Cooper Crystale Purvis, Gelb Cynthia A, Chu Jennifer
1 Soltera Center for Cancer Prevention and Control , Tucson, Arizona.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2014 Jun;23(6):488-92. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2014.4759. Epub 2014 Apr 7.
In 2013, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Inside Knowledge: Get the Facts About Gynecologic Cancer campaign tested creative concepts for English- and Spanish-language video advertisements (for use on television and the Internet) with women aged 35-64 years. Sixteen English and nine Spanish focus groups were conducted in four U.S. cities. CDC used animatics (a series of photographs edited together with a sound track) to simulate produced advertisements, without having to incur the high cost of filming and production. Advertisement concepts consistently resonating with participants featured cancer survivors, were straightforward, included information about cancer symptoms, displayed Inside Knowledge educational materials, and featured diverse women. In the general population focus groups, a primacy testing order effect was observed in which the concept tested first tended to be the most favorably received. Varying the order in which concepts were tested and considering testing order when interpreting results was critical.
2013年,美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)开展的“深入了解:获取妇科癌症事实”活动对面向35至64岁女性的英文和西班牙文视频广告(用于电视和互联网)的创意概念进行了测试。在美国四个城市进行了16个英文和9个西班牙文焦点小组访谈。疾控中心使用动画样片(一系列配有音轨编辑在一起的照片)来模拟制作好的广告,而无需承担拍摄和制作的高昂成本。与参与者产生持续共鸣的广告概念包括癌症幸存者、内容直白、包含癌症症状信息、展示“深入了解”教育材料以及展现不同女性形象。在普通人群焦点小组中,观察到了首因测试顺序效应,即首先测试的概念往往最受青睐。改变概念的测试顺序并在解释结果时考虑测试顺序至关重要。