Course content
The course investigates campaigns as
central institutions and organizing devices in
market communication in practice. It confronts students with
challenges, roles and inputs of different actors in
the process of developing and executing campaigns, from
initiation to evaluation and follow-up. The aim
is to enable students to contribute in various
capacities to produce effective marketing communication and
reflect upon the strategic context, social dynamics,
specialist skills and knowledge of campaign
work.
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The course examines various types of
communication campaigns (in terms of e.g. objectives, openness
and level of engagement, media, sector), while
exploring trends towards convergence and more agile,
interactive, precisely targeted, cross
media, content-driven approaches anchored
in digital media. The course places particular emphasis
on the actors at various levels and organizational
arrangements behind campaigns, (marcom)
departmental authority and mandate, client-agency relations,
affiliation of professionals to communities of practice
and peer networks, audience and customer or other
stakeholder groups, account teams and project
groups whether organizations (such as
advertising agencies, marketing and corporate communication
departments, media providers), groups (account teams, consumer or
activities) and professionals (CMOs, account managers, account
planners, creative workers, digital and media
specialists) .
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Finally, the course has a
methodological component focusing on the one hand
qualitative methods for generating insights into target consumers
and audience responses to inform creative development as well
as quantitative methods of data gathering for
tracking and documenting the impact of campaigns. The
methodological part consists of theoretical and hands-on elements
of field work and data analysis.
Teaching methods
The teaching of the course consists of lectures, case discussion
tutorials, and method workshops. Guest lecturers will introduce and
discuss contexts, organization, processes and outcomes of
campaigns. A futher central learning activity is the live case
pitch, which simulate campaign development and coordination.
It asks opposing student 'agency'
groups guided by tutorial lecturers to do a
competitive pitch for the account of a real company.
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Textbook:
Hackley, C. & A.R. Hackley (2014), Advertising and
promotion. An integrated marketing communications approach.
London: Sage.
Readings:
Bilton, C. (2009), “Relocating creativity in advertising. From
asthetic specialization to strategic integration.” in Andy C. Pratt
and Paul Jeffcutt. Creativity, innovation and the cultural
economy, London: Routledge, 25-40.
Christensen, L.T., A. F. Firat and J. Cornelissen (2009) "New
tensions and challenges in integrated communications",
Corporate Communications: An International Journal, Vol.
14 Iss: 2, 207 - 219
Cornelissen, J. (2011). Corporate Communication. A Guide to
Theory and Practice. London: Sage. chapter 2.
Court, D et al. (2012) “Measuring marketing’s worth”, McKinsey
Quarterly (May), 1-7.
Edelman, D. & Salsberg, B. (2010), “Beyond Paid Media:
Marketing’s New Vocabulary”. McKinsey Quarterly, November,
1-8.Eiberg, K. et al. (eds.) (2013) Markedskommunikation i
praksis. København: Samfundslitteratur.
Goldenberg, J. & Mazursky (2007), “Advertising Creativity:
Balancing Surprise and Regularity”, Chapter 18 in Tellis, G. &
Ambler, T., The Sage Handbook of Advertising. London: Sage
Publications, 283-299
Grabher, Gernot (2002) The Project Ecology of Advertising: Tasks,
Talents & Teams. Regional Studies. 36:3, 245-262.
Kapferer, Jean-Noel (2012) “Managing global brands”, Chapter 17 in
The New Strategic Brand Management: Advanced Insights and
Strategic Thinking. London: Kogan Page, 405-438.
McLeod, C. et al. (2011), “Pot Noodles, Placements and Peer Regard:
Creative Career Trajectories and Communities of Practice in the
British Advertising Industry”. British Journal of
Management, Vol. 22, 114–131
Moss, Danny (2011), "Strategy-Making and Planning in the
Communications Context." In Public Relations: A Managerial
Perspective (2011): 111.
Park, Hyun-Soo, et al. (2012), “Marketing's accountability and
internal legitimacy: Implications for firm performance”, Journal of
Business Research, Volume 65, Issue 11, November, 1576-1582
Sachs, Marylee (2013), What the New Breed of CMOs Know that You
Don’t, Farnham: Gower, 1-10 & 133-138.
Storey, Richard & Edith Smith (2007), “The Creative Brief and
its Strategic Role in the Campaign Development Process”, Chapter 11
in Tellis, G. & Ambler, T., The Sage Handbook of
Advertising. London: Sage Publications, 171-183.
Turow, Joseph (2013), “How Should We Think About Audience Power in
the Digital Age?” in Valdivia, Angharad N. and Scharrer, Erica.
The International Encyclopedia of Media Studies: Media
Effects/Media Psychology. 1-24.
Visconti, Luca & M. Ucok-Hughes (2012) “Segmentation and
Targeting Reloaded” in Penaloza, Toulouse & Visconti (ed.)
Marketing Management: A Cultural Perspective. 955-314
Waller, D.S. (2004), “Developing an account-management lifecycle
for advertising agency-client relationships”, Marketing
Intelligence & Planning, Vol. 22 Iss: 1, 95 – 112.
West, D., Caruana, A., & Leelapanyalert, K. (2013). “What Makes
Win, Place, or Show? Judging Creativity in Advertising at Award
Shows”. Journal of Advertising Research, 53(3), 1-23.
Cases
The Pepsi Refresh Project: A Thirst for Change
Michael I. Norton; Jill Avery
English PDF |
512018-PDF-ENG
MINI USA: Finding a New Advertising Agency (A)
David B. Godes
English PDF |
508041-PDF-ENG
Vestas' World of Wind
Thomas Steenburgh; Elena Corsi
English PDF |
511121-PDF-ENG
Sephora Direct: Investing in Social Media, Video, and Mobile
Elie Ofek; Alison Berkley
Wagonfeld
English PDF | 511137-PDF-ENG
Clearblue pregnancy test
Douglas Holt & Douglas Cameron (2010)
in Cultural Strategy. 195-219 (in
compendium)
MINI USA: Finding a New Advertising Agency (B)
David B. Godes
English PDF |
508042-PDF-ENG•
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