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Sex in advertising

Sex appeal in advertising is a common tactic employed to promote products and services.[1] Research indicates that sexually appealing content, including imagery, is often used to shape or alter the consumer's perception of a brand, even if it is not directly related to the product or service being advertised. This approach, known as "sex sells," has become more prevalent among companies, leading to controversies surrounding the use of sexual campaigns in advertising.[2][1]

An early example of sexual imagery in advertising (1921)

Contemporary mainstream advertising, across various media platforms such as magazines, online, and television, frequently incorporates sexual elements to market a wide range of branded goods and services. Provocative images of attractively dressed men and women are commonly used to promote clothing, alcohol, beauty products, and fragrances. Renowned brands like Calvin Klein, Victoria's Secret, and Pepsi use such imagery to cultivate an alluring media presence.

In some cases, sexual content is overtly displayed, while in others, it is subtly integrated with imperceptible cues aimed at influencing the target audience. Furthermore, sexual content has been employed to promote mainstream products that were not traditionally associated with sex. For instance, the Dallas Opera's marketing of the more suggestive aspects of its performances is believed to have contributed to a boost in ticket sales.[3][4]

The effectiveness of sex appeal in advertising varies depending on the cultural context and the gender of the recipient, though these aspects are subject to further research and discussion.[citation needed]

Concept edit

Gender Advertisements,[5] a 1979 book by Canadian social anthropologist Erving Goffman, is a series of studies of visual communication and how gender representation in advertising communicates subtle, underlying messages about the sexual roles projected by masculine and feminine images in advertising. The book is a visual essay about sex roles in advertising and the symbolism implied in the depictions of men and women in advertising.

When couples are used in an advertisement, the sex roles played by each partner also sends out messages. The interaction of the couple may send out a message of relative dominance and power, and may stereotype the roles of one or both partners. Usually the message is very subtle, and sometimes advertisements attract interest by changing stereotypical roles. For example, companies including Spotify, Airbnb, Lynx and Amazon.com have used same-sex couples in adverts.[6] These adverts appeal to same-sex couples; they also create the image that these companies are tolerant, allowing them to appeal to a wider consumer audience.

As many consumers and professionals are thinking people, sex may be used to grab a viewer's attention, but this is likely short-term success. Whether using sex in advertising is effective depends on the product.[7] About three-quarters of advertisements using sex to sell the product are communicating a product-related benefit, such as the product making its users more sexually attractive.[citation needed]

Daily exposure on social media by adolescents to these types of influences can affect their development. Younger teenage girls are drawn to these ads in order to learn about romance and relationships. [8]

Correlational studies have linked sociodemographic variables to adolescent viewing habits. This can include (but not limited to) sex, age, and even ethnicity. Adolescents who watch and listen to a lot of media are more likely than less regular audiences to consider stereotypes of sex roles on TV as realistic.[citation needed]

Types edit

Physical attractiveness edit

 
Promotional model pageant at the Games Day 2011 event in Kyiv

The use of physically attractive models in advertising is a form of sex in advertising. Physical attractiveness can be conveyed through facial beauty, physique, hair, skin complexion as well as by the model's inferred personality. This form of sex in advertising is effective as it draws attention and influences the overall feeling of the ad. Furthermore, such ads create an association between physical attractiveness and the product which sends a message to the consumer that buying and using the product will help them achieve that physique.[9] The sexual arousal possibly elicited by physical attractiveness in adverts is thought to transfer onto the advertised product.[10]

Sexual behavior edit

 
A pole dancer promoting a video game at IgroMir 2010

Marketers often use tactics such as sexual imagery in their advertisements to capture the consumer's attention for longer.[11] Sex in advertising is also incorporated using hints of sexual behavior. The latter is communicated by the models using flirtatious body language, open posture and making eye contact with the viewer. Sexual behavior can also be displayed using several models interacting in a more or less sexual way. Sexual behavior in advertising is used to arouse sexual interest from the viewer.[9] Research has shown that sexual arousal elicited by an advert subsequently affects the overall ad evaluation and the chances of future purchase.[10]

For example, in a Guess clothing advert, while the models are physically attractive, it is their behavior such as position, posture and facial expressions that communicate sexual interest to the viewer. Women are often shown as being shorter, put in the background of images, shown in more 'feminine' poses than men, and generally present a higher degree of 'body display' than men in print advertisements.[12]

Sexual embeds edit

Sexual embeds are a controversial form of sex in advertising. They are a powerful technique that advertising agencies do not want consumers to consciously notice.[citation needed] They are subliminal elements that are detected as sexual information solely at the subconscious level. Sexual embeds can take the form of objects or words that, at the subconscious level (or when occasionally consciously identified) explicitly depict sexual acts or genitalia. For example, a perfume bottle could mimic a phallic shape and its positioning could suggest sexual intercourse. Embeds are especially effective as they unconsciously trigger sexual arousal in the consumer which drives motivation and goal directed behavior such as purchase intention.[9]

Gender roles edit

After women achieved the vote in the United States, Britain and Canada in the 1920s, advertising agencies exploited the new status of women. For example, they associated driving an automobile with masculinity, power, control, and dominance over a beautiful woman sitting alongside. More subtly, they published automobile ads in women's magazines, at a time when the vast majority of purchasers and drivers were in fact men. The new ads promoted themes of women's liberation while also delineating the limits of this freedom. Automobiles were more than practical devices, they were also highly visible symbols of affluence, mobility and modernity. The ads offered women a visual vocabulary to imagine their new social and political roles as citizens and to play an active role in shaping their identity as modern women.[13]

History edit

 
The earliest known use of sex in advertising, Pearl Tobacco label showing lightly draped female figure rising from the waves

The earliest known use of sex in advertising is by the Pearl Tobacco brand in 1871, which featured a naked maiden on the package cover. In 1885, W. Duke & Sons inserted trading cards into cigarette packs that featured sexually provocative starlets. Duke grew to become the leading American cigarette brand by 1890.[14]

Other early forms of sex appeal in advertising include woodcuts and illustrations of attractive women (often unclothed from the waist up) adorning posters, signs, and ads for saloons, tonics, and tobacco. In several notable cases, sex in advertising has been claimed as the reason for increased consumer interest and sales.

