Why are Seniors not good targets for ad campaigns? And the younger generation becoming resistant as well? It is possibly part of a larger paradigm shift in society.I will be interested in this audience's reaction to the thesis presented below.
Very few people of any age group today know the name Edward Bernays, but in the last century he was the father of the entire field of modern advertising and public relations. For his amazing history see this article in Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Bernays . His theories, based on research of his uncle, Sigmund Freud, and others basically postulated that the majority of human beings were like sheep who could be manipulated by cleverly and repetitively playing on desires for pleasure and fear of discomfort.
This may well have been true for his Uncle's study subjects, who were by default all residents of Austrian mental facilities. But, as others have pointed out, they were not representative of society as a whole. Those of presumably better mental health are also motivated by more altruistic drives. Regardless of this defect Bernays successfully implemented his theories for politicians including Woodrow Wilson and Calvin Coolidge, various corporations and even political causes of his own choosing.
Today's advertising approaches are still largely based on Bernay's theories - but the target groups are no longer sheep. Many seniors by virtue of experiance become resistant to manipulation over time. The younger generations are now following suit. They have access both to one another through social media and all sorts of alternative information through the internet.This is making increasing numbers both mote aware of attempts at manipulation and more resistant to being manipulated.
These trends are making life difficult for successful advertising campaigns based on manipulation in any media genre. Fancy jingles, glitzy pictures and unique promotions can still generate single purchase impulse buys. However, we are gradually shifting away from being a purely consumerist culture. We are fearful of what the facts, not advertising campaigns, tell us. Seniors and millennials alike increasingly are not willing to incur debt just to have things "now." The days of P. T. Barnum ("there's a sucker born every minute") are, some hope, passing away.
This new paradigm is based on competing information sources, not just propaganda ( a term Bernays disdained in favor of "public relations because of its WW1 connotations). It is perhaps why you see mote products being promoted thru radio and Internet informercials - it is an information marketplace.