom




  • 7 Extreme examples


  • 8 Viewer response


  • 9 Criticisms


  • 10 Research


    • 10.1 Effectiveness


      • 10.1.1 Recall


      • 10.1.2 Attitude


      • 10.1.3 Purchase intention


      • 10.1.4 Subconscious effects


      • 10.1.5 Negative effects


      • 10.1.6 Placement moderators


        • 10.1.6.1 Congruence


        • 10.1.6.2 Audio vs visual


        • 10.1.6.3 Character attractiveness


        • 10.1.6.4 Product prominence


        • 10.1.6.5 Level of Involvement






    • 10.2 Audience demographics


      • 10.2.1 Cultural attributes


      • 10.2.2 Age


      • 10.2.3 Sex




    • 10.3 Measurement


      • 10.3.1 Measurement of the explicit memory


      • 10.3.2 Measurement of the implicit memory




    • 10.4 Ethics




  • 11 See also


  • 12 References


  • 13 Further reading


  • 14 External links





History



Origins





A Bar at the Folies-Bergère by Edouard Manet may be an early example of product placement. The distinctive label and shape of two bottles allow them to be identified as Bass beer


Product placement began in the 19th century. By the time Jules Verne published the adventure novel Around the World in Eighty Days (1873), his fame had led transport and shipping companies to lobby to be mentioned in the story. Whether Verne was actually paid to do so, however, remains unknown.[8] Similarly, a painting by Eduoard Manet (1881-1882) shows a bar at the Folies Bergere with distinctive bottles placed at either end of the counter. The beer bottle is immediately recognisable as Bass beer. Manet's motivations for including branded products in his painting are unknown; it may be that it simply added to the work's authenticity, but on the other hand the artist may have received some payment in return for its inclusion.[9]


Research reported by Jean-Marc Lehu (2007) suggests that films produced by Auguste and Louis Lumière in 1876 were made at the request of a representative of Lever Brothers in France. The films feature Sunlight soap, which may be the first recorded instance of paid product placement in film.[10] This led to cinema becoming one of the earliest channels used for product placement.




Self-advertising: A German countess holds a copy of the magazine Die Woche in her hands. The photo appeared in 1902 in an issue of the magazine. (detail of the actual photograph)


With the arrival of photo-rich periodicals in the late 19th century, publishers found ways of lifting their paper's reputation by placing an actual copy of the magazine in photographs of prominent people. For example, the German magazine Die Woche in 1902 printed an article about a countess in her castle where she, in one of the photographs, holds a copy of the magazine in her hands.[11]


Product placement was a common feature of many of the earliest actualities and cinematic attractions from the first ten years of cinema history.[12]


During the next four decades, Harrison's Reports frequently cited cases of on-screen brand-name products.[13]Harrison condemned the practice as harmful to movie theatres, and his editorials reflected his hostility towards product placement in films. Harrison's Reports published its first denunciation of that practice over Red Crown gasoline's appearance in The Garage (1920).[14] Another editorial criticised the collaboration between the Corona Typewriter company and First National Pictures when a Corona typewriter appeared in several films in the mid-1920s including The Lost World (1925).[15]


Recognisable brand names appeared in movies from cinema's earliest history. Before films were even narrative forms in the sense that they are recognized today, industrial concerns funded the making of what film scholar Tom Gunning described as "cinematic attractions",[16] short films of one or two minutes. In the first decade or so of film (1895–1907) audiences attended films as "fairground attractions" interesting for their then-amazing visual effects. This format was better suited to product placement than narrative cinema. Gurevitch argued that early cinematic attractions have more in common with television advertisements in the 1950s than they do with traditional films.[17] Gurevitch suggested that as a result, the relationship between cinema and advertising is intertwined, suggesting that cinema was in part the result of advertising and the economic advantage that it provided early film makers.[18] Segrave detailed the industries that advertised in these early films.[19]



Movies and television



Early film


A feature film that has expectations of reaching millions of viewers attracts marketers.[20]


In many cases no payment is made for product exposure and no promise of marketing support is made when consumer brands appear in movies.[citation needed] Film productions need props for scenes, so each movie's property master, who is responsible for gathering props film, contacts product placement middlemen agencies or product companies directly. In addition to items for on-screen use, the product/service supplier might provide a production with large quantities of complementary products or services. Tapping product placement channels can be particularly valuable for movies when a vintage product is required—such as a sign or bottle—that is not readily available.


Although there is no definitive proof that product placement for Red Crown gasoline in The Garage, Fritz Lang's Dr. Mabuse the Gambler (1922) contained a prominent title card in the opening credits reading "The gowns of the female stars were designed by Vally Reinecke and made in the fashion studios of Flatow-Schädler und Mossner."


Among notable silent films to feature product placement was Wings (1927), the first to win the Academy Award for Best Picture. It contained a plug for Hershey's chocolate. Fritz Lang's film M (released in 1931) shows a banner display for Wrigley's PK Chewing Gum, for approximately 20–30 seconds.


Another early example occurs in Horse Feathers (1932), where Thelma Todd's character falls out of a canoe and into a river. She calls for a "life saver" and Groucho Marx tosses her a Life Savers candy. It's a Wonderful Life (1946) depicts a young boy with aspirations to be an explorer, displaying a prominent copy of National Geographic magazine. In Love Happy (1949), Harpo cavorts on a rooftop among various billboards and at one point escapes from the villains on the old Mobil logo, the "Flying Red Horse". Harrison's Reports severely criticised this scene in its film review[21] and in a front-page editorial. In Gun Crazy (1949), the climactic crime is the payroll robbery of the Armour meat-packing plant, where a Bulova clock is prominently displayed.