Sex and soap edit

 
1916 Ladies' Home Journal version of the famous seduction-based ad by Helen Lansdowne Resor at J. Walter Thompson Agency

Woodbury's Facial Soap, a woman's beauty bar, was almost discontinued in 1911. The soap's sales decline was reversed, however, with ads containing images of romantic couples and promises of love and intimacy for those using the brand.[15] Jōvan Musk Oil, introduced in 1971, was promoted with sexual entendre and descriptions of the fragrance's sexual attraction properties. As a result, Jōvan, Inc.'s revenue grew from $1.5 million in 1971 to $77 million by 1978.[16]

Kamasutra condoms in India edit

In 1991, J.K. Chemicals Group asked the Bombay office of Lintas Bombay to develop a campaign for a new condom brand. The problem was that in the late 1940s, the Nehru government had launched a major population limitation program to reduce India's birthrate. The program was very heavy-handed, using coercion, and demanding that men use condoms. The product therefore signified an oppressive governmental intrusion. The agency head hit on the idea of a pleasurable condom, "So when the user hears the brand name, he says, "Wow. It's a turn on. Not a turn off." A brainstorming session hit on the name "Kamasutra", which refers to an ancient Sanskrit treatise on lovemaking and the sculptures at temples that illustrate the positions involved. The term was known to well-educated Indians, the intended audience. Correctly predicting the huge impact the campaign would have, the agency purchased all the advertising space in the popular glamour magazine Debonair and filled it with erotic images of Bollywood actors and actresses promoting Kamasutra condoms. A television commercial followed featuring a steamy shower scene. The television ad was censored but the print campaign proved highly successful.[17][18]

Benetton edit

The Italian clothing company Benetton gained worldwide attention in the late 20th century for its saucy advertising, inspired by its art director Oliviero Toscani. He started with multicultural themes, tied together under the campaign "United Colors of Benetton" then became increasingly provocative with interracial groupings, and unusual sexual images, such as a nun kissing a priest.[19]

Calvin Klein - sex and jeans edit

Calvin Klein of Calvin Klein Jeans has been at the forefront of this movement to use sex in advertising, having claimed, "Jeans are about sex. The abundance of bare flesh is the last gasp of advertisers trying to give redundant products a new identity." Calvin Klein's first controversial jeans advertisement showed a 15-year-old Brooke Shields, in Calvin Klein jeans, saying, "Do you want to know what gets between me and my Calvins? Nothing."[20] Calvin Klein has also received media attention for its controversial advertisements in the mid-1990s. Several of Calvin Klein's advertisements featured images of teenage models, some "who were reportedly as young as 15" in overly sexual and provocative poses.[21] Although Klein insisted that these advertisements were not pornographic, some considered the campaign as a form of "soft porn" or "kiddie porn" that was exploitative, shocking, and suggestive. In 1999, Calvin Klein was the subject of more controversy when it aired advertisements of young children who were only wearing the brand's underwear. This "kiddie underwear ad campaign" was pulled only one day after it aired as a result of public backlash.[22] A spokesperson from Calvin Klein insisted that these ads were intended "to capture the same warmth and spontaneity that you find in a family snapshot."[21]

The film industry edit

Film studios often make use of provocative movie posters in order to increase publicity and draw in larger audiences. One example is the iconic poster for Quentin Tarantino's 1994 film Pulp Fiction, in which Uma Thurman lies on her front, wearing a low-cut top and stilettos and smoking a cigarette despite the fact that, in the actual movie, she wears a button-down shirt that is far less revealing.[23] The idea that "sex sells" has also led to film studios going a step further - rather than dressing female stars in a certain way simply to promote the movie, they base their actual costume design around this concept. For example, in the 2004 film Catwoman, Halle Berry simply wore a black push-up bra with S&M inspired straps, heavily ripped leather trousers and heels with a cat mask and whip,[24] which commentators said "oozed overt [...] sexuality".[25] This costume was a move away from Catwoman's skin-tight black suit that she wears for the majority of her appearances within DC Comics and thus, despite being entirely more revealing, was actually not a popular decision among fans of the character.[citation needed]

Effectiveness edit

Effective use edit

Gallup & Robinson, an advertising and marketing research firm, has reported that in more than 50 years of testing advertising effectiveness, it has found the use of the erotic to be a significantly above-average technique in communicating with the marketplace, "...although one of the more dangerous for the advertiser. Weighted down with taboos and volatile attitudes, sex is a Code Red advertising technique ... handle with care ... seller beware; all of which makes it even more intriguing." This research has led to the popular idea that "sex sells".[26]

Marketing strategies centered around sex have been successful. Abercrombie & Fitch used sex to market their brand in a variety of ways, including store greeters dressed only in underwear, models working in store and topless models on the bags. Employees were hired based on physical attractiveness.[27] This strategy was aimed at teenagers and young adults, who are the most impressionable consumer group and have significant disposable income.[citation needed] During the late 1990s, the company produced a magazine/catalogue (magalog), featuring semi-nude or nude models. The magalog was a success, with A&F issuing over 1.5 million copies. The use of sexual branding raised their revenue from $85 million in 1993 to $1.35 billion in 2002.[28] A&F have expressed that they will move away from sexual marketing, and focus on showcasing product and trends.[29]

Sexuality in advertising is extremely effective at attracting the consumer's attention and once it has their attention, to remember the message.[30] This solves the greatest problem in advertising of getting the potential buyer to look at and remember the advertisement. However, the introduction of attraction and especially sexuality into an ad often distracts from the original message and can cause an adverse effect of the consumer wanting to take action.[31]

Ineffective use edit

There are some studies that contradict the theory that sex is an effective tool for improving finances and gathering attention. A study from 2009 found that there was a negative correlation between nudity and sexuality in movies, and box office performance and critical acclaim.[32] A 2005 research by MediaAnalyzer has found that less than 10% of men recalled the brand of sexual ads, compared to more than 19% of non sexual ads; a similar result was found in women (10.8% vs. 22.3%). It is hypothesized by that survey, that this is a result of a general numbing caused by overuse of sexual stimuli[33] in advertising.

