Gender Targeting in Advertising
Gender targeting is one of the Kellogg topics that piqued my interest. Men and women are clearly different, but I found it interesting how some of the different factors of their personalities can be used in targeting a particular advertising campaign towards either gender. Men and women, apparently, differ greatly in how they make judgments - and, thus, their purchase decisions:
- Men are more likely to:
- Be quicker in making their decisions
- More certain about their judgments
- Be less easily persuaded
- Women are more likely to:
- Be slower in making decisions
- Consider more details in their decision making process
- Seek more discussion
Therefore, when making decisions,
- Men tend to be goal-oriented, single-minded, and look for short cuts, such as prior knowledge or the first information presented.
- While women will tend towards comprehensive information processing, and will tend towards products with more information, not less when making their purchase decisions
This means that, even though gender targeting can be easily presented through the use of obvious, everyday cues (the Heineken ad is a great example of this), the WAY the ad is presented can be just as important in improving the effectiveness of the ad for the target gender. This was a revelation to me!
Some ads try to appeal to both trains of thought - for example, the headline in this AMX ad might appeal to men, while the detailed information might appeal more to women.
I find that the print ads below illustrate perfectly the differences between the male vs. female thought processes. I've never seen them illustrated so well before! I love this campaign.
A new start
So after about 14 years of hand-coding my personal website (the most current one would be apsylus.com), all while developing and working with various CMS'es professionally, I've decided to re-start my online existence with WordPress.
Why? Because these blogging and CMS platforms are becoming so much better and easier to use by the minute, that hand coding a personal website is going the way of the dodo. Another reason is that this will entice me to update the site a little more than once a year. Also because everyone blogs nowadays, and I feel slightly inadequate for only having an online journal, a LiveJournal, and accounts on Twitter and Facebook - because no matter what you do or how much you know, unless you have an ACTUAL blog, you're a nobody on the web. That or I have just gotten suckered into blogging (very likely).
Anyway - welcome! Please read the About page for what the site's all about, leave a comment, and we'll talk soon.
Kellogg Fall Ball 2008

I was asked to do the branding, logo design, and marketing materials for the Kellogg Annual Fall Ball 2008. The theme for the ball was "masquerade". Since it was to be held at Chicago's fancy Navy Pier Crystal Garden, the marketing material had to convey an upscale and dressy theme (one big problem with Kellogg formals is that when it comes to costumes, people like to be creative - sometimes too creative. We did not want anybody coming in with jeans and a pirate mask).
- Email teaser
- Posters
- Tabletop marketing collateral
- Ticket
Kellogg Technology Conference 2009

This was easily my biggest project while at Kellogg. As the Marketing Co-chair, I was responsible for everything involving marketing the conference - it was my job to sell the conference out as quickly as possible. Starting with the logo (which is different from the past years' Kellogg Technology Conference logos), I created the visual branding of the conference.
More importantly, I thought of various ways of driving demand for the conference - this included crafting different waves of marketing campaigns (increasing awareness first, then generating excitement, then driving purchases), and tailoring the messages differently depending on the market segment I was addressing.
There were also smaller things like pushing the brand out even when the conference was full to drive additional demand and excitement, as well as reduce "empty" sales - so people who purchased tickets for the conference but could not make it would be replaced by those waitlisted and likely extremely excited about attending.
The conference ended up selling out two weeks prior to the actual conference day, which was unheard of for the Technology Conference at Kellogg. It was amazing to see how what I learned actually made a difference - I think I applied more of what I learned about marketing at Kellogg on this than any other project I've done!
- Logo
- Website
- Postcards
- Back of postcard
- Email flyer
- A variation of the email flyer
- Email signatures
- Email flyer, promoting giveaways
- Raffle email
- Laptop stickers
- Banner
- Banner (platinum sponsor)
- Phone socks (attendee giveaways)
Rocket Pockets
Rocket Pockets is Kellogg's pop and rock band, of which I may or may not be a groupie. They had a few photos taken for their promotional material, and I created this poster out of the photo they picked.
- Poster



