Later films

The Cannonball Run and Smokey and the Bandit film series featured conspicuous placements. The film ET is often cited for its multiple, obvious placements.


In the New World Pictures dub of The Return of Godzilla, Godzilla 1984, Dr. Pepper is subject to prominent product placement in the new scenes shot specifically for the dub. In a scene shot at an American military base, a vending machine is situated directly between two characters, and in similar scenes characters are often shown drinking the soft drink.


Cheerios and Coca-Cola had product placement in the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Evita, in Superman: The Movie and the sequel Superman II. Clark Kent eats Cheerios for breakfast in Smallville. In Superman II's climax, Superman crashes into a giant Coca-Cola advertisement and saves people on a bus bearing an ad for Evita, before he smashes into a Marlboro delivery truck.


A more prominent example of product placement comes in the film Cast Away in which Tom Hanks, the lead character, is a FedEx employee. References to the delivery company FedEx are made throughout the film, and the company is central to the plot itself. The Internship (2013), which features two unemployed friends seeking employment at Google, was described by Tom Brook of the BBC as "one huge advertisement for Google" that took "product placement to a startling new extreme".[22]



Early television


In other early media, e.g., radio in the 1930s and 1940s and television in the 1950s, programs were often underwritten by companies. Soap operas were so-named because they were initially underwritten by consumer packaged goods companies such as Procter & Gamble or Unilever. When television began to displace radio, DuMont's Cavalcade of Stars television show was, in its era, notable for not relying on a sole sponsor. Sponsorship continues with programs being sponsored by major vendors such as Hallmark Cards.


The conspicuous display of Studebaker motor vehicles in the television series Mr. Ed (1961–1966), which was sponsored by the Studebaker Corporation from 1961 to 1963, as well as the display of Ford vehicles on the series Hazel (1961–1966), which was sponsored by the Ford Motor Company from 1961 to 1965, are notable examples of television product placement.



Types


Placements fall into two categories: those that are donated to reduce production costs and those placed in exchange for compensation.[23]Lotz refers to two classifications within these two categories—"basic" and "advanced". Basic placement is when the logo of an object or a brand name is visible but the characters do not draw attention to the brand. Advanced placement is when the product or brand is mentioned by name by characters in the show or movie.[24]


Barter and service deals (mobile phones provided for crew use, for instance) are also common practices. Content providers may trade product placements for help funding advertisements tied-in with a film's release, a show's new season or other event.[25]


A variant of product placement is advertisement placement. In this case an advertisement for the product (rather than the product itself) appears in the production. Examples include a Lucky Strike cigarette advertisement on a billboard or a truck with a milk advertisement on its trailer.



Re-placement


Placing contemporary products into existing content creates new opportunities for marketers.[26] Current product placements can be added to older programs when they are rerun or released on video.[27][28][29]


Examples include Numb3rs and Still Standing; where a scene may be shot originally with a blank table, with sponsored products digitally added, possibly for each airing.[30]


As of 2007, dynamic or switchable placements became possible. Placements can be customised based upon factors such as demographics, psychographics or behavioral information about the consumer. In-game advertising vendors such as Massive Incorporated transmit user information such as individual player IDs and data about what was on the screen and for how long to their servers, enabling user-specific placements.[31]


Hypervideo techniques allow the insertion of interactive elements into video.



Brand integration


A variant of product placement is brand integration, which varies from placement when "the product or company name becomes part of the show in such a way that it contributes to the narrative and creates an environment of brand awareness beyond that produced by advanced placement."[32] While this type of advertising is common on unscripted shows such as The Apprentice, it can also be used in scripted television.[32] An early example was by Abercrombie & Fitch, when one of its stores provided the notional venue for part of the romantic comedy film Man's Favorite Sport? (1964). On All My Children one character took a job at Revlon.[32] The character's job became part of the character's development.[33]


Jurassic Park not only prominently features Ford cars and other commercial products, but also includes a scene displaying its own promotional merchandise. One shot shows the "Jurassic Park Souvenir Store", with products that it offered for sale to fans.



Product displacement


According to Danny Boyle, director of the film Slumdog Millionaire (2008), the makers used "product displacement" to accommodate sponsors such as Mercedes-Benz that refused to allow their products to be used in non-flattering settings. While Mercedes did not mind having a gangster driving their cars, they objected to their products being shown in a slum. The makers removed logos digitally in post-production, costing "tens of thousands of pounds". When such issues are brought up in advance of filming, production companies often resort to "greeking", the practice of simply covering logos with tape, but one of them driven by Latika is shown to have the logos on the car keys.


Similarly, in The Blues Brothers (1980), portions of the defunct Dixie Square Mall in Harvey, Illinois, were reconstructed in façade and used as the scene of an indoor car chase. Signage belonging to mall tenants was replaced with that of other vendors; for instance, a Walgreens would become a Toys "R" Us.[34]


Cars (2006) parodies NASCAR, an advertising-heavy sport which controversially had long allowed alcohol and tobacco sponsorships. NASCAR's sponsors were replaced with fictional or parody brands; Dinoco Oil takes pride of place, followed by a string of invented automotive aftermarket products positioned as pharmacy or medical brands. "Dale Earnhardt Inc." displaced "Junior #8"'s sponsor Budweiser to avoid advertising beer in a Disney feature. NASCAR's former Winston Cup trophy became the Piston Cup, removing a tobacco advertisement.[35][36]



Audio vs visual


Placements can be sound-only, visual-only or a combination of both. The Russian television show дом-2 (phonetically Dom-2) (similar to Big Brother) often features participants stating something along the lines of, "Oh, did you check out the new product X by company Y yet?" after which the camera zooms in on the named product, explicitly combining an audio mention with a visual image. In The Real World/Road Rules Challenge participants often make a similar comment, usually pertaining to the mobile device and carrier for a text message.