In another experimental study conducted on 324 undergraduate college students, Brad Bushman, professor and Chair of Mass Communication at Ohio State University, examined brand recall for neutral, sexual or violent commercials embedded in neutral, sexual or violent TV programs. He found that brand recall was higher for participants who saw neutral TV programs and neutral commercials versus those who saw sexual or violent commercials embedded in sexual or violent TV programs.[34] Other studies have found that sex in television is extremely overrated and does not sell products in ads. Unless sex is related to the product (such as beauty, health or hygiene products), there is no clear effect.[35][36]

Using sex may attract one market demographic while repelling another at the same time. The overt use of sexuality to promote breast cancer awareness, through fundraising campaigns like "I Love Boobies" and "Save the Ta-tas", is effective at reaching younger women, who are at low risk of developing breast cancer, but angers and offends some breast cancer survivors and older women, who are at higher risk of developing breast cancer.[37]

In addition, sexually objectified content fails to achieve its goal of brand recall, a study by Vargas & Mensa (2020) shows.[38] Despite the use of sex in marketing to influence men, Vargas & Mensa (2020) study highlights that young women are more influenced; thus, the approach can be ineffective when directed towards male products.

Gender differences edit

Recent research indicates that the use of sexual images of females in ads negatively affects women's interest.[39] Research shows that females were more likely than males to be portrayed as nude, wearing sexual clothing or only a partial amount of clothing.[40] A study from the University of Minnesota in 2013 of how printed ads with sexual content affects women clearly showed that women are not attracted to them except in the case of products being luxurious and expensive.[41] Besides alienating women, there is a serious risk that the audience in general will reduce support for organisations that uses the sexual images of women without a legitimate reason.[42]

Further research[43] found that men have a positive attitude to sexual adverts, whereas women have a negative response to them; this study used an advert with both a male and female. This was thought to be because women had lower average sex drives than men. Another theory for this difference is that evolution has led men to seek casual sex, contrary to women who value commitment and intimacy in the context of a sexual relationship.[44] In adverts sex tends to be represented in its own right and not as part of a relationship leading to the difference in responses. This theory is supported by research which found that women respond less negatively to sexual adverts when it is in the context of gift giving from a man to a woman, i.e. when the sexuality of the advert is the context of commitment. Men respond more negatively to the sexual advert when it involves gift giving as it emphasizes them having to spend money in a relationship.[45] This is in line with evolutionary theory that women value men for their resources and men value women for sex and fertility.[46] Further research found that even in men, recall of the advert is worsened by sexual content, as they focus on breasts and legs but not on the product.[47]

Cultural differences edit

 
1926 U.S. advertisement for "French" postcards

In order to be consistent, brands use standardized campaigns across various countries.[48] Cultural differences have been found in response to sexual adverts. A 2016 study by the Korea Internet Advertising Foundation (KIAF) noted that 94.5% of South Korean high-schoolers were familiar with sex-driven ads, 83.4% of adults thought such ads have negative influence on society, and 91.2% said there are too many of such ads. A KIAF official noted that government legislation aimed to reduce such ads is not effective due to its ambiguity.[49] Research has found that sex is used in adverts more in France than in the United States because they are more sexually liberated and so receptive to its use in advertising.[50]

Prevalence edit

 
Two promotional models with the logo of Camel, a cigarette brand they are advertising, printed on the backside of their shorts, in Ibiza, 2004. They are wearing uniforms mandated by the cigarette company.

In the 21st century, the use of increasingly explicit sexual imagery in consumer-oriented print ads have become almost commonplace. Ads for jeans, perfumes and many other products have featured provocative images that were designed to elicit sexual responses from as large a cross section of the population as possible, to shock by their ambivalence, or to appeal to repressed sexual desires, which are thought to carry a stronger emotional load. Increased tolerance, more tempered censorship, emancipatory developments and increasing buying power of previously neglected appreciative target groups in rich markets (mainly in the West) have led to a marked increase in the share of attractive flesh 'on display'.

In international perspective, a 2008 comparison of nudity in television advertising in Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, South Korea, Thailand, and the United States reveals that China and the United States have the most demure ads, while Germany and Thailand exposed more of the female body. There is little variation in male undress.[51]

Historically, sex in advertising has focused on heterosexual gender roles, but there are increasing examples of sex being used to advertise to the LGBT community. The New Zealand Aids Foundation's Love Your Condom (LYC) campaign used provocative images of males alongside captions such as "Riding hard?", "Bear hunting?" and "Going deep?", followed by the hashtag #loveyourcondom.[52] It was hoped by using images explicitly directed towards homosexual men, their use of condoms would increase, which would help decrease rates of HIV transmission amongst gay and bisexual men. The campaign has been successful, with a 12% reduction in new HIV infections among MSM in New Zealand.[53]

In a 2003 study conducted at the University of Georgia’s Department of Advertising and Public Relations Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, researchers looked at sexual advertisements in magazines over the span of the last 30 years. The rate at which sex in advertising is being used increased from 15% to 27% in the advertisements that the researchers looked at. Their reasoning behind the increase is because they believe sex still sells, specifically with “low-risk products impulse purchases.” The study also mentions “alcohol, entertainment and beauty are the main product categories that use sex in advertising.[54]

Ad Age, a magazine delivering news, analysis, and data on marketing and media, published a list of Top 100 most effective advertising of the century, out of the 100, only eight involved use of sex.[55] Unruly Media's viral video tracker lists the Top-20 most viewed car commercial viral videos; only one uses sex, while the No.1 spot was held by VW's "The Force" ad.[56] The overall top-spot (across all product segments), was held by VW's "Fun Theory" campaign, the most viewed viral video as of October 2011.

Criticism edit

Stereotypes edit

The use of sex in advertising has been criticized for its tendency to reinforce sexist stereotypes. Since the late 1970s, many researchers have determined that advertisements depict women as having less social power than men, but the ways in which women are displayed as less powerful than men have evolved over time. In modern times, advertisements have displayed women's expanding roles in the professional realm and importance in business backgrounds. However, as this change occurred there has been a substantial increase in the number of images that showcase women as less sexually powerful than men and as objects of men's desire.[57] The 2011 documentary film Miss Representation by Jennifer Siebel Newsom explores how the depiction of women in mainstream media contributes to the under-representation of women in leadership roles and other positions of influence.

