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Continuing to Broaden the Marketing Concept
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About This Book
Review of Marketing Research pushes the boundaries of marketingâbroadening the marketing concept to make the world a better place.
This volume brings together leading scholars to explore how marketing can push boundaries to fix some of the most important problems which face society today. Topics covered include; politics, retirement, modelling social marketing data (for alcohol consumption and illegal drug use), feeding the world, data privacy (informing readers as to the varieties of protective options), and environmental sustainability.
Each chapter provides thought provoking discussions which will be relevant to researchers, professionals and students.
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Yes, you can access Continuing to Broaden the Marketing Concept by Dawn Iacobucci in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Business General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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PART I
NEW (TO US) MODALITY
A FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING COMMUNICATION THROUGH COMICS (ILLUSTRATED)
ABSTRACT
We develop a four-factor conceptual framework to explain how information presented in comics differs from other media and therefore is processed differently. The unique ability of sequential art to manipulate time, prompt the reader for closure, utilize abstractions, and combine words and pictures to deliver a multimodal message mages comics an especially effected medium for marketing communications. The influence of these four factors is illustrated through the use of the comic medium in lieu of traditional text throughout this chapter. As a result, processing complex information is facilitated.
Keywords: Graphic art; illustrative research; sequential art; comics; marketing; consumer information processing
Dear Readers:
Please allow us to say a few words to assist you in approaching this chapter with the right frame of mind. This chapter is a bit unconventional, but be assured that it is a serious academic chapter dealing with a serious topic: the use of comics in marketing communications. Comics run the gamut from âhigh-browâ graphic novels such as Maus and Persepolis to serialized, âlow-browâ superhero comic books such as Superman and X-men. Still, all these comics have one thing in common: they are a part of a vibrant medium that is vital to the publishing industry. Internationally, comics are a well-accepted art form that elicits academic criticism and sizable market shares in both Europe and Asia. In the United States, comics have taken longer to gain cultural acceptance. But the past decade has seen a golden age of graphic novels in the United States (Jaggi, 2012)1 that fully utilized the storytelling advantages inherent in the medium. More importantly, comics have entered the cultural zeitgeist and are influencing other mediums; in 2017, five out the top ten highest grossing films were based on comics (www.boxofficemojo.com).
These days, when you need to be provided complex information quickly, you are likely to be interacting with a comic. When you open the box of a new device you bought (be it from Apple, HP, or Ikea), notice that the first think you will see is a comic explaining how to set things up. If you need emergency evacuation information on a boat or a plane, you'll follow the steps of a comic to safety. But it does not stop there, Google released a full-length comic to familiarize programmers with the capabilities and functionality of its new web browser, Chrome. At the University of Minnesota and at MIT, comics are used to help teach the principles of physics (Gerde & Foster, 2008). We consume large quantities of information, and comics are often the best medium to enable this consumption.
We approach the topic of comics from a psychological point of view: trying to understand how people process information conveyed in a comic form. The nature of comics as âsequential artâ has profound implications for how readers of all ages and backgrounds process the information presented to them. We develop a conceptual model of comic information processing based upon four important properties of comics and grounded in the existing information processing literature (e.g., MacInnis & Jaworski, 1989). We demonstrate how the properties of time, closure, abstraction, and multimodality uniquely blend in comics to produce a medium that enhances the processing of information and marketing communications. When developing our theory, we discovered that our points come across better when presented in comic form, and this led directly to our choice of utilizing this medium throughout the manuscript. We believe that comics allow us to both explain and display our theory better; they also allow you and the reader to experience our theorizing firsthand.
We would like you to experience both the successes and the potential hurdles the medium provides. For example, on the comic's fourth page, the characters will literally âwalk you throughâ the theoretical framework, represented by house in which the information processing model we utilize is presented on the bottom of the page as it represents the âfoundationâ of our framework. Although this picture provides a useful metaphor for building upon extant theory, its operationalization contradicts the traditional âZ-patternâ of how we navigate visual space (Cohn & Campbell, 2015). With luck, you will experience the frisson caused by these processing incongruities as well as the delight when other panels make complex concepts easier to grasp.
We hope that you recognize the importance of our choice of presentation medium and can share in the spirit and excitement in which this manuscript was created. Mostly, we wish that after reading this comic you agree that comics are a medium that deserves serious study and are an important platform for consuming marketing information.
Sincerely,
The Authors
1This is different than the Golden Age of Comics, which ran from around 1938 until 1950. The comic book industry considers now to be the Modern Age of Comics, which started around 1986 and is characterized by more commercialism and gritty realism as exhibited in The Watchman (Kilinc, 2017).
REFERENCES
Adaval, R., & Wyer, R. S., Jr. (1998). The role of narratives in consumer information processing. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 7(3), 207â245.
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Cattell, J. M. K. (1886). The time it takes to see and name objects. Mind, 11(41), 63â65.
Cohn, N., & Campbell, H. (2015). Navigating comics II: Constraints on the reading order of comic page layouts. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 29, 193â199.
Deighton, J., Romer, D., & McQueen, J. (1989). Using drama to persuade. Journal of Consumer Research, 16(3), 335â343.
Eisner, W. (1985). Comics and sequential art: Principles and practices from the legendary cartoonist. New York, NY: W. W. Norton.
Fantz, R. L. (1961). The origin of form perception. Scientific American, 204(5), 66â72.
Federmeir, K. D., & Kutas, M. (2001). Meaning and modality: Influences of context, semantic memory organization, and perceptual predictability on picture processing. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 27(1), 202â224.
Fussel, D., & Haaland, A. (1978). Communicating with pictures in Nepal: Results of practical study used in visual education. Educational Broadcasting International, 11(1), 25â31.
Gerde, V. W., & Foster, R. S. (2008). X-men ethics: Using comic books to teach business ethics. Journal of Business Ethics, 77(3), 245â258.
Gerrig, R. J. (1994). Narrative thought? Person...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Contents
- About the Editor-in-Chief
- List of Contributors
- About the Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Editor-in-Chief Introduction
- Introduction: Dawn Iacobucci (Guest Editor)
- PART I NEW (TO US) MODALITY
- PART II POLITICS
- PART III THE WORLD AROUND US â NOW AND SOON
- PART IV FEELING AND THINKING â NEW PERSPECTIVES REGARDING AFFECT AND COGNITION
- Part V Environmental Sustainability
- Index