Advertiser-produced programming


In 2010 Wal-Mart teamed with Procter & Gamble to produce Secrets of the Mountain and The Jensen Project, both family-oriented films that display the characters using Wal-Mart and Procter & Gamble- branded products. The Jensen Project also featured a preview of Kinect.[37][38]


Advertiser Funded Programming is one of the ways the Battle of the Chefs: Harare managed to fund 2 Seasons (Season 2 & 3) with funding from the leading supermarket in Zimbabwe TM Pick n Pay.[39]



Self promotion


20th Century Fox regularly uses their sister Fox News and Sky News channels in their films by including them as a plot device when characters view news broadcasts. The channel is featured in a film depends on its setting. The character typically says that the audience is viewing Sky News. Examples include the 1996 films Independence Day and Mission: Impossible.



Parodies


The pilot episode of the NBC sitcom 30 Rock featured the General Electric (at the time an 80% owner of NBC) Trivection oven,[40] but was said to be a joke by the show's creator.[41] The show later parodied placement.[42]


The 1988 film Return of the Killer Tomatoes mocked the concept when at one point the film stops for lack of money. The character played by George Clooney suggests product placement as a way to continue. This was followed by several scenes with blatant product placement, including a Pepsi billboard installed in front of the villain's mansion.


The film Fight Club, directed by David Fincher, bit the hand that fed it by depicting acts of violence against most of the products that paid to be placed in the film.[43] Examples include the scene where the Apple Store is broken into, the scene where Brad Pitt and Edward Norton smash the headlights of a new Volkswagen Beetle, and try to blow up a "popular coffee franchise", a thinly veiled dig at Starbucks.


The film Superstar, starring Will Ferrell and Molly Shannon, shows every resident in town driving Volkswagen New Beetles, possibly for comic effect. Similarly, the film Mr. Deeds shows Adam Sandler's character purchasing a Chevrolet Corvette for every resident of his town.


Wayne's World featured a scene where Wayne refuses to allow his show's sponsor to appear on the air. When told it is part of his contract, Wayne argues that the deal "didn't include selling out" while conspicuously drinking a can of Pepsi, eating Doritos, and displaying a Pizza Hut pizza. Garth then laments that "people only do things because they get paid" while his entire wardrobe consists of Reebok athletic wear. Finally, Wayne complains of a headache and Garth advises him to take Nuprin while cutting to a few seconds of a Nuprin TV ad.


Kung Pow! Enter the Fist spoofed its product placements, highlighting the anachronistic inclusion of a Taco Bell. In a similar vein, in Looney Tunes: Back In Action, the main characters stumble across a Wal-Mart while stranded in the middle of Death Valley and acquire supplies just for providing an endorsement. Kannagi: Crazy Shrine Maidens poked fun at its sponsor Sony by having one character give another a Blu-ray Disc with the tagline "It's a Sony", only for them to complain that they do not have a Blu-ray player, to which the character responds with a version in Betamax.



Faux placements



X-Files (1993–2002) (as well as many other films and television productions) featured the fictional Morley brand of cigarettes, the choice of the Cigarette Smoking Man.[44] The company producing Morleys was also involved in a cover-up conspiracy, Brand X.


Ghostbusters had a faux product in the climax of the film when the team faces the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man. Previously in the film, Stay-Puft brand marshmallows[45] are shown in Dana's apartment and a Stay-Puft billboard is visible (via a matte painting) when the Ghostbusters' storage grid is deactivated and the imprisoned ghosts are released. Similar in form, Mel Brooks used the same device in the comedy spoof Spaceballs, which parodied Star Wars: in one scene, he opened up a can of Perri-Air canned air, a play on the name Perrier, the brand of fresh spring water.[46]


The Truman Show utilized faux placements to advance the narrative of the reality television set. The protagonist's wife places products in front of hidden cameras, even naming them in dialogue with her husband. This increases Truman's suspicions as he comes to realise his surroundings are intentionally fabricated.[47]


Some filmmakers created fictional products that appear in multiple movies.[citation needed] Examples include Kevin Smith (Nails Cigarettes, Mooby Corporation, Chewlees Gum, Discreeto Burritos) and Quentin Tarantino (Red Apple Cigarettes, Jack Rabbit Slim's Restaurants, Big Kahuna Burger). This went even further with the fictional brand Binford Tools which appeared in TV shows Home Improvement and Last Man Standing and in the Toy Story movie franchise, all starring Tim Allen.


This practice is also fairly common in certain comics, such as Svetlana Chmakova's Dramacon, which makes several product-placement-esque usages of "Pawky", (a modification of the name of the Japanese snack "Pocky", popular among anime and manga fans) or Naoko Takeuchi's Sailor Moon, which includes numerous references to the series Codename: Sailor V, from which Sailor Moon was spun off.


This practice is also common in certain "reality-based" video games such as the Grand Theft Auto series, which feature fictitious stores such as Ammu-Nation,[48] Vinyl Countdown, Gash (spoofing Gap) Zip, Pizza Boy, etc.