Objectification edit

Furthermore, sex in advertising has been criticized for its emphasis on the importance of physical attractiveness and role as a mate.[58] This emphasis has led men and women to value intelligence and general skills less.[59] The rise in awareness of sexism portrayed in these types of adverts has led to stricter advertising policies. One group that enforces these rules is the Advertising Women of New York association. Adverts using highly sexual images containing nudity and unrealistic physiques can lead to self-objectification.[60] In turn, this can lead to shame, disgust, appearance anxiety, eating disorders and depression. The increase in self-objectification caused by the use of sex in advertising has been found in women and men. The latter is not surprising with the increased sexual portrayal of men in advertising.[61]

Social norms edit

Sex in advertising is an accepted marketing technique, however it is not unusual for it to cause backlash when it breaks social norms.[58] In 1995, the Calvin Klein advertising campaign (see section on Calvin Klein, above) that showed teenage models in provocative poses wearing Calvin Klein underwear and jeans was deemed inappropriate and shocking. The ads were withdrawn when parents and child welfare groups threatened to protest and Hudson stores did not want their stores associated with the ads. It was reported that the U.S. Justice Department was investigating the ad campaign for possible violations of federal child pornography and exploitation laws. The Justice Department subsequently decided not to prosecute Calvin Klein for these alleged violations as the DOJ “independently verified that minors were not used as models in the particular photographs that raised questions,” according to Deputy Assistant Atty. Gen. Kevin V. Di Gregory. [62]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Garcia, Eli, and Kenneth CC Yang. "Consumer responses to sexual appeals in cross-cultural advertisements." Journal of International Consumer Marketing 19#2 (2006): 29–52.
  • Reichert, Tom, and Jacqueline Lambiase, eds. Sex in advertising: Perspectives on the erotic appeal (Routledge, 2014)
  • Sherman, Claire, and Pascale Quester. "The influence of product/nudity congruence on advertising effectiveness." Journal of Promotion Management 11#2-3 (2006): 61–89.
  • Streitmatter, Roger. Sex sells!: The media's journey from repression to obsession (Basic Books, 2004)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Sex in advertising at Wikimedia Commons

