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Tide Print Advert (1950s) - Coggle Diagram
Tide Print Advert (1950s)
Context
Designed specifically for heavy-duty, machine cleaning, Procter & Gamble launched Tide in 1946 and it quickly became the brand leader in America, a position it maintains today
The D’Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles (DMB&B) advertising agency handled P&G’s accounts throughout the 1950s
Its campaigns for Tide referred explicitly to P&G because their market research showed that consumers had high levels of confidence in the company
Uniquely, DMB&B used print and radio advertising campaigns concurrently in order to quickly build audience familiarity with the brand
Both media forms used the “housewife” character and the ideology that its customers “loved” and “adored” Tide.
The post-WWII consumer boom of the 1950s includes the rapid development of new technologies for the home, designed to make domestic chores easier
Vacuum cleaners, fridge freezers, microwave ovens and washing machines all become desirable products for the 1950s consumer
Products linked to these new technologies also develop during this time, for example, washing powder
Industry Context
Print adverts from the 1950s conventionally used more copy than we’re used to seeing today
Consumer culture was in its early stages of development and, with so many ‘new’ brands and products entering markets, potential customers typically needed more information about them than a modern audience, more used to advertising, marketing and branding, might need
Conventions of print-based advertising are still recognisable in this text however, as detailed below
Z-line and a rough rule of thirds can be applied to its composition
Bright, primary colours connote the positive associations the producers want the audience to make with the product
Headings, subheadings and slogans are written in sans-serif font, connoting an informal mode of address
This is reinforced with the ‘comic strip’- style image in the bottom right-hand corner with two women ‘talking’ about the product using informal lexis (“sudsing whizz”)
The more ‘technical’ details of the product are written in a serif font, connoting the more ‘serious’ or ‘factual’ information that the ‘1,2,3’ bullet point list includes
Theoretical Perspectives
Semiotics – Roland Barthes: Suspense is created through the enigma of “what women want” and emphasised by the tension building use of multiple exclamation marks
Bathes’ Semantic Code could be applied to the use of hearts above the main image
The hearts and the woman’s gesture codes have connotations of love and relationships
It’s connoted that this is “what women want” (in addition to clean laundry!)
Hyperbole and superlatives (“Miracle”, “World’s cleanest wash!” “World’s whitest wash!”) as well as tripling (“No other…”) are used to oppose the connoted superior cleaning power of Tide to its competitors
This Symbolic Code (Barthes) was clearly successful as Procter and Gamble’s competitor
Representation
In the 1950s, while men were being targeted for the post-war boom in America’s car industry, women were the primary market for the technologies and products being developed for the home
In advertising for these types of texts, stereotypical representations of domestic perfection, caring for the family and servitude to the ‘man of the house’ became linked to a more modern need for speed, convenience and a better standard of living than the women experienced in the pre-war era
Consider how selection and combination of aspects of media language constructs representations of gender:
The dress codes of the advert’s main female character include a stereotypical 1950s hairstyle incorporating waves, curls and rolls made fashionable by contemporary film stars such as Veronica Lake, Betty Grable and Rita Hayworth
The fashion for women having shorter hair had a practical catalyst as long hair was hazardous for women working with machinery on farms or in factories during the war
The headband or scarf worn by the woman also links to the practicalities that women’s dress codes developed during this time
For this advert, having her hair held back connotes she’s focused on her work, though this is perhaps binary opposed to the full makeup that she’s wearing
Theory
Stuart Hall’s theory of representation - the images of domesticity (including the two women hanging out the laundry) form part of the “shared conceptual road map” that give meaning to the “world” of the advert
Despite its ‘comic strip’ visual construction, the scenario represented is familiar to the audience as a representation of their own lives
David Gauntlett’s theory of identity - women represented in the advert act as role models of domestic perfection that the audience may want to construct their own sense of identity against
Construct Audience
Despite women having seen their roles in society change during the War (where they were needed in medical, military support and other roles outside of the home) domestic products of the 1950s continued to be aimed at female audiences
The likely target audience of increasingly affluent lower-middle class women were, at this point in the 1950s, being appealed to because of their supposed need for innovative domestic technologies and products
The increasing popularity during the 1950s of supermarkets stocking a wider range of products led to an increased focus by corporations on brands and their unique selling points
The likely audience demographic is constructed through the advert’s use of women with whom they might personally identify (Uses and Gratifications Theory)
These young women are likely to be newly married and with young families (the men’s and children’s clothing on the washing line creates these connotations)
The endorsement from Good Housekeeping Magazine makes them an Opinion Leader for the target audience, reinforcing the repeated assertion that Tide is the market-leading product
The preferred reading (Stuart Hall) of the advert’s reassuring lexical fields (“trust”, “truly safe”, “miracle”, “nothing like”) is that, despite being a “new” product, Tide provides solutions to the audience’s domestic chores needs
Reception Theory
Stuart Hall - The indirect mode of address made by the woman in the main image connotes that her relationship with the product is of prime importance (Tide has what she wants)
This, according to Hall, is the dominant or hegemonic encoding of the advert’s primary message that should be received by “you women.”
The direct mode of address of the images in the top right and bottom left-hand corner link to the imperative “Remember!” and the use of personal pronouns (“your wash,” “you can buy”)
Cultivation Theory
George Gerbner: Advertising developed significantly during the 1950s and this theory, developed by Gerbner in the early 1970s, explains some of the ways in which audiences may be influenced by media texts such as adverts
The Tide advert aims to cultivate the ideas that: this is the brand leader; nothing else washes to the same standard as Tide; it’s a desirable product for its female audience; and its “miracle suds” are an innovation for the domestic washing market
Gerbner’s theory would argue that the repetition of these key messages causes audiences to increasingly align their own ideologies with them (in this case positively, creating a product that “goes into more American homes than any other washday product”).