Reverse placement


So-called "reverse product placement" creates real products to match those seen in a fictional setting.[49] For example, in 2007, 7-Eleven rebranded 11 of its American stores and one Canadian store as "Kwik-E-Marts", selling versions of products seen in episodes of The Simpsons, such as Buzz Cola and Krusty-O's cereal.[50] In 1997, Acme Communications was created as a chain of real television stations; the firm is named for the fictional Acme Corporation of Warner Brothers fame. Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) led to a real Willy Wonka candy company, established soon after the film's release.[51]


In 1949, Crazy Eddie was created as a fictional car dealer in the film A Letter to Three Wives.[52] That name, bestowed in 1971 upon a real-life electronics chain in New York City, appeared in 1984 in an ad in Splash. Crazy Eddie's memorable ads are parodied in Howard the Duck, featuring a duck version of the famous pitchman, and UHF, as "Crazy Ernie", a used car salesman, threatens to club a baby seal if nobody comes in to buy a car.



Music and recording industries


While radio and television stations are regulated by national governments, producers of printed or recorded works are not, leading marketers to attempt to get products mentioned in lyrics of popular songs.


In 2008, The Kluger Agency was claimed[53] to have proposed placement of Double Happiness Jeans,[54] a virtual sweatshop created as part of the Invisible Threads project for the 2008 Sundance Festival, in a Pussycat Dolls song for a fee.[55] The firm was not intended to represent a commercial product. It had been invented as a collaboration between Jeff Crouse of the Anti-Advertising Agency and Stephanie Rothenberg. While the product technically existed at the time, Double Happiness was intended to be a critical piece.[56]


In January 2009, Migra Corridos, a five-song EP including accordion ballad "El Mas Grande Enemigo", had received airplay on twenty-five Mexican radio stations. The tune purports to be the lament of a would-be immigrant left to die in the Arizona desert by coyotes (people smugglers).[57] No disclosure was made to the radio stations that the U.S. Border Patrol had commissioned the project with content devised by Elevación, a Hispanic advertising agency based in Washington, D.C. and New York City.[58]


In 2010, a video for Lady Gaga's "Telephone" was panned by critics for displaying nine brands in nine minutes (including her own line of Heartbeats headphones), many as paid product placements.[59] Other 2010 music videos displayed the PlentyofFish website include Natasha Bedingfield's "Touch", Flo Rida and Akon's "Available", Jason Derulo's "Ridin' Solo",[60] and 3OH!3's "Double Vision".[61]


In 2011, Britney Spears's music video for "Hold It Against Me" advertised PlentyofFish and Sony; one Washington Post review denounced the video as an informercial.[62]


Jennifer Lopez's Fiat-sponsored music video "Papi" was edited for broadcast as a 30-second advertisement for the Fiat 500 Cabrio in 2011.[63] The original video also advertised BlackBerry, Tous, Planet Love Match and Crown Royal.[64]


Alcohol advertising in music videos drew criticism from Curtin University in Perth, Australia in 2011. An Alcohol Beverages Advertising Code (ABAC) exists in Australia to handle complaints,[65] but a placement of Midori liqueur in Cobra Starship's "You Make Me Feel..." was judged not to be alcohol advertising.[66]



Comics


South African football comic book Supa Strikas accepts product placement to allow for the comic's free distribution. Product placement occurs throughout the publication; on players' shirts, billboards and signage, and through the branding of locations or scenarios. Supa Strikas receives the majority of its support from Chevron, via its Caltex and Texaco brands.


In markets where Chevron lacks a presence, other brands step in, e.g., including Visa in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. Other brands include their logos included as both billboard and background advertising, and through the branding of locations and scenarios. These companies include Metropolitan Life, Nike, Spur Steak Ranches and the South African National Roads Agency, among others.[67]


Other titles adopted the same system, including cricket comic Supa Tigers and Strike Zone.



Sports


Product placement has long been prevalent in sports at all levels.



NFL


While now-defunct NFL Europe allowed liberal use of team uniforms by sponsors, the main National Football League (NFL) does not. For instance, the league prohibits logos of sponsors painted onto the fields, although Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, has their stadium's logomark painted onto the FieldTurf field. In 2008, the league allowed sponsors on the practice jerseys of the uniforms, but not game uniforms.


In 1991, the league allowed uniform suppliers to display their logos on their NFL-related products. Since 2012, Nike has been the league's official uniform supplier.[68]


Early on, two of the league's flagship teams—the Green Bay Packers and the Pittsburgh Steelers—adopted their identity from corporate sponsors. The Packers adopted the name "Packers" because they were sponsored by the Indian Packing Company. They later had "ACME PACKERS" written on their uniforms in the early 1920s after the Acme Packing Company bought Indian Packing.[69] The Steelers adopted their current logo in 1962 as a product-placement deal with the American Iron and Steel Institute, which owned the rights to the Steelmark logo. The Steelers later were allowed to add "-ers" to the Steelmark logo the following year so that they could own a trademark on the logo.[70] (The Steelers' pre-NFL predecessors also regularly sold naming rights to companies in the Pittsburgh area.)


The league has placed itself. NFL Japan was a sponsor of the football-themed anime series Eyeshield 21.[71]



Auto racing


In auto racing, the concept of the factory-backed contestant, who is provided with vehicles and technical support in return for the car's manufacturer obtaining visibility for its products in competition, dates in NASCAR to the 1950s and Marshall Teague's factory-backed Fabulous Hudson Hornet. "Win on Sunday, sell on Monday" was once a common adage among automakers.[72]


In Formula One, a number of major racing teams were once sponsored by tobacco companies, including Marlboro (which has had tenures with Ferrari and the McLaren team. Due to tightening regulations on tobacco advertising worldwide, many of these sponsorships have either been dropped, or downplayed and replaced with subliminal versions on vehicle livery when races are held in regions with heavy restrictions or outright bans on the marketing of cigarettes (such as the European Union).[73][74]



Notable placements


Automobiles, apparel, beverages, home goods, furniture, consumer electronics, computers, restaurants, financial institutions, travel, airlines and websites are just a few of the product categories.


