- Katy Bachman, Mediaweek

In the
midst of a recession, consumers credit media advertising with
influencing their purchase considerations, according to a study by
Yankelovich and the Television Bureau of Advertising released
during a presentation in New York on Wednesday (April 15). The
study examined how much influence advertising had on a consumer's
purchase decision, depending on where the consumer was in the
purchase cycle.
The study found that in general, media impacts 80 percent of
consumers in the awareness phase of the purchase cycle declining to
about 53 percent at the transaction phase. That varied by category.
For example, in the travel category, 87 percent of consumers
reported being influenced by media in the awareness phase, while 59
percent were influences at the purchase sage. In the auto category,
81 percent were influenced by media in the awareness phase, and 41
percent were influences in the purchase stage.
Television's share of media impact is about the same throughout all
phases of the purchase cycle from 54 percent at the awareness stage
to 49 percent at purchase.
"The purchase funnel [awareness, consideration, preference and
purchase] has been widely accepted as an important way of looking
at how consumers move toward a purchase decision, but up to now
very little research existed to determine the impact of
advertising.
This study breaks new ground and the advertising community has
already expressed great interest in seeing our results," said Susan
Cuccinello, senior vp of research for the TVB.
Conducted between Jan. 29 and Feb. 10, the online study surveyed
more than 3,000 consumers that had seen a TV ad in order to
determine the role of TV advertising in driving consumer actions
throughout the purchase decision process, how TV interacts with
other media platforms and the role of different media platforms in
the cycle. The study measured responses to ads across 15 different
consumer categories, including auto, financial services,
restaurants, department or discount stores, furniture stores,
healthcare, entertainment, travel, telecommunications.
Source: Mediaweek.com
Media Ads Affect Purchase Decisions
April 15, 2009
- Katy Bachman, Mediaweek

In the midst of a recession, consumers credit media advertising with influencing their purchase considerations, according to a study by Yankelovich and the Television Bureau of Advertising released during a presentation in New York on Wednesday (April 15). The study examined how much influence advertising had on a consumer's purchase decision, depending on where the consumer was in the purchase cycle.
The study found that in general, media impacts 80 percent of consumers in the awareness phase of the purchase cycle declining to about 53 percent at the transaction phase. That varied by category. For example, in the travel category, 87 percent of consumers reported being influenced by media in the awareness phase, while 59 percent were influences at the purchase sage. In the auto category, 81 percent were influenced by media in the awareness phase, and 41 percent were influences in the purchase stage.
Television's share of media impact is about the same throughout all phases of the purchase cycle from 54 percent at the awareness stage to 49 percent at purchase.
"The purchase funnel [awareness, consideration, preference and purchase] has been widely accepted as an important way of looking at how consumers move toward a purchase decision, but up to now very little research existed to determine the impact of advertising.
This study breaks new ground and the advertising community has already expressed great interest in seeing our results," said Susan Cuccinello, senior vp of research for the TVB.
Conducted between Jan. 29 and Feb. 10, the online study surveyed more than 3,000 consumers that had seen a TV ad in order to determine the role of TV advertising in driving consumer actions throughout the purchase decision process, how TV interacts with other media platforms and the role of different media platforms in the cycle. The study measured responses to ads across 15 different consumer categories, including auto, financial services, restaurants, department or discount stores, furniture stores, healthcare, entertainment, travel, telecommunications.
Source: Mediaweek.com