THE EFFECT OF TELEVISION ADVERTISEMENTS ON CONSUMPTION CULTURE


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Authors

  • Cemil YAVUZ Gazi Üniversitesi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46872/pj.300

Keywords:

Advertising, Consumer Behavior, Desire, Gender, Consumption Culture

Abstract

The concept of "other", which is made attractive by different discourses in the consumption culture, is presented to users as an object to be consumed. The other phone, the other house, the other body, etc., which the consumers desire to reach. advertisements are always made more attractive than what they have. In a sense, instead of marketing products to people in line with their needs, new needs are tried to be marketed to this audience. As a result, in today's rapidly changing world, the necessity of going beyond traditional stereotypes has arisen in understanding consumer behavior. While examining the purchasing behavior of consumers, some new facts brought about by the changing and globalizing world order should also be taken into account, apart from the classical factors. Advertising is one of the most important concepts that trigger social consumption. Advertisements reach the target audience through different channels and television advertisements take a large share of this part. What is important for a company that advertises is that it prefers its own brand among the many different brands when the consumer goes to the market. However, with the emergence of many similar brands in the same categories, classical advertisements are not enough for a product to be the first choice in the minds of the consumer. In this study, how the desire factor that is tried to be evoked in television commercials is processed in the commercials. The relationship between the interest levels of consumers' gender identities and socioeconomic status levels regarding advertisements and the effect of these concepts on the shaping of consumption culture is discussed in scale.

Published

2021-10-15

How to Cite

YAVUZ, C. (2021). THE EFFECT OF TELEVISION ADVERTISEMENTS ON CONSUMPTION CULTURE. PEARSON JOURNAL, 6(14), 56–66. https://doi.org/10.46872/pj.300

Issue

Section

Articles