Fedex provided vehicles, access, and logistical support for the making of Cast Away. The movie depicted real Fedex locations, and the company's CEO appeared in one scene.[75]



Automobiles


The most common products to be promoted in this way are automobiles. Frequently, all the important vehicles in a film or television series are supplied by one manufacturer.


Luxury vehicles like Aston Martin, Mercedes, Audi, BMW utilize brand integration in films like Iron Man 3,[76]Spectre,[77]Jurassic World,[78] and Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation.[79]


Cars (2006) portrays a mix of real and fictional vehicles as characters. None are directly paid product placements, but many are factory-backed by manufacturers who provided technical assistance and vehicles during production.[80] The Lexus LC 500[81] was featured in the 2018 film Black Panther.[82] The Audi R8 was featured in the Iron Man film series,[83] while the Acura NSX Roadster [83] was featured in The Avengers.



Apparel and accessories


Tom Ford has utilised brand integration to elevate his fashion brand in movies like Skyfall,[84] music from Jay Z's Magna Carta,[85] and television shows like Empire.[86]


Vera Wang, Caroline Herrera, Christian Lacroix, Lanvin, Dior, Oscar De La Renta, and Vivienne Westwood were all featured in the TV series Sex and the City.[87]


Under Armour, an athletic wear company, currently worth $6.67 billion,[88] has been featured in films such as the Fast and the Furious[89]The Martian, 22 Jump Street, and Fantastic Four to name a few.[90]



Consumer electronics and computers


Apple's products frequently appear in films, music videos and on television. Apple has stated that they do not pay for this, but declined to discuss how its products are placed; some Apple placements may have stemmed from the brand's position as a status symbol rather than actual paid promotion.[91] Similarly, Pixar films have often featured references to Apple products, although these are an homage to the involvement of its founder, Steve Jobs, as an early investor in the studio.[92]


The 2010 Modern Family episode "Game Changer" prominently featured the iPad and aired prior to its launch, while the 2015 episode "Connection Lost" is presented entirely from the perspective of a character's Macbook Pro laptop, with all interactions between characters being conducted via FaceTime and iMessage. Show creator Steven Levitan said the show had an ongoing relationship with Apple, but did not elaborate further. In the case of the former, while the episode's credits did state that the iPad was "provided" by Apple, the company did not pay the show's broadcaster ABC for the integration, nor buy any commercial time during the episode.[93][94]


Owing to its common ownership, Sony Pictures films have featured placements of Sony consumer electronics products, particularly Sony Xperia smartphones, amongst other products. The James Bond films Skyfall and Spectre prominently feature placements of the Sony Xperia T and Sony Xperia Z5 smartphones respectively, and Sony released editions of the T and Xperia Z5 Compact branded as tie-ins for the films.[95][96][97][98]


In video games, the most common placements are for processors or graphics cards. For example, in EA's Battlefield 2142, ads for Intel Core 2 processors appear on map billboards. EA's The Sims contains in-game advertising for Intel and for McDonald's. Rare's Perfect Dark Zero features many ads for Samsung in their menus.[99]


In the TV adaptation of DC's Green Arrow, several characters noticeably use devices with Microsoft's Windows 8 and 10.



Food and beverage


The use of Reese's Pieces as a prominent plot element in the film E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial was the result of a sponsorship deal; it was originally intended for the titular character's favorite food to be M&Ms candies, but Mars, Incorporated turned down an offer, believing the film's alien would scare children. The Hershey Company took the sponsorship instead, which included the rights for the company to cross-promote Reese's Pieces with the film. The deal was considered a major coup for the company; sales of Reese's Pieces tripled, and some retailers had trouble meeting demand for the product.[100] For a few years after the film's release, Reese's ran commercials featuring a purple-skinned alien (who looked nothing like E.T.) that came down to Earth and bonded with Earth children by offering them Reese's Pieces.


Alongside criticism for trying to ride off the popularity of E.T., the film Mac and Me was widely criticised for containing numerous placements for Coca-Cola soft drinks and the fast food chain McDonald's; both brands are integral to the film's plot, while McDonald's mascot Ronald McDonald makes an appearance during a dance scene set at a McDonald's, and is credited as appearing in the film "as himself". Critics also noted that the name of the alien creature featured in the film, "Mac", could also be interpreted as a reference to the chain's notable burger, the Big Mac.[101][102][103] Its producer R.J. Louis denied that the film was funded by McDonald's; he had previously worked on campaigns for the company and wanted to make a film that would help benefit the Ronald McDonald House Charities, and had to pursue rights to portray the McDonald's brand in the film (noting that he was "still the only person in the universe that ever had the exclusive motion picture rights to the McDonald's trademark, their actors, their characters, and the whole company"), but did receive funding from one of the chain's major suppliers, Golden State Foods. He also justified the extended dance scene, as trips to McDonald's were often seen as a "treat" for children of the era, and explained that "Mac" was meant to be an acronym for "Mysterious Alien Creature".[104]


Sylvester Stallone's Rocky films featured heavy product placement. The most obvious example appeared in Rocky III: when Rocky spends time with his young son, he asks him what he wants for breakfast. The boy responds, "Wheaties!" and, at Rocky's prompting, adds that it's "the breakfast of champions!"



