Introduction:
Is online advertising influencing our interests more so than we realize?
Movies
have target audiences. Why not target those audiences more creativity
my approaching them through the websites they are most likely visiting?
The web is a vital source of communication and outreach. Looking to
broaden your audiences from just the trailers shown on TV and in
theaters, there are several other means of grabbing the public's
attention of your new project. Social Media has become a booming means
to communicate quickly and efficiently any magnificent new film you're
developing or trying to market. Its important to remember that while
film is an art, even artists have to eat. So marketing, advertising your
film online through ads, tweets, posts, anything you can do, will
increase your chances of having a steak dinner every once in awhile.
What I Learned:
Films, especially for the little guys, the indie film, the low budget
films, the films scheduled on kitchen tables in studio apartments, are
hard to market. The lesser known you are the harder it is to get your
name out there. Your film will be harder to get an audience to, and
making any profit afterwards is almost not going to happen. You have to
be creative, proactive, and target all your resources to get your film
in front of people. Target audiences, If you’re movies a chick-flick
think like a girl, advertise on feminine websites. If its a teen film,
get on facebook, make a page, think socializing, that’s literally all
teenagers want to go, so do it too to get your film an audience!
Marketing a film isn’t going to be easy, production doesn’t stop when
the camera stops rolling. There’s this whole new monster called
“marketing” that now must be tackled immediately so you can start seeing
a reward or payback for all the work that you’ve put into your project.
“Smart
filmmaker know that a film’s marketing is crucial to its success or
failure—and doing it well requires an enormous amount of time and
effort.” A
filmmaker must go above and beyond to make sure his/her film is seen.
It take a lot to get to get a film into a theater or a festival. A lot
of effort comes from every crew member on a film. You want the film that
everyone dedicated so much time to, several hours a day for sometimes
months, to be seen. Film, like any other art form is meant to be seen by
a large audience. Marketing a film is how you get that film seen.
Marketing may seem like such mundane business affair, but it becomes a
crucial part of a film, because it determines whether or not a movie
will be seen or left on a shelf to rot.
What I Would Like to Learn More About:
I would really like to look into how larger companies target their
consumers. Understanding how the major businesses with the incredible
funds target their consumers, could help smaller groups or businesses as
well. A big budget plan can be reworked to be utilized at a smaller
scale. I want to know how women are specifically targeted. And why women
are targeted based on their insecurities? How are children’s products
marketed? How are men’s products marketed? Why is the teenage market so
large? Teenagers are marketed to all the time, at every hour of the day,
on so many different platforms. How many different platforms are
teenagers marketed to on? How can you jump start a social networking
marketing plan? Are indie films using a team of people to market their
films are can it be done with a few or even by just one person? I’m also
curious as to how marketing can benefit or harm a film? How much money
is spent marketing? How much money of what the consumer spends goes into
marketing? How much time and effort goes into marketing before a film
is screened to the public? How many test groups, people, screenings, do
should I be going through? How do I know what demographics to screen to?
Knowing that three things sell: animals, children, and sex, should I
utilize this information to market my film to guarantee an audience or
simply market the story? How much should I listen to focus groups? How
much should I spend on focus groups and marketing? What percentage of my
budget should I allot to marketing. How should I market? Twitter,
blogging, Posters, Netflix, trailers, podcasts, how many outlets should I
utilize to make sure my film is heard and seen? "Some of the most successful movie marketing campaigns in recent memory have used the Internet and social media almost exclusively to fuel audience interest, or more precisely, audience engagement, in their movies."
My Video Exercises:
I
composed my videos elaborating specifically on how women are targeted
in advertising. Their perception of beauty and what it means to be
beautiful are both targeted so I decided to exploit these things in my
video compositions. I used an old Betty Boop cartoon because she has become the image of beauty for years since her creation, and she has also become a model of what women should consider femininity in American culture. I accompanied this video with a images of women of every size walking down the catwalk, an environment usually seen occupied by thin women of unattainable physical standards for the average woman. I used resources from archived images or videos that
are now public domain, and I also used songs that are popular or
familiar so that the association of the images and songs is stronger.
My Project Video Composition:
For my second video I composed a video of advertisements that use women to glorify something that is inherently unattractive. Smoking cigarettes is awful for your health. Everyone is aware of the side-affects. And vacuuming is no fun however you are, chores are just that 'chores'. But when you put a vacuum or a cigarette in a pretty hand the image completely changes. My goal of this video was to show that marketing can change how you perceive an action.
My Works Cited:

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