Unit 30 Advertisement Production for Television
Wednesday, 18 June 2014
HA4 Task 5 – Post-production
Peer Reviews:
Daniel Harrison: I thought the advert was very good,
especially the song and dinosaur parts. The idea of the kitkat moving is
really good as well.
Reece Cordingley: The music scene is very clever and overall
it was very creative.
Chloe Kyriacou: I thought that it was a very well-made
advert and the stop motion was very good. There was a bit of a problem with the
lighting throughout but, it wasn’t too noticeable. I really enjoyed the advert
overall.
Kelsey Keighley: The advert was brilliant and really
creative. I thought that the moving bar was really well thought out and fun. It seemed a bit slow at times and the music didn't fully match.
Emma Upton: I really liked the advert, though there were
parts of it where it kept flashing. However, it was very good. I also think that different music should have been used.
Skye Nel: The adverts style was good and the idea was too.
The stop-motion style was very well done and there was nothing wrong with the
video.
Callum Wallace: The advert was really good and well made.
From this I can conclude that while my advert did well in terms of creativity and execution, there were some small elements that i could have fixed. The primary concern was the lighting and the music. I couldn't find any other fast paced instrumental music and the lighting would have been near-impossible to correct in post-production due to a lack of resources and time.
HA4 Task 4 – Production
PLEASE NOTE:
There is a big gap between the first two log entries as when originally uploaded to slideshare, the format would change and affect the pictures by overlapping them with text.
Wednesday, 14 May 2014
HA3 Task 8 - Audience Classification
Audience Classification
There are a range of techniques that are used to classify audiences for the TV advertising industry. This is referred to as 'Audience Profiling'. By researching their audience beforehand, a researcher can ensure that an advertiser puts across the right message to the viewing audience. It might include details like age, sex, educational qualification, work experience, financial background, field of work, interests, mood, orientation, bias, food habits, religious background, physique, health condition etc. As it depends on what is being researched, how much detail is applied to the research can vary.
Demographics
Psychographics
A small table detailing a few differences between demographics and psychographics, showing the main differences between the two.
Geodemographics
Geodemographics is the process of analyzing survey data of a specific geographical area to profile economic and demographic characteristics of population living there. It is commonly used for marketing and advertising strategies. It will analyze where various people live and how viewing decisions between locations change. This is because people living in crowded council estates would probably watch different things than people who own their own house in an upmarket area. Geodemographic systems estimate the most probable characteristics of people based on the combined profile of all people living in a small area near a particular address. Geodemographics can also work in conjunction with psychographics and class systems. This is because some areas will typically be more upmarket, with more expensive house whilst other will consist of council houses and high rise flats. So, the class and personality traits will most likely differ greatly.
An example of the types of houses in a location in Great Britain:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)