Tobacco


Tobacco companies have made direct payment to stars for using their cigarettes in films. Sylvester Stallone received US$500,000 to use Brown and Williamson tobacco products in five feature films.[105][106][107]


In response to a Christian Science Monitor article[108] accusing the industry of deliberately using product placement as an advertising strategy, the Tobacco Institute claimed that product placement is driven by filmmakers to "achieve desired artistic effects but also to offset production costs". It also claimed "the 1970 federal ban on cigarette advertising on television and radio does not prohibit payments to filmmakers for the use of cigarettes in a film." The rebuttal concludes with the sentiment that smoking in film provides a certain "aesthetic" which is legitimate and at the filmmaker's discretion.[109]



Airlines


Many airlines have advertised prominently in film, in some cases to promote a new flight route or just to increase public awareness of the company. Pan American World Airways advertised in many films, including some James Bond ones. American Airlines was advertised in Home Alone and Home Alone 2, and a model of a Virgin Atlantic Boeing 747 was shown in Wayne's World. Mike Myers' later film, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, featured a major promotion with Virgin, including repainting some of Virgin's fleet to read "Virgin Shaglantic".[110]


United Airlines was mentioned in the title of the movie United 93; this movie, however, was based on a real life event.


American Airlines and Hilton Hotels were featured in the film Up in the Air. George Clooney, an avid flyer is constantly seen in the airport because of his career. This film was a huge endorsement for American Airlines, yet no payment was exchanged between the filmmaker and the airline.[111]


Turkish Airlines was featured in the film Batman v Superman. Warner Bros and Turkish Airlines signed a contract together to help promote and endorse the film.[112]



Radio, television and publishing



Television


The list of television shows with the most instances of product placement (November 2007 – 2008; according to Nielsen Media Research) included:





  • The Biggest Loser – 6,248


  • American Idol – 3,000


  • Extreme Makeover: Home Edition – 3,371


  • America's Toughest Jobs – 2,807


  • One Tree Hill – 2,575


  • Deal or No Deal – 2,292


  • America's Next Top Model – 2,241


  • Last Comic Standing – 1,993


  • Kitchen Nightmares – 1,853


  • Hell's Kitchen – 1,807



Nielsen called a scene in an episode of CBS' Mike & Molly of Mike eating M&M's in Carl's apartment 2013's best branded and opinion-shifting product integration in a scripted show.[113]



Video sharing website


YouTubers are allowed to do product placement. For instance, the LinusTechTips channel by Linus Sebastian.[114] Notifying YouTube is required,[115] and YouTube reserves the right to ban it.[116]



Literature


In 2001, British author Fay Weldon published The Bulgari Connection, a novel commissioned by Italian jewellery company Bulgari. According to The Independent, this was the first instance of a literary product-placement deal between an established writer of fiction and a commercial partner.[117]



Legal considerations



United States


Much of U.S. broadcast law pertaining to on-air product promotion dates to the payola scandals of 1950s broadcast radio. An investigation launched in November 1959 into allegations that some radio disc jockeys had accepted bribes in return for radio airplay[118] ended with a US$2,500 fine for disc jockey Alan Freed (of WABC and WINS) for violating commercial bribery laws. On September 13, 1960, the U.S. government banned payola in broadcasting. Under 47 U.S.C. § 317 "All matter broadcast by any radio station for which money, service, or other valuable consideration is directly or indirectly paid, or promised to or charged or accepted by, the station so broadcasting, from any person, shall, at the time the same is so broadcast, be announced as paid for or furnished, as the case may be, by such person..." with similar and related provisions reflected in Federal Communications Commission regulations as 47 C.F.R. 73.1212.[119]


These provisions have governed subsequent payola investigations, including a 2005 investigation into Sony BMG and other major record companies.[120]


Often, a broadcaster claimed to have complied by placing an acknowledgement in an inconspicuous place, such as embedded within the credits.[121] In 2005 U.S. Federal Communications Commission commissioner Jonathan Adelstein stated "if broadcasters and cable TV companies insist on further commercializing new and other shows alike, that is their business. But if they do so without disclosing it to the viewing public, that is payola, and that is the FCC's business."[122]



United Kingdom




The 'PP' icon, introduced by Ofcom to identify programs on television which contain product placement.


In the United Kingdom, placement by commercial broadcasters was forbidden prior to 2011. On February 28, 2011, telecommunications regulator Ofcom legalised placements in certain types of programming. A placement must be "editorially justified" and not place "undue prominence" on the product. Product placements are not allowed for products that cannot legally be advertised on television, including alcohol, baby milk, gambling products, medication or junk food. Placements are not allowed during children's, news, public affairs and religious programs. Additionally, broadcasters must disclose placements on-air by displaying a "PP" icon on-screen during the program for at least three seconds at the beginning, after every commercial break, and at the end. The first legal product placement on British television came during an episode of This Morning, for a Nestlé-produced coffee maker. As with all other advertising, the BBC is barred from using placements on its publicly funded services.[123][124]



Extreme examples


I, Robot offers placements for Converse, Ovaltine, Audi, FedEx, Dos Equis and JVC among others, all of them introduced within the film's first ten minutes. One moment includes a straightforward advertisement where Will Smith's character responds to a compliment about his shoes, to which he replies "Converse All-Stars, vintage 2004"[125] (the year of the film's release). Audi created a special car for the film, the Audi RSQ. Surveys conducted in the US showed that the placements boosted the brand's image.[126] The Audi RSQ appears for nine minutes, and other Audis also appear in the film.[127]I, Robot was ranked "the worst film for product placement" on a British site.[128]


Demolition Man makes heavy mention of the only remaining restaurant chain being Taco Bell (in the U.S. release) or Pizza Hut (in the European release).