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Sex sells redirects here For other uses see Sex Sells disambiguation The article s lead section may need to be rewritten Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sex appeal in advertising is a common tactic employed to promote products and services 1 Research indicates that sexually appealing content including imagery is often used to shape or alter the consumer s perception of a brand even if it is not directly related to the product or service being advertised This approach known as sex sells has become more prevalent among companies leading to controversies surrounding the use of sexual campaigns in advertising 2 1 An early example of sexual imagery in advertising 1921 Contemporary mainstream advertising across various media platforms such as magazines online and television frequently incorporates sexual elements to market a wide range of branded goods and services Provocative images of attractively dressed men and women are commonly used to promote clothing alcohol beauty products and fragrances Renowned brands like Calvin Klein Victoria s Secret and Pepsi use such imagery to cultivate an alluring media presence In some cases sexual content is overtly displayed while in others it is subtly integrated with imperceptible cues aimed at influencing the target audience Furthermore sexual content has been employed to promote mainstream products that were not traditionally associated with sex For instance the Dallas Opera s marketing of the more suggestive aspects of its performances is believed to have contributed to a boost in ticket sales 3 4 The effectiveness of sex appeal in advertising varies depending on the cultural context and the gender of the recipient though these aspects are subject to further research and discussion citation needed Contents 1 Concept 2 Types 2 1 Physical attractiveness 2 2 Sexual behavior 2 3 Sexual embeds 2 4 Gender roles 3 History 3 1 Sex and soap 3 2 Kamasutra condoms in India 3 3 Benetton 3 4 Calvin Klein sex and jeans 3 5 The film industry 4 Effectiveness 4 1 Effective use 4 2 Ineffective use 4 3 Gender differences 4 4 Cultural differences 5 Prevalence 6 Criticism 6 1 Stereotypes 6 2 Objectification 6 3 Social norms 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksConcept editGender Advertisements 5 a 1979 book by Canadian social anthropologist Erving Goffman is a series of studies of visual communication and how gender representation in advertising communicates subtle underlying messages about the sexual roles projected by masculine and feminine images in advertising The book is a visual essay about sex roles in advertising and the symbolism implied in the depictions of men and women in advertising When couples are used in an advertisement the sex roles played by each partner also sends out messages The interaction of the couple may send out a message of relative dominance and power and may stereotype the roles of one or both partners Usually the message is very subtle and sometimes advertisements attract interest by changing stereotypical roles For example companies including Spotify Airbnb Lynx and Amazon com have used same sex couples in adverts 6 These adverts appeal to same sex couples they also create the image that these companies are tolerant allowing them to appeal to a wider consumer audience As many consumers and professionals are thinking people sex may be used to grab a viewer s attention but this is likely short term success Whether using sex in advertising is effective depends on the product 7 About three quarters of advertisements using sex to sell the product are communicating a product related benefit such as the product making its users more sexually attractive citation needed Daily exposure on social media by adolescents to these types of influences can affect their development Younger teenage girls are drawn to these ads in order to learn about romance and relationships 8 Correlational studies have linked sociodemographic variables to adolescent viewing habits This can include but not limited to sex age and even ethnicity Adolescents who watch and listen to a lot of media are more likely than less regular audiences to consider stereotypes of sex roles on TV as realistic citation needed Types editPhysical attractiveness edit nbsp Promotional model pageant at the Games Day 2011 event in KyivThe use of physically attractive models in advertising is a form of sex in advertising Physical attractiveness can be conveyed through facial beauty physique hair skin complexion as well as by the model s inferred personality This form of sex in advertising is effective as it draws attention and influences the overall feeling of the ad Furthermore such ads create an association between physical attractiveness and the product which sends a message to the consumer that buying and using the product will help them achieve that physique 9 The sexual arousal possibly elicited by physical attractiveness in adverts is thought to transfer onto the advertised product 10 Sexual behavior edit nbsp A pole dancer promoting a video game at IgroMir 2010Marketers often use tactics such as sexual imagery in their advertisements to capture the consumer s attention for longer 11 Sex in advertising is also incorporated using hints of sexual behavior The latter is communicated by the models using flirtatious body language open posture and making eye contact with the viewer Sexual behavior can also be displayed using several models interacting in a more or less sexual way Sexual behavior in advertising is used to arouse sexual interest from the viewer 9 Research has shown that sexual arousal elicited by an advert subsequently affects the overall ad evaluation and the chances of future purchase 10 For example in a Guess clothing advert while the models are physically attractive it is their behavior such as position posture and facial expressions that communicate sexual interest to the viewer Women are often shown as being shorter put in the background of images shown in more feminine poses than men and generally present a higher degree of body display than men in print advertisements 12 Sexual embeds edit Sexual embeds are a controversial form of sex in advertising They are a powerful technique that advertising agencies do not want consumers to consciously notice citation needed They are subliminal elements that are detected as sexual information solely at the subconscious level Sexual embeds can take the form of objects or words that at the subconscious level or when occasionally consciously identified explicitly depict sexual acts or genitalia For example a perfume bottle could mimic a phallic shape and its positioning could suggest sexual intercourse Embeds are especially effective as they unconsciously trigger sexual arousal in the consumer which drives motivation and goal directed behavior such as purchase intention 9 Gender roles edit After women achieved the vote in the United States Britain and Canada in the 1920s advertising agencies exploited the new status of women For example they associated driving an automobile with masculinity power control and dominance over a beautiful woman sitting alongside More subtly they published automobile ads in women s magazines at a time when the vast majority of purchasers and drivers were in fact men The new ads promoted themes of women s liberation while also delineating the limits of this freedom Automobiles were more than practical devices they were also highly visible symbols of affluence mobility and modernity The ads offered women a visual vocabulary to imagine their new social and political roles as citizens and to play an active role in shaping their identity as modern women 13 History editMain article History of advertising nbsp The earliest known use of sex in advertising Pearl Tobacco label showing lightly draped female figure rising from the wavesThe earliest known use of sex in advertising is by the Pearl Tobacco brand in 1871 which featured a naked maiden on the package cover In 1885 W Duke amp Sons inserted trading cards into cigarette packs that featured sexually provocative starlets Duke grew to become the leading American cigarette brand by 1890 14 Other early forms of sex appeal in advertising include woodcuts and illustrations of attractive women often unclothed from the waist up adorning posters signs and ads for saloons tonics and tobacco In several notable cases sex in advertising has been claimed as the reason for increased consumer interest and sales