History of Advertising
In
order to understand what the advertising industry is today, it is helpful
to appreciate where it has come from. You can look at the GCSE
pages for further information and links.
Advertising
as a discrete form is generally agreed to have begun with newspapers,
in the seventeenth century, which included line or classified advertising.
Simple descriptions, plus prices, of products served their purpose until
the late nineteenth century, when technological advances meant that
illustrations culd be added to advertising, and colour was also an option.

An
early advertising success story is that of Pears Soap. Thomas Barratt
married into the famous soap making family and realised that they needed
to be more aggressive about pushing their products if they were to survive.
He launched the series of ads featuring cherubic children which firmly
welded the brand to the values it still holds today. he took images
considered as "fine art" and used them to connote his brand's
quality, purity (ie untainted by commercialism) and simplicity (cherubic
children). He is often referred to as the father of modern advertising.
However,
it was not until the emergence of advertising agencies in the latter
part of the nineteenth century that advertising became a fully fledged
institution, with its own ways of working, and with its own creative
values. These agencies were a response to an increasingly crowded marketplace,
where manufacturers were realising that promotion of their products
was vital if they were to survive. They sold themselves as experts in
communication to their clients - who were then left to get on with the
business of manufacturing.
World
War I saw some important advances in advertising as governments on all
sides used ads as propaganda. The British used advertising as propaganda
to convince its own citizens to fight, and also to persuade the Americans
to join. No less a political commentator than Hitler concluded (in Mein
Kampf) that Germany lost the war because it lost the propaganda
battle: he did not make the same mistake when it was his turn. One of
the other consequences of World War I was the increased mechanisation
of industry - and hence increased costs which had to be paid for somehow:
hence the desire to create need in the consumer which
begins to dominate advertising from the 1920s onward.
Advertising
quickly took advantage of the new mass media of the first part of the
twentieth century, using cinema, and to a much greater extent, radio,
to transmit commercial messages. You can listen to some early radio
advertising here
(RealPlayer req'd). This was beginning to show signs of working effectively
in the 1920s but the Wall St crash put an end to widespread affluence,
and the Great Depression and World War Two meant that it was not really
until the 1950s that consumers had enough disposable income to really
respond to the need creation message of advertisers.
The
1950s not only brought postwar affluence to the average citizen but
whole new glut of material goods for which need had to be created. Not
least of these was the television set. In America it quickly became
the hottest consumer property - no home could be without one. And where
the sets went, the advertisers followed, spilling fantasies about better
living through buying across the hearthrug in millions of American homes.
The UK and Europe, with government controlled broadcasting, were a decade
or so behind America in allowing commercial TV stations to take to the
air, and still have tighter controls on sponsorship and the amount of
editorial control advertisers can have in a programme. This is the result
of some notable scandals in the US, where sponsors interfered in the
content and outcome of quiz shows in order to make their product seem,
by association, more sexy. See the excellent Quiz
Show (1994), directed by Robert Redford which deals with the
disillusionment of the American people.
Unhappy
with the ethical compromise of the single-sponsor show, NBC executive
Sylvester Weaver came up with the idea of selling not whole shows to
advertisers, but separate, small blocks of broadcast time. Several different
advertisers could buy time within one show, and therefore the content
of the show would move out of the control of a single advertiser - rather
like a print magazine. This became known as the magazine concept,
or participation advertising, as it allowed a whole
variety of advertisers to access the audience of a single TV show. Thus
the 'commercial break' as we know it was born.
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