Cover Image: 101 Things I Learned® in Advertising School

101 Things I Learned® in Advertising School

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A short, easy to understand guide to marketing. I really like it and feel that it offers practical advice. I suggest reading it through, then hanging onto it to use as a reference in the future.

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I love this series, as so much becomes clear about the mysteries we associate with certain professions. Advertising of course is often considered the dark arts, and we often associate it with deception and manipulation. This book makes you think "yes its all of that" and "thank the Lord for that".

This book details how advertising professionals help you on the product path to all the purchases you need and want. These people not only shift product but also make a world that is refined to making consumer and industry work in synergy. Coordinating that dance is a very complex and useful activity. This book looking at 101 aspects gives you a sense of how it works, why it works and in many cases why it often fails.

I loved this book, but it did leave me wanting more. Some aspects they could have really brought out more, such as digital advertising and telephone and person to person sales. Still I highly recommend this to any one who has any inclination to find out how advertising is done and more importantly why its done.

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[Note:  This book was provided free of charge by Net Gallery.  All thoughts and opinions are my own.]

I'm not familiar with the series that this book is a part of, but judging from what the book says, it is likely that the series as a whole is at least somewhat polarizing if this book is any indication.  My own feelings about advertising and marketing are somewhat ambivalent, but this book does a good jot, for the most part, at presenting the high road in giving advertising legitimacy by providing the means by which people who have goods and services to offer make others aware of that fact in ways that encourage their bottom line.  I see nothing inherently illegitimate about advertising, but feel it necessary to recognize that much of it is unethical and manipulative in its nature [1].  The authors of this book--and it seems as if the cowriter is given credit mainly because he was the one who created the series rather than for being the main author--do a good job at drawing interest to this book through their mostly good-natured sense of humor about advertising.  Other than a particularly saucy and daring quotation from Hitler about the nature of propaganda and its audience, this book manages to take the high road and defend ethics and truth-telling in advertising to a high degree.

In terms of its contents this book is short and straightforward to a high degree.  Each of the 101 things that the author(s) learned in Advertising school are introduced with some sort of provocative visual and there is usually some sort of provocative quotation or short discussion about it.  This is not a book that aims at great depth but it certainly is the start of book that can start a conversation with the reader about the nature of advertising and marketing efforts that certainly deserves to be had.  What is the value of brokers and middlemen in general?  What are the alternatives to advertising efforts, and are there ways that advertisers can improve their rather pitiful reputation among an increasingly cynical general public?  How can much of the clutter that the authors talk about in advertising be removed for the benefit of everyone involved except for those business which profit from the proliferation of intrusive and often irritating advertisement?  This book does not definitely answer such fairly obvious questions but does at least provide a pro-advertising point of view that ought to inspire some sort of comment and response among many readers, which is likely what it was meant to do.

Even so, at the end of the day I find it hard simply to buy the arguments of the author(s) in favor of advertising.  The authors seem to want to do a great deal in a somewhat superficial way here, and much of it is certainly interesting and some of it downright ironic, such as the insight that advertising agencies do not themselves advertise, except indirectly through the marketing campaigns that they work on for others.  The book also praises companies whose reputations have fallen a bit on hard times, like that on Dove with recent advertising that has been deemed racist.  Those who want something to argue with or respond to will find much of interest here.  Those whose views are favorable to marketers and advertisers will also find much of interest here, but I wonder if this book is designed more to preach to the choir in a highly polarized atmosphere concerning advertising and marketing and to provoke debate with those who are opposed to the authors' worldview than it is to provide the means for a convincing argument in favor of their worldview.  At least some of this book appears an awful lot like trolling, especially the quotation from Mein Kempf and its reference to 9/11 truthers that are its most controversial comments/insights.

[1] See, for example:

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2017/10/05/first-impressions-of-st-lucia/

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2017/05/02/book-review-benefits-in-god/

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2017/04/30/book-review-the-cigar-story/

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2016/08/25/do-they-really-think-californians-are-that-clueless/

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2016/07/21/book-review-sun-maid-raisins-dried-fruits/

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If you are planning on advertising anything, this is a must read. Very educational and helpful in a very simple to understand method of advertising your product or business. Very glad I read this book.

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101 tips for advertising people. Written in a simplistic manner, will most likely appeal to those who are either interested in, or beginning a career in advertising.

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This book is exactly what it says it is: 101 concise lessons about advertising that span different areas of focus. During my time in advertising, I learned that it can be difficult to convince a designer to put the merchandise and target demographic before their artistic vision, but it can also be hard to convince a business person about the importance of font choice and brand standards. I joined the advertising field as a graphic artist, but there's so much more to advertising than design. There are also business, communications, psychological, and legal aspects to consider. Advertising is such a diverse field, so it's helpful to learn a little about each aspect.

How can you use basic human psychology to your advantage? Why did the federal ban on cigarette advertising actually increase smoking? Which type of products should have the highest profit margin? This book answers those questions, plus much more. It includes real-life examples, such as the interesting ways well-known companies have revived or destroyed their brands. There are also helpful tips. The one about handling criticism would be useful for anyone in a creative field. The author advises paying attention when multiple people find a problem with your work, but to focus on the actual criticism rather than the suggested fix for it. If you're looking for how to avoid controversy, this book provides answers for that too. It always baffles people when something obviously offensive slips past the eyes of entire committees, but things aren’t so easy to see when you’re too close to a project and you aren’t looking for it.

This book of succinct and memorable lessons would make a great gift for a student interested in joining the advertising field. It could also be useful for professionals, because it includes lessons that we all need to be reminded of from time to time!

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101 Things I Learned in Advertising School was a fun read. Learned a lot!

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This book was very brief but distilled essential concepts from Advertising school. The illustrations were well done, and the text was just the right length and context for each graphic I thought the illustrations could actually be a bit bigger, and also the table of contents could have a summary word for each topic rather than just a number. It's a summary of well-known advertising principles, rather than a story,, so there isn't anything contentious in it. I believe it could be helpful to those who want to remember what they learned in school, as well as advertising students. It could save someone a ton of time in advertising school

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