The Island features at least 35 individual products or brands, including cars, bottled water, shoes, credit cards, beer, ice cream, and a web search engine.[129][130] In the movie's DVD Commentary track, director Michael Bay claims he added the advertisements for greater realism.[131]


The 2006 comedy film Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby parodied the large amount of sponsorship in NASCAR. For example, Ricky Bobby thanks baby Jesus for certain products during the dinner blessings, due to contractual obligations. In one race, he drives his car with a giant Fig Newtons sticker on his windshield, which obscures his vision. A scene where Ricky's and Jean Girard's cars go flipping for an excessively long time is interrupted by an Applebee's commercial (referencing NBC's use of commercial breaks during its own coverage).[132] The character Jean Girard, a cultured French driver, is appropriately sponsored by Perrier mineral water.


Josie and the Pussycats contains placements in most of the shots. This appears to be done ironically, as the plot of the film revolves around subliminal messages in advertising. The film's general message can also be construed as an anti-consumerist one. The film neither sought nor received compensation for the placements.


The 2009 Star Trek, in a scene where young James Kirk drives and crashes a Chevrolet Corvette, he operates a Nokia touch-screen smartphone. Before running the car off the cliff while being chased by a hovering motorcycle cop, the distinct Nokia trademark ring tone can be heard. The Finnish phone maker offered Star Trek apps for its phones. The use of contemporary products was ridiculed, as the scene is set in the year 2255.[133]


The 2013 Filipino film My Little Bossings attracted criticism for its extensive use of product placement. Reviewers panned the film for being "one long commercial", where advertisements for brands endorsed by the characters' actors are frequently interspersed into the film.[134][135] Zig Marasigan of Rappler described the film's use of product endorsements as "some of the most distasteful examples of local product placement while no effort is made to weave them into the narrative."[136]


In a similar vein to early radio and television programs, sponsored programs in the Philippines are not uncommon, where children's programs like Tropang Potchi and Jollitown were produced on behalf of companies, prominently featuring products and related properties in the shows in question.



Viewer response


In April 2009, fans of the television series Chuck responded to a placement by Subway restaurants with a grassroots effort to save the show from cancellation.[137] The movement gained support from cast and crew, with series star Zachary Levi leading hundreds of fans to a Subway restaurant in Birmingham, United Kingdom.[138]



Criticisms


Placement continues to grow, despite consumer groups such as Commercial Alert that object to the practise as "an affront to basic honesty". The group requested disclosure of all product-placement arrangements and notification before and during embedded advertisements. It justifies this to allow parents to protect easily influenced children.[139]


In 2005, the Writers Guild of America, a trade union representing authors of television scripts, objected that its members were forced to produce disguised ad copy.[140]


Some scholars argue that product placement may inherently affect the creativity and originality of movies as film producers may re-write scripts in order to incorporate products.[141] Most typically, product placement and merchandise are most successful amongst specific genres of movies which may eventually limit the diversity of films.[141]



Research



Effectiveness


As with most marketing tactics, product placement leads to explicit as well as implicit advertising effects. Explicit effects can be observed directly and are usually visible by higher recall scores.[142][143] They are highly connected to the conscious mind.[144] Implicit effects can be observed by a change in behavior – like a higher purchase intention.[142][145][146] They are fully based on the subconscious mind.[142][147] Implicit effects are more relevant for purchase decisions and therefore more valuable than explicit reactions.[142][147]



Recall


Recall describes whether people can name a product after seeing it within the content. Research showed that there is a significant relationship between product placement and recall.[148][149][150][151]



Attitude


Product placement also leads to changes in attitude towards the product or brand.[152][153][154][155]



Purchase intention


A lot of research has shown a higher purchase intention as a result of product placement.[156][157][158][159][160]



Subconscious effects


Product placement affects the audience on a conscious, but also subconscious level. Science showed that there does not even need to be an explicit, conscious effect to activate subconscious effects.[157][161][162][163] For example, product placement can lead to an exclusion of competing brands from the consideration set of the audience – subconsciously.[142][164] It is also hoped to bypass advertising defense reactions of consumers by focusing on the subconscious character of product placement.[143]



Negative effects


Under specific circumstances, product placement can lead to no[165][166][167] or even negative effects.[152][166][168][169] This usually happens if the product placement is too obvious, while the audience also feels it is being manipulated.[143][166][169]



Placement moderators



Congruence

The better the product placement fits the surrounding content, the better the implicit effectiveness (like attitude or purchase-intention) will be.[155][170][171][172]



Audio vs visual

After viewing a Seinfeld episode with visual, auditory and audiovisual product placements, a recall task indicated that audiovisual product placements were recalled the best, visual product placements somewhat less and audio placements least. In a recognition test audiovisual was still remembered the best but audio placements were remembered second best and visual placements were remembered third best.[157] As indicated, the type of placement that is most effective seems to vary depending on task, but audiovisual placements seem to be often the most effective.[173] However, audiovisual product placements are not remembered best when there is more than one audiovisual placement at once, making it hard to remember each one.[148] In case the placement is only on the audio level, advertisers must make sure it is very prominent to have any effect at all.[149][166][174]



Character attractiveness

People tended to like brand names that were paired with attractive faces more than those paired with unattractive faces. The more times a brand was paired with an attractive face, the more people liked it.[175]



Product prominence

Product placement perceived to disrupt a movie, especially when repeated, were found in one study to be counterproductive. Moderate repetition of subtle product placements did not increase people's feelings of distraction.[176]


Products that are integrated within the plot of a movie are better recall, although not if more than one product is shown at a time.[148] In one study placements connected to the story were recognized most often, products used by the main character were remembered less often and products in the background were remembered least often.[160]


