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STRATEGIC RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADVERTISING CLUTTER AND POLYCHRONIC TIME
USE: A STUDY OF INDIAN YOUTH
Purva Kansal
Panjab University
Divya Aggarwal
HCL Technologies
ABSTRACT
As globalization becomes ever more prominent, the role of media and
advertising is increasing. Ideally for large multinationals that have
the resources to take advantage of globalization there exists a larger
“market” to which products can be sold. To create and sustain their
market, these multinationals companies use aggressive advertising
strategies. Television is a aggressive advertising media for these
companies. In India television advertising has been expanding throughout
the 1990s. Close on the heels of multinationals, domestic companies are
also using television as a media to reach the Indian masses. As a
result, the number of television commercials is increasing. With this
the frequency and time of advertising pods, in a program, are also
increasing. This competition between the program content and advertising
pods is known as “clutter”. This advertising clutter and has led to
companies questioning the efficiency of the medium of communication, in
terms of reducing the competitive rivalry and creating a brand
impression. This paper aims at understanding this relationship between
advertising clutter and multiple activities a viewer might be involved
in i.e. polychronic use of time: as proposed by Kaufman and Lane
(1994)). The study concludes that Indian youth exhibit mental nomadship
rather than channel or physical nomadship, at current levels of
advertising. Furthermore, channel nomadship has a significant
relationship with the person who has control over the remote and the
time for which the television is being watched. Physical nomadship has a
significant relationship with age, gender and education level. Finally,
mental nomadship was related to gender and education level. The study
also has important implications for managers.
Keywords:
Advertising Clutter, Polychronic time use, Advertising Strategies,
Nomadic Behavior, Consumer behavior. |