TIDE Flashcards
Product context
Designed specifically for heavy-duty, machine
cleaning, Procter & Gamble launched Tide in
1946 and it quickly became the brand leader
in America, a position it maintains today.
The D’Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles (DMB&B)
advertising agency handled P&G’s accounts
throughout the 1950s. Its campaigns for Tide
referred explicitly to P&G because their
market research showed that consumers had
high levels of confidence in the company.
DMB&B used print and radio
advertising campaigns concurrently in
order to quickly build audience familiarity
with the brand. Both media forms used the
“housewife” character and the ideology that
its customers “loved” and “adored” Tide.
The post-WWII consumer boom of the
1950s includes the rapid development of new
technologies for the home, designed to make
domestic chores easier. Vacuum cleaners,
fridge freezers, microwave ovens and washing
machines all become desirable products
for the 1950s consumer. Products linked to
these new technologies also develop during
this time, for example, washing powder.
Industry context
Print adverts from the 1950s conventionally
used more copy than we’re used to seeing today.
Consumer culture was in its early stages of
development and, with so many ‘new’ brands and
products entering markets, potential customers
typically needed more information about them than
a modern audience, more used to advertising,
marketing and branding, might need.
In the 1950s, while men were being targeted for the
post-war boom in America’s car industry, women
were the primary market for the technologies
and products being developed for the home. In
advertising for these types of texts, stereotypical
representations of domestic perfection, caring
for the family and servitude to the ‘man of the
house’ became linked to a more modern need for
speed, convenience and a better standard of living
than the women experienced in the pre-war era.
Composition
Z-line and a rough rule of thirds.
Colour palette
Bright, primary colours connote the
positive associations the producers want
the audience to make with the product.
Typography
Headings, subheadings and slogans are
written in sans-serif font, connoting
an informal mode of address.
The more ‘technical’ details of the product
are written in a serif font, connoting the
more ‘serious’ or ‘factual’ information that
the ‘1,2,3’ bullet point list includes.
“Comic strip” style images
The ‘comic strip’-
style image in the bottom right-hand corner
with two women ‘talking’ about the product
using informal lexis (“sudsing whizz”).
Dress codes
The dress codes of the advert’s main female
character include a stereotypical 1950s
hairstyle incorporating waves, curls and rolls
made fashionable by contemporary film stars
such as Veronica Lake, Betty Grable and Rita
Hayworth. The fashion for women having shorter
hair had a practical catalyst as long hair was
hazardous for women working with machinery
on farms or in factories during the war.
The headband or scarf worn by the woman also
links to the practicalities that women’s dress
codes developed during this time. For this advert,
having her hair held back connotes she’s focused
on her work, though this is perhaps binary
opposed to the full makeup that she’s wearing.
Audience
Despite women having seen their roles
in society change during the War (where
they were needed in medical, military
support and other roles outside of the home)
domestic products of the 1950s continued
to be aimed at female audiences.
The likely target audience of increasingly
affluent lower-middle class women were, at
this point in the 1950s, being appealed to
because of their supposed need for innovative
domestic technologies and products. The
increasing popularity during the 1950s of
supermarkets stocking a wider range of products
led to an increased focus by corporations on
brands and their unique selling points.
Applying Uses and Gratifications theory to TIDE
The likely audience demographic is constructed
through the advert’s use of women with whom
they might personally identify (Uses and
Gratifications Theory). These young women
are likely to be newly married and with young
families (the men’s and children’s clothing on
the washing line creates these connotations).
Applying semiotics to TIDE
Suspense is created through the enigma of “what
women want” and emphasized by the tension building use of multiple exclamation marks.
Bathes’ Semantic Code could be applied
to the use of hearts above the main image.
The hearts and the woman’s gesture codes
have connotations of love and relationships.
It’s connoted that this is “what women
want” (in addition to clean laundry!)
Hyperbole and superlatives (“Miracle”,
“World’s cleanest wash!” “World’s whitest
wash!”) as well as tripling (“No other…”)
are used to oppose the connoted superior
cleaning power of Tide to its competitors.
This Symbolic Code was clearly
successful as Procter and Gamble’s competitor
products were rapidly overtaken, making Tide the brand leader by the mid-1950s.
Applying Stuart Hall’s theory of representation to TIDE
The images of domesticity (including the two
women hanging out the laundry) form part
of the “shared conceptual road map” that
give meaning to the “world” of the advert.
Despite its ‘comic strip’ visual construction,
the scenario represented is familiar to the
audience as a representation of their own lives.
Applying David Gauntlett’s theory of identity to TIDE
David Gauntlett’s theory of identity - women
represented in the advert act as role models of
domestic perfection that the audience may want
to construct their own sense of identity against.
Applying Stuart Hall’s reception theory to TIDE
The indirect mode of address made by the
woman in the main image connotes that
her relationship with the product is of prime
importance (Tide has what she wants). This,
according to Hall, is the dominant or hegemonic
encoding of the advert’s primary message
that should be received by “you women.”
The direct mode of address of the images in the
top right and bottom left-hand corner link to the
imperative “Remember!” and the use of personal
pronouns (“your wash,” “you can buy”).
Applying George Gerbner’s cultivation theory to TIDE
Advertising developed significantly during
the 1950s and this theory, developed by
Gerbner in the early 1970s, explains some
of the ways in which audiences may be
influenced by media texts such as adverts.
The Tide advert aims to cultivate the ideas that:
this is the brand leader; nothing else washes to
the same standard as Tide; it’s a desirable product
for its female audience; and its “miracle suds”
are an innovation for the domestic washing
market. Gerbner’s theory would argue that
the repetition of these key messages causes
audiences to increasingly align their own
ideologies with them (in this case positively,
creating a product that “goes into more American
homes than any other washday product”).