Sex and soap edit nbsp 1916 Ladies Home Journal version of the famous seduction based ad by Helen Lansdowne Resor at J Walter Thompson AgencyWoodbury s Facial Soap a woman s beauty bar was almost discontinued in 1911 The soap s sales decline was reversed however with ads containing images of romantic couples and promises of love and intimacy for those using the brand 15 Jōvan Musk Oil introduced in 1971 was promoted with sexual entendre and descriptions of the fragrance s sexual attraction properties As a result Jōvan Inc s revenue grew from 1 5 million in 1971 to 77 million by 1978 16 Kamasutra condoms in India edit In 1991 J K Chemicals Group asked the Bombay office of Lintas Bombay to develop a campaign for a new condom brand The problem was that in the late 1940s the Nehru government had launched a major population limitation program to reduce India s birthrate The program was very heavy handed using coercion and demanding that men use condoms The product therefore signified an oppressive governmental intrusion The agency head hit on the idea of a pleasurable condom So when the user hears the brand name he says Wow It s a turn on Not a turn off A brainstorming session hit on the name Kamasutra which refers to an ancient Sanskrit treatise on lovemaking and the sculptures at temples that illustrate the positions involved The term was known to well educated Indians the intended audience Correctly predicting the huge impact the campaign would have the agency purchased all the advertising space in the popular glamour magazine Debonair and filled it with erotic images of Bollywood actors and actresses promoting Kamasutra condoms A television commercial followed featuring a steamy shower scene The television ad was censored but the print campaign proved highly successful 17 18 Benetton edit The Italian clothing company Benetton gained worldwide attention in the late 20th century for its saucy advertising inspired by its art director Oliviero Toscani He started with multicultural themes tied together under the campaign United Colors of Benetton then became increasingly provocative with interracial groupings and unusual sexual images such as a nun kissing a priest 19 Calvin Klein sex and jeans edit Calvin Klein of Calvin Klein Jeans has been at the forefront of this movement to use sex in advertising having claimed Jeans are about sex The abundance of bare flesh is the last gasp of advertisers trying to give redundant products a new identity Calvin Klein s first controversial jeans advertisement showed a 15 year old Brooke Shields in Calvin Klein jeans saying Do you want to know what gets between me and my Calvins Nothing 20 Calvin Klein has also received media attention for its controversial advertisements in the mid 1990s Several of Calvin Klein s advertisements featured images of teenage models some who were reportedly as young as 15 in overly sexual and provocative poses 21 Although Klein insisted that these advertisements were not pornographic some considered the campaign as a form of soft porn or kiddie porn that was exploitative shocking and suggestive In 1999 Calvin Klein was the subject of more controversy when it aired advertisements of young children who were only wearing the brand s underwear This kiddie underwear ad campaign was pulled only one day after it aired as a result of public backlash 22 A spokesperson from Calvin Klein insisted that these ads were intended to capture the same warmth and spontaneity that you find in a family snapshot 21 The film industry edit Film studios often make use of provocative movie posters in order to increase publicity and draw in larger audiences One example is the iconic poster for Quentin Tarantino s 1994 film Pulp Fiction in which Uma Thurman lies on her front wearing a low cut top and stilettos and smoking a cigarette despite the fact that in the actual movie she wears a button down shirt that is far less revealing 23 The idea that sex sells has also led to film studios going a step further rather than dressing female stars in a certain way simply to promote the movie they base their actual costume design around this concept For example in the 2004 film Catwoman Halle Berry simply wore a black push up bra with S amp M inspired straps heavily ripped leather trousers and heels with a cat mask and whip 24 which commentators said oozed overt sexuality 25 This costume was a move away from Catwoman s skin tight black suit that she wears for the majority of her appearances within DC Comics and thus despite being entirely more revealing was actually not a popular decision among fans of the character citation needed Effectiveness editEffective use edit Gallup amp Robinson an advertising and marketing research firm has reported that in more than 50 years of testing advertising effectiveness it has found the use of the erotic to be a significantly above average technique in communicating with the marketplace although one of the more dangerous for the advertiser Weighted down with taboos and volatile attitudes sex is a Code Red advertising technique handle with care seller beware all of which makes it even more intriguing This research has led to the popular idea that sex sells 26 Marketing strategies centered around sex have been successful Abercrombie amp Fitch used sex to market their brand in a variety of ways including store greeters dressed only in underwear models working in store and topless models on the bags Employees were hired based on physical attractiveness 27 This strategy was aimed at teenagers and young adults who are the most impressionable consumer group and have significant disposable income citation needed During the late 1990s the company produced a magazine catalogue magalog featuring semi nude or nude models The magalog was a success with A amp F issuing over 1 5 million copies The use of sexual branding raised their revenue from 85 million in 1993 to 1 35 billion in 2002 28 A amp F have expressed that they will move away from sexual marketing and focus on showcasing product and trends 29 Sexuality in advertising is extremely effective at attracting the consumer s attention and once it has their attention to remember the message 30 This solves the greatest problem in advertising of getting the potential buyer to look at and remember the advertisement However the introduction of attraction and especially sexuality into an ad often distracts from the original message and can cause an adverse effect of the consumer wanting to take action 31 Ineffective use edit There are some studies that contradict the theory that sex is an effective tool for improving finances and gathering attention A study from 2009 found that there was a negative correlation between nudity and sexuality in movies and box office performance and critical acclaim 32 A 2005 research by MediaAnalyzer has found that less than 10 of men recalled the brand of sexual ads compared to more than 19 of non sexual ads a similar result was found in women 10 8 vs 22 3 It is hypothesized by that survey that this is a result of a general numbing caused by overuse of sexual stimuli 33 in advertising In another experimental study conducted on 324 undergraduate college students Brad Bushman professor and Chair of Mass Communication at Ohio State University examined brand recall for neutral sexual or violent commercials embedded in neutral sexual or violent TV programs He found that brand recall was higher for participants who saw neutral TV programs and neutral commercials versus those who saw sexual or violent commercials embedded in sexual or violent TV programs 34 Other studies have found that sex in television is extremely overrated and does not sell products in ads Unless sex is related to the product such as beauty health or hygiene products there is no clear effect 35 36 Using sex may attract one market demographic while repelling another at the same time The overt use of sexuality to promote breast cancer awareness through fundraising campaigns like I Love Boobies and Save the Ta tas is effective at reaching younger women who are at low risk of developing breast cancer but angers and offends some breast cancer survivors and older women who are at higher risk of developing breast cancer 37 In addition sexually objectified content fails to achieve its goal of brand recall a study by Vargas amp Mensa 2020 shows 38 Despite the use of sex in marketing to influence men Vargas amp Mensa 2020 study highlights that young women are more influenced thus the approach can be ineffective when directed