Untitled Document
Some of the biggest advertisers are taking their advertising away from
full page ads and television spots and spending up on hidden persuasion. You
won't find these secret messages in ice-cubes or flickering film footage like
they were in the sixties. Subliminal advertising has gone mainstream - fake
news, mind control scripts, propaganda and stealth voicemail are in wide use
by corporations, government bodies, and industry groups. Have you spotted any
of these?
1. Point of Sale Mind Control Scripts
Clothing store staff and car salesmen use them to close the deal - carefully
planned questions and subverbal cues to get you to sign. If you’ve ever
walked out of a store, after spending twice as much as you wanted to, chances
are you’ve fallen victim to one of these scripts. The GAPACT is used by
Gap staff to upsell you. Other salesmen use word techniques to make you buy,
even when you don’t have the money - because they make more by selling
you 'easy' finance. When a car salesmen takes you on a test drive and asks you
“Is this the type of vehicle you would like to own?”, he is using
a subtle mental framing trick - it can create an embarrassing distraction while
you drive. The technique is called disassociation - which is the ideal state
for mental manipulation.
2. Doctor-Patient Drug Kick-backs
When a doctor recommends a certain heart medication or an antidepressant, chances
are he has been paid a cash bonuses and perks by the manufacturer, making it
difficult to give objective advice. Some pharmaceutical firms have gone so far
as to invent and promote a new syndrome in order to create a market for a new
drug! Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) was devised in 1998 and publicised by planting
fifty press stories and quizzes such as: “Do you have social anxiety disorder?”.
Soon after, Smithkline Beecham released Paxil - the 'cure' for SAD.
3. In-Store Sensory Manipulation
Scientifically tested visual displays, Muzak tapes, and even mind altering
scents combine to maximize impulse spending. Specially designed music loops
can keep shoppers in the supermarket for 18% longer. One study into use of airborne
aromas, pumped into a Canadian mall, resulted in an increase of over $50 per
customer that week. In supermarkets, scientifically generated Planograms create
the ideal shelf arrangement for certain products, skewing the shopper's eyes
towards high value items. Companies pay slotting allowances for favoured placement.
Aisle layout are change regularly - which prevents systematic shopping - forcing
extra trips past the impulse item displays.
4. Private Conversation Rental
Positive buzz can be triggered artificially for a price. Marketers now recruit
secret 'buzz agents' to promote to their friends and family. One buzz agency
claims to have an army of agents in every major US city. Their job is to mention
or display certain products as they go about their day, using their relationships
as marketing channels. Music labels, book sellers, entertainment venues, and
fashion outlets are using this method to establish new brands. Today’s
billion dollar 12-16 year olds are so immune to traditional advertising, mass
media is no longer a reliable persuasive device - so the alternative is a 'synthetic
grapevine’!
5. Neuromarketing
Corporations are going to enormous lengths to probe the minds of consumers
- literally tapping into their brains. The Brighthouse Institute for Thought
Sciences, in Atlanta, is one lab that is scanning people's brains with MRIs,
in an effort to decode and record our subconscious thoughts and devise more
seductive advertising. The process is being called neuromarketing. They are
hoping to determine specific biological triggers that can be used by language
engineers to stimulate purchases. This is the hi-tech fulfilment of pioneer
psychologists Freud and Jung who established the connection between language
and behaviour.
6. Chatbots and Stealth Voicemail
Personal phone messages from businesses or political campaigners can turn up
in your morning voicemail, having been delivered late the previous night. Voicemail
broadcasters like DialAmerica uses massive computer installations to deliver
identical copies of spoken messages to millions of householder simultaneously.
On the internet, chat room 'bots' masquerading as personal real buddies are
actually distributed simultaneously by powerful computers 24 hours a day. Virtual
word-of-mouth communication is replacing other promotional technologies because
of its speed and price.
7. Real-time Bugging of Personal Data
Your browser is probably revealing more than you might want: your location,
the software and hardware you are using, details of other links you clicked
on and your browsing habits. Many third party dataminers use 'cookies' to track
your path across the web. Extensive realtime information is processed to target
you. Larger databases harvest your personal medical and financial records to
be bought and sold by interested companies and government departments. Datamining
is a fuzzy science that filters you personal information for links about your
personal behaviour and finances. These details are used in turn to create elaborate
marketing campaigns to sell you more stuff.
8. Sidewalk Stalkers
The public space of streets, neighborhoods and communities is being mapped
and targeted by viral marketers and fake grassroots organizations. In some cases
the campaigns are overt but, increasingly, street 'agents' are making unannounced
social approaches. Fake tourists flash around the latest camera-phone to passing
crowds. 'Product seeders' circulate at sports events to find influential young
players to wear their gear. Others wander the street wearing colored corporate
tattoos. Personal space is the last frontier for commerce. As citizens attempt
to retreat from the deluge of media advertising they can now be stalked when
they step out the door.
9. Planted News Stories
Industry front groups, public relations firms and government departments are
planting news stories on TV, radio, newspapers and the web. Those 'miracle drug'
stories or research reports are often Video News Release (VNRs). TV newsrooms
love these prepackaged news items that are distributed across the networks.
It saves them time and money but it is killing community news and genuine investigative
reporting. Real news items are being replaced by slick corporate promotions
and political messages. According to one Nielsen Media Research Survey, about
80 percent of U.S. news directors air VNRs several times a month, and all American
television newsrooms now use VNRs in their newscasts.
10. Government Propaganda
When it's time to launch a war or promote an unpopular policy, the government
needs special help to sell the idea through the media. Opinion engineers are
paid to "manage" public perception of inconvenient facts, and turn
them around for better. Using the universal tools fear, patriotism, and phrase
repitition, these high flying spin doctors can easily sway the population. The
most successful public relations campaigns aim to change public perception without
our awareness of the campaign. They are typically launched by governments, institutions
and countries who need to change their public image, restore their reputation
or manipulate public opinion. There are PR firms today who advise dictatorships,
dishonest politicians and corrupt industries to cover up environmental catastrophes
and human rights violations.
Martin Howard is a media researcher and author of
We Know What You Want: How They Change Your Mind - an illustrated
consumer guide for today's citizens. It is the first attempt to catalog the
hundreds of methods used to control and persuade us. Chapters cover cult tactics,
rogue computer programs, undercover sales agents and data mining. The hybrid
book uses colourful diagrams, cartoons and quizes to engage the interest of
younger readers and average consumers. It outlines hundreds of examples and
offers pointers to resources for further research.