Advertising and Consumer Representations
People
Course director
Corengia M.
Course director
Description
Course objectives
This Course aims at:
- Providing students with an overview of key advertising issues, from the design of campaigns to the measurement of advertising effectiveness
- Preparing them for any positions in advertising, at the client or agency side.
- Stimulating a reflection on the ethics and implications of consumer representations
Course description
This course introduces the key stakes, frameworks and best practices that shape the current advertising landscape. Students will learn the fundamentals of the discipline, including its creative, media and data/tech sides, for traditional AND digitally-driven campaigns and programs. The course will tackle both branding, and direct-response advertising, throughout what practitioners call «a full-funnel» approach of paid advertising. Doing so, students will be exposed to some of the key trends affecting both agencies and clients, including the rise of Advertising Technologies (AdTech) and the increasing role played by algorithms in advertising campaigns (at a time when some agencies and experts try hard to reclaim the role played by «craft» and «magi » in advertising effectiveness). This course will be very much anchored in the realities of today’s practitioners, both from the agency and client side.
Students will have also the opportunity to reflect on the implications of consumer representations delivered through advertising. They will be exposed to examples of advertising campaigns showing the complexity, dynamicity and potential harmful effects of consumer representations. By the end of the course, students hopefully will develop a more insightful approach to advertising that takes into consideration also the ethical dimension rooted in consumer representation.
The course is organised in two parts: (1) Advertising Today; (2) Implications of Consumer Representations.
Attendance
Attendance is strongly recommended.
Examination information
Assessment will consist of an individual written exam that will address issues and topics covered in part 1 and 2 of the course.
Required material
Some articles drawn from the trade press will be handed out before the first and second week for the part 1 of the course («Advertising today»)
References for the part 2 of the course («Implications of consumer representations») will be uploaded on iCorsi at the end of the course. These references will not be compulsory for the final exam that will be based, for part 2, on the material presented and discussed in class.
Education
- Master in European Studies in Investor Relations and Financial Communication, Elective course, Elective Courses, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Communication and Economics in Corporate Communication, Elective course, Thematic Area: Crossmedia, Transmedia and Multimodal Communication, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Communication and Economics in Corporate Communication, Elective course, Thematic Area: Visual and Material Culture, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Communication and Economics in Marketing and Transformative Economy, Elective course, Thematic Area: Crossmedia, Transmedia and Multimodal Communication, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Communication and Economics in Marketing and Transformative Economy, Elective course, Thematic Area: Visual and Material Culture, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Communication in Media Management, Elective course, Thematic Area: Crossmedia, Transmedia and Multimodal Communication, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Communication in Media Management, Elective course, Thematic Area: Visual and Material Culture, 2nd year
- Master of Science in Digital Fashion Communication, Elective course, 1st year