towards male products Gender differences edit Recent research indicates that the use of sexual images of females in ads negatively affects women s interest 39 Research shows that females were more likely than males to be portrayed as nude wearing sexual clothing or only a partial amount of clothing 40 A study from the University of Minnesota in 2013 of how printed ads with sexual content affects women clearly showed that women are not attracted to them except in the case of products being luxurious and expensive 41 Besides alienating women there is a serious risk that the audience in general will reduce support for organisations that uses the sexual images of women without a legitimate reason 42 Further research 43 found that men have a positive attitude to sexual adverts whereas women have a negative response to them this study used an advert with both a male and female This was thought to be because women had lower average sex drives than men Another theory for this difference is that evolution has led men to seek casual sex contrary to women who value commitment and intimacy in the context of a sexual relationship 44 In adverts sex tends to be represented in its own right and not as part of a relationship leading to the difference in responses This theory is supported by research which found that women respond less negatively to sexual adverts when it is in the context of gift giving from a man to a woman i e when the sexuality of the advert is the context of commitment Men respond more negatively to the sexual advert when it involves gift giving as it emphasizes them having to spend money in a relationship 45 This is in line with evolutionary theory that women value men for their resources and men value women for sex and fertility 46 Further research found that even in men recall of the advert is worsened by sexual content as they focus on breasts and legs but not on the product 47 Cultural differences edit nbsp 1926 U S advertisement for French postcardsIn order to be consistent brands use standardized campaigns across various countries 48 Cultural differences have been found in response to sexual adverts A 2016 study by the Korea Internet Advertising Foundation KIAF noted that 94 5 of South Korean high schoolers were familiar with sex driven ads 83 4 of adults thought such ads have negative influence on society and 91 2 said there are too many of such ads A KIAF official noted that government legislation aimed to reduce such ads is not effective due to its ambiguity 49 Research has found that sex is used in adverts more in France than in the United States because they are more sexually liberated and so receptive to its use in advertising 50 Prevalence edit nbsp Two promotional models with the logo of Camel a cigarette brand they are advertising printed on the backside of their shorts in Ibiza 2004 They are wearing uniforms mandated by the cigarette company In the 21st century the use of increasingly explicit sexual imagery in consumer oriented print ads have become almost commonplace Ads for jeans perfumes and many other products have featured provocative images that were designed to elicit sexual responses from as large a cross section of the population as possible to shock by their ambivalence or to appeal to repressed sexual desires which are thought to carry a stronger emotional load Increased tolerance more tempered censorship emancipatory developments and increasing buying power of previously neglected appreciative target groups in rich markets mainly in the West have led to a marked increase in the share of attractive flesh on display In international perspective a 2008 comparison of nudity in television advertising in Brazil Canada China Germany South Korea Thailand and the United States reveals that China and the United States have the most demure ads while Germany and Thailand exposed more of the female body There is little variation in male undress 51 Historically sex in advertising has focused on heterosexual gender roles but there are increasing examples of sex being used to advertise to the LGBT community The New Zealand Aids Foundation s Love Your Condom LYC campaign used provocative images of males alongside captions such as Riding hard Bear hunting and Going deep followed by the hashtag loveyourcondom 52 It was hoped by using images explicitly directed towards homosexual men their use of condoms would increase which would help decrease rates of HIV transmission amongst gay and bisexual men The campaign has been successful with a 12 reduction in new HIV infections among MSM in New Zealand 53 In a 2003 study conducted at the University of Georgia s Department of Advertising and Public Relations Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication researchers looked at sexual advertisements in magazines over the span of the last 30 years The rate at which sex in advertising is being used increased from 15 to 27 in the advertisements that the researchers looked at Their reasoning behind the increase is because they believe sex still sells specifically with low risk products impulse purchases The study also mentions alcohol entertainment and beauty are the main product categories that use sex in advertising 54 Ad Age a magazine delivering news analysis and data on marketing and media published a list of Top 100 most effective advertising of the century out of the 100 only eight involved use of sex 55 Unruly Media s viral video tracker lists the Top 20 most viewed car commercial viral videos only one uses sex while the No 1 spot was held by VW s The Force ad 56 The overall top spot across all product segments was held by VW s Fun Theory campaign the most viewed viral video as of October 2011 Criticism editStereotypes edit The use of sex in advertising has been criticized for its tendency to reinforce sexist stereotypes Since the late 1970s many researchers have determined that advertisements depict women as having less social power than men but the ways in which women are displayed as less powerful than men have evolved over time In modern times advertisements have displayed women s expanding roles in the professional realm and importance in business backgrounds However as this change occurred there has been a substantial increase in the number of images that showcase women as less sexually powerful than men and as objects of men s desire 57 The 2011 documentary film Miss Representation by Jennifer Siebel Newsom explores how the depiction of women in mainstream media contributes to the under representation of women in leadership roles and other positions of influence Objectification edit Furthermore sex in advertising has been criticized for its emphasis on the importance of physical attractiveness and role as a mate 58 This emphasis has led men and women to value intelligence and general skills less 59 The rise in awareness of sexism portrayed in these types of adverts has led to stricter advertising policies One group that enforces these rules is the Advertising Women of New York association Adverts using highly sexual images containing nudity and unrealistic physiques can lead to self objectification 60 In turn this can lead to shame disgust appearance anxiety eating disorders and depression The increase in self objectification caused by the use of sex in advertising has been found in women and men The latter is not surprising with the increased sexual portrayal of men in advertising 61 Social norms edit Sex in advertising is an accepted marketing technique however it is not unusual for it to cause backlash when it breaks social norms 58 In 1995 the Calvin Klein advertising campaign see section on Calvin Klein above that showed teenage models in provocative poses wearing Calvin Klein underwear and jeans was deemed inappropriate and shocking The ads were withdrawn when parents and child welfare groups threatened to protest and Hudson stores did not want their stores associated with the ads It was reported that the U S Justice Department was investigating the ad campaign for possible violations of federal child pornography and exploitation laws The Justice Department subsequently decided not to prosecute Calvin Klein for these alleged violations as the DOJ independently verified that minors were not used as models in the particular photographs that raised questions according to Deputy Assistant Atty Gen Kevin V Di Gregory 62 See also edit nbsp Human sexuality portalBody image Exploitation of women in mass media Family in advertising Feminism Gender advertisement Media and gender