Placements were found more effective on a larger screen compared to on a smaller one.[148] Also, products placed in the first half of a movie tend to be remembered better than products in the second half of a movie, which demonstrates the primacy effect.[148]



Level of Involvement

High involvement with the program makes it easier for people to recognize the product placement.[177][178] This can lead to positive effects,[179][180] but might also lead to negative reactions.[181] The same applies for high product category involvement.[182]



Audience demographics



Cultural attributes


Older research cited a difference between different cultural areas. For example, Australians,[183] Austrians.[184] and Germans[185][186] tended to evaluate product placement more critically and show less positive reactions than Americans or people from certain Asian countries such as India.[187][188][189]



Age


Children are usually more easily influenced than adults.[190][191][192]



Sex


If the product is endorsed by a person, there are stronger priming effects if the audience is the same sex.[193] Women tend to be influenced a little easier,[194][195] but show more negative reactions when the product can be described as ethically questionable (e.g. alcohol).[196]



Measurement


To measure the success of product placement, one first tracks the parameters of the placement itself, like the ease of identification, screen time, number of exposure(s), or association with a main character. That information is also often used to determine the price of a specific placement. Secondly, the effectiveness is measured using direct (for explicit memory effects) as well as indirect (for implicit memory effects) measurements.



Measurement of the explicit memory


Explicit effects are measured by recall or recognition tests. Subjects are asked to name the products that he or she noticed (free recall).[142][197] This survey can be also aided by giving additional information like a specific product category.[165] At recognition tests, a selection of products is shown to the interviewed person, who then needs to select the ones that he has seen before.[167][173]



Measurement of the implicit memory


Implicit effects are measured in an indirect way by observing a change in behavior.[142][198] This can be done by tracking the consideration set and buying behavior of people,[142][145][146] measuring brain activities[199] or using abstract indirect test settings like the word fragment or word stem completion test.[200] The implicit association test (IAT) is also an applicable measurement tool.[201][202]



Ethics


Many argue that product placement is ethically questionable, because it manipulates people against their will.[159][203][204][205] A contrary view is, even if product placement is only perceived unconsciously, it is still evaluated by our mind.[206][207] It cannot make people act against their beliefs. Most people also appreciate the fact that movies look more realistic with real brands and do not feel disturbed by the placements.[208][209] Additionally, further research argues that product placement is not any different from other marketing tactics when it comes to ethics.[168]



See also



  • Subliminal advertising

  • The Greatest Movie Ever Sold



References





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Further reading



  • Simon J. Pervan and Brett A. S. Martin (2002) Product placement in US and New Zealand television soap operas: an exploratory study (Journal of Marketing Communications)


  • Balasubramanian, Siva K (1994). "Beyond Advertising and Publicity: Hybrid Messages and Public Policy Issues". Journal of Advertising. 23 (4): 29–46. doi:10.1080/00913367.1943.10673457.


  • Balasubramanian, Siva K.; Karrh, James; Patwardhan, Hemant (2006). "Audience Response to Product Placements: An Integrative Framework and Future Research Agenda". Journal of Advertising. 35 (3): 115–141. doi:10.2753/joa0091-3367350308.

  • Chan, F.F.Y. (2012). "Product Placement and Its Effectiveness: A Systematic Review and Propositions for Future Research." The Marketing Review. 12(1): 39-60. doi: 10.1362/146934712X13286274424271

  • Gurevitch, Leon. (2010). "The Cinemas of Transactions: The Exchangable Currency of Digital Attractions Across Audiovisual Economies", Journal of Television and New Media, Sage Publications, New York, 11 (5), 367-385.

  • Gurevitch, Leon. (2010). The Cinemas of Interactions: Cinematics and the ‘Game Effect’ in the Age of Digital Attractions, Forthcoming (December) in Senses of Cinema Journal, Online Journal AFI/RMIT, Melbourne, Issue 57.

  • Gurevitch, Leon. (2009). "Problematic Dichotomies: Narrative and Spectacle in Film and Advertising Scholarship", Journal of Popular Narrative Media, Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, Vol. 2 (2), 143-158.

  • Marich, Robert (2013) "Marketing To Moviegoers: Third Edition", SIU Press books, [1] p. 166-180.


  • Miller, Mark Crispin (April 1990). "Hollywood: The Ad—The Techniques and the Cartoon-Like Moral Vision of Television Advertising Are Exerting More and More Influence over American Moviemaking". The Atlantic. Retrieved September 4, 2010.


  • Pascal Schumacher: Effektivität von Ausgestaltungsformen des Product Placement, Fribourg 2007


  • Russell, Cristel A.; Stern, Barbara (2006). "Consumers, Characters, and Products: A Balance Model of Sitcom Product Placement Effects". Journal of Advertising. 35 (1): 7–18. doi:10.2753/joa0091-3367350101.


  • Russell, Cristel A.; Belch, Michael (2005). "A Managerial Investigation into the Product Placement Industry". Journal of Advertising Research. 45 (1): 73–92. doi:10.1017/s0021849905050038.


  • Russell, Cristel A (2002). "Investigating the Effectiveness of Product Placements in Television Shows: The Role of Modality and Plot Connection Congruence on Brand Memory and Attitude". Journal of Consumer Research. 29 (3): 306–318. doi:10.1086/344432.

  • Product Placement mit Startschwierigkeiten (Matthias Alefeld) http://www.productplacement.de/#presse



External links




  • Media related to Product placement at Wikimedia Commons


  • Product Placement at SourceWatch








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