Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This book is based on state-of-the-art research, including pure single-source research, consumer panel research, a predictive technique to pre-test television commercials, econometric evaluation, and studies of market and brand aggregates. Although the data in the book is based on sound samples and proven measurement techniques, they are explained with the simplest mathematics and the clearest prose.
Synopsis
John Philip Jones's new book is a provocative and lively challenge to much conventional advertising practice. -PAUL FELDWICK, Southcot House, Executive Planning Director, BMP, DDB, U. K.
Professor John Philip Jones is more than a fine teacher, he is an exceptional thinker. John at last brings structure, clarity, and understanding to the murky business of how advertising contributes to brand profits. Reading his new book I found myself nodding 'yes, yes, yes' to things I had never read before. -ERWIN EPHRON, President, Ephron, Papazian & Ephron, Inc.
John Phillip Jones has set himself the highest hurdle there is-how to make advertising accountable. His argument is precise, and his language entertaining and intelligent, making this quest an essential, provocative and delightfully enjoyable voyage for professionals and students alike. Read it. -ANDREW FENNING, Executive Vice President of J. Walter Thompson
Building on his original single-source data analysis, Jones demonstrates in depth the potential power of advertising ideas. His new Gatekeeper model gives his thesis some real teeth and provides marketers and agencies with an invaluable tool to harness creativity profitably on behalf of brands. -HAMISH PRINGLE, Director General of the IPA and co-author of 'Brand Spirit' and 'Brand Manners'
John Philip Jones gives you his methods and shares details of how advertising can be effectively measured and made accountable.
The Ultimate Secrets of Advertising is based on a large study of real brand advertising conducted by Media Marketing Assessment (MMA). Jones provides inside information and new information never published before on how advertising works, if itworks, how much it works, and how to explain, present, determine, measure, and analyze the medium- and long-term effects of advertising.
Table of Contents
Big ideas and good ideas -- Passing through the gate -- Getting it right first time -- Repetition, competition and the growth (or decline) of brands -- Keeping the brand in the window -- The bridge to the long term -- A first measure of long-term effects -- The depth of advertising's long-term effects -- Can doses of advertising produce doses of profit? -- Frozen effects versus continuous effects.