Promotional model Sexual objectification Shock advertising Killing Us Softly Miss RepresentationReferences edit a b Blair J D Stephenson J D Hill K L amp Green J S 2006 Ethics in advertising sex sells but should it Journal of Legal Ethical and Regulatory Issues 9 1 2 109 Rodger Streitmatter Sex sells The media s journey from repression to obsession Basic Books 2004 Chism 1999 Tom Reichert 2002 Sex in advertising research A review of content effects and functions of sexual information in consumer advertising Annu Rev Sex Res 13 241 73 PMID 12836733 Goffman Erving March 1 1979 Gender Advertisements 1 ed Harper amp Row p 84 ISBN 978 0060906337 Williams Gareth 13 August 2015 13 amazing adverts featuring same sex couples PinkNews Retrieved 2016 11 22 DOES SEX IN ADVERTISING WORK Branding Strategy Insider 2008 03 22 Retrieved 2015 03 31 Media influence on pre teens and teenagers social media movies YouTube and apps Raising Children Network Retrieved 2023 09 23 a b c Reichert Tom 2011 Sex in advertising Perspectives on the erotic appeal Routledge pp 11 151 a b Berger Arthur Asa 2015 Ads fads and Consumer culture Fifth ed Rowman amp Littlefield pp 99 120 Dahl Sengupta amp Vohs 2009 Zotos Yorgos Tsichla Eirini October 2014 Snapshots of Men and Women in Interaction An Investigation of Stereotypes in Print Advertisement Relationship Portrayals Journal of Euromarketing 23 3 35 58 doi 10 9768 0023 03 035 via ResearchGate Einav Rabinovitch Fox 2016 Baby You Can Drive My Car Advertising Women s Freedom in 1920s America American Journalism 33 4 372 400 doi 10 1080 08821127 2016 1241641 S2CID 157498769 Porter 1971 Account Histories 1926 Sloan amp Millman 1979 O Barr William M 2008 Advertising in India Advertising amp Society Review 9 3 William Mazzarella Shoveling Smoke Advertising and Globalization in Contemporary India Duke University Press 2003 Mark Tungate Adland A Global History of Advertising 2007 pp 146 49 Sischy Ingrid Vanity Fair Calvin Klein Vanityfair com Retrieved 2011 11 28 a b Calvin Klein A Case Study Archived 2012 05 21 at the Wayback Machine Peters Robert Kiddie Porn Controversy Archived 2009 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Pulp Fiction 1994 IMDb IMDb Catwoman 2004 IMDb IMDb McMurray Jacob 2012 Fantasy Sci Fi and Superheroes In Nadoolman Landis Deborah ed Hollywood Costume V amp A Publishing p 290 Streitmatter Roger 2004 Sex sells The media s journey from repression to obsession Basic Books Bowerman Mary Cover up Abercrombie amp Fitch says sexual marketing is over USA today Retrieved 2016 11 23 Driessen Claire 2005 Message Communication in Advertising Selling the Abercrombie and Fitch Image PDF UW L Journal of Undergraduate Research VIII Retrieved 2016 11 23 Monllos Kristina Shirts on Boys Abercrombie Says It s Done With Sexualized Marketing Adweek com Retrieved 2016 11 23 King James McClelland Alastair Furnham Adrian 2015 03 01 Sex Really Does Sell The Recall of Sexual and Non sexual Television Advertisements in Sexual and Non sexual Programmes Applied Cognitive Psychology 29 2 210 216 doi 10 1002 acp 3095 ISSN 1099 0720 Baron Robert S 1982 Sexual Content and Advertising Effectiveness Comments on Belch Et Al 1981 and Caccavale Et Al 1981 by Robert S Baron Acr North American Advances NA 09 Retrieved 2015 03 31 Anemone Cerridwen Dean Keith Simonton 2009 Sex Doesn t Sell Nor Impress Content Box Office Critics and Awards in Mainstream Cinema PDF Retrieved 2013 03 14 Sex in ads does not sell Emergencemarketing com 2005 10 25 Retrieved 2013 03 14 Bushman Brad 2007 That was a great commercial but what were they selling Effects of violence and sex on memory for products in television commercials Journal of Applied Social Psychology 37 8 1784 1796 doi 10 1111 j 1559 1816 2007 00237 x hdl 1871 39449 Magazine trends study finds increase in advertisements using sex uga edu 2012 06 05 Retrieved 2012 06 05 Violence and Sex in Television Programs Do Not Sell Products in Advertisements 2012 06 05 Retrieved 2012 06 05 Szabo Lisa 30 October 2012 Sexy breast cancer campaigns anger many patients USA Today Retrieved 9 November 2012 Vargas Bianchi Lizardo Mensa Marta 2020 03 21 Do you remember me Women sexual objectification in advertising among young consumers Young Consumers 21 1 77 90 doi 10 1108 YC 04 2019 0994 ISSN 1747 3616 S2CID 216353566 Women find sexually explicit ads unappealing unless the price is right medicalxpress com 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2013 12 03 Soley Lawrence 1986 Sex in Advertising A Comparison of 1964 and 1984 Magazine Advertisements Journal of Advertising 15 3 46 64 doi 10 1080 00913367 1986 10673018 Sex doesn t sell This study into women s response to raunchy advertising starts wrong and gets worse www independent co uk 2013 12 10 Retrieved 2013 12 10 Study Does sex always sell phys org 2013 12 19 Retrieved 2013 12 19 Sengupta J 2008 Gender related reactions to gratuitous sex appeals in advertising Journal of Consumer Advertising 18 62 78 doi 10 1016 j jcps 2007 10 010 Herold 1993 Gender differences in casual sex and AIDS prevention A survey of dating bars Journal of Sex Research 30 36 42 doi 10 1080 00224499309551676 Dahl Darren 2009 Sex in advertising Gender differences and the role of relationship commitment Journal of Consumer Research 36 2 215 231 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 620 2353 doi 10 1086 597158 Buss David 1989 Sex differences in human mate preferences Evolutionary hypotheses tested in 37 cultures Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 1 14 doi 10 1017 s0140525x00023992 Nudd 2005 Does sex really sell Adweek 46 14 17 Argawal Wadhu 1995 Review of a 40 year debate in international advertising Practitioner and academician perspectives to the standardization adaptation issue International Marketing Review 12 26 48 doi 10 1108 02651339510080089 Internet Ads with Sexual Imagery at a Critical Level Survey Be Korea savvy koreabizwire com 8 September 2016 Retrieved 2016 09 12 Biswas 1992 A comparison of print advertisements from the United States and France Journal of Advertising 21 4 73 81 doi 10 1080 00913367 1992 10673387 Nelson Michelle R Paek Hye Jin 2008 Nudity of female and male models in primetime TV advertising across seven countries International Journal of Advertising 27 5 715 744 doi 10 2501 s0265048708080281 S2CID 144322217 Order free condoms New Zealand Aids Foundation Retrieved 21 November 2016 History of NZAF New Zealand Aids Foundation Retrieved 21 November 2016 Why Sex Sells More Than Ever Business News Daily Retrieved 2016 12 12 Garfield Bob 29 March 1999 Top 100 Advertising Campaigns of the Century Ad Age Retrieved 2015 03 31 Top 20 most popular car commercials Unruly Media Archived from the original on 2014 08 11 Retrieved 2015 03 31 Stankiewicz and Rosselli Julie and Francine 2008 Women as Sex Objects and Victims in Print Advertisements Sex Roles 58 7 579 589 doi 10 1007 s11199 007 9359 1 S2CID 143452062 a b Timke Edward O Barr William M Zuzarte Raquelle M Reichert Tom Mechlin David Lambiase Jacqueline Kilbourne Jean Bronstein Carolyn Bass Debra 2018 Roundtable on Sex in Advertising Part I Advertising amp Society Quarterly 19 4 doi 10 1353 asr 2018 0034 ISSN 2475 1790 S2CID 149832346 Pardun Carol 2013 Advertising and Society Roberts 2004 Mere exposure effects of priming a state of self objectification Sex Roles 51 17 28 doi 10 1023 b sers 0000032306 20462 22 S2CID 55703429 Reichart Tom 1999 Cheesecake and beefcake No matter how you slice it sexual explicitness in advertising continues to increase Journalism amp Mass Communication Quarterly 76 7 20 doi 10 1177 107769909907600102 S2CID 145780411 Justice Department Plans No Charges Over Calvin Klein Ads Los Angeles Times 1995 11 16 Retrieved 2015 03 31 Further reading editGarcia Eli and Kenneth CC Yang Consumer responses to sexual appeals in cross cultural advertisements Journal of International Consumer Marketing 19 2 2006 29 52 Reichert Tom and Jacqueline Lambiase eds Sex in advertising Perspectives on the erotic appeal Routledge 2014 Sherman Claire and Pascale Quester The influence of product nudity congruence on advertising effectiveness Journal of Promotion Management 11 2 3 2006 61 89 Streitmatter Roger Sex sells The media s journey from repression to obsession Basic Books 2004 External links edit nbsp Media related to Sex in advertising at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sex in advertising amp oldid 1183787378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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