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buying a piano, believing it comes as their own idea.
Instead of saying to the purchaser ‘please buy a piano’, they have caused the purchaser
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  • 00:15

    Edward Bernays persuaded women to smoke.

  • 00:18

    He convinced the public that bacon and eggs were the true all-American breakfast.

  • 00:23

    He also facilitated the successful overthrow of a democratically elected Guatemalan president.

  • 00:28

    How did one man achieve these remarkable accomplishments?

  • 00:33

    The methods used to accomplish these astonishing events are explained in his book, ‘Propaganda’.

  • 00:39

    What is propaganda?

  • 00:42

    Propaganda nowadays is now seen as a synonym for lies.

  • 00:46

    It implies half-truths, selective history, bias, misleading information and other tricks.

  • 00:52

    However, it can be used in a positive manner.

  • 00:55

    For example: a campaign to improve public health through vaccination.

  • 01:00

    When used in such a constructive way, it can be a progressive force, capable of improving

  • 01:05

    and benefiting every life and every home.

  • 01:12

    Specific propaganda should be seen as good or bad depending on the merit of the cause

  • 01:16

    urged and the correctness of the information published.

  • 01:20

    Modern propaganda is a consistent and continuing effort to create or shape events to influence

  • 01:26

    public relations on an enterprise, idea or group.

  • 01:31

    Edward Bernays worked for the Woodrow Wilson administration in the First World War, using

  • 01:36

    a propaganda model promoting America’s war efforts as ‘bringing democracy to Europe’.

  • 01:41

    After swaying the public across the world with this slogan he set to work on employing

  • 01:46

    propaganda in peacetime.

  • 01:48

    Due to negative implications surrounding the word propaganda because of its use by the

  • 01:54

    Germans in the war, he promoted the term ‘Public Relations’.

  • 02:02

    A public relations expert is concerned with bringing an idea to the awareness of the public,

  • 02:10

    using modern media communications and group formations of society.

  • 02:13

    They act as an advisor to their client.

  • 02:18

    Edward Bernays had an impressive list of these clients, ranging from media companies such

  • 02:22

    as Time Inc., CBS and NBC through to individuals such as the President of the United States.

  • 02:30

    He was not just a propagandist.

  • 02:31

    He was concerned with courses of action, policies, systems and opinions, and the securing of

  • 02:37

    public support for them.

  • 02:39

    His responsibilities even included discovering new markets.

  • 02:42

    The most famous new market Bernays was asked to uncover was that of women smoking cigarettes

  • 02:48

    in the late 1920s.

  • 02:53

    Up until then women smoking in public was seen as a social taboo.

  • 02:56

    Bernays set about removing this taboo to potentially double tobacco companies possible clientele.

  • 03:03

    First, he contacted a psychoanalyst to understand the societal perceptions that dissuaded women

  • 03:09

    from smoking.

  • 03:11

    He found that for feminists, cigarettes were like ‘torches of freedom’ that symbolised

  • 03:16

    their nonconformity and freedom from male oppression.

  • 03:20

    He used this information to formulate a strategy and got a group of stylish women to march

  • 03:27

    in an Easter Day parade.

  • 03:30

    Prior to the parade, he had told the press that a group of women's rights marchers would

  • 03:36

    light ‘torches of freedom’.

  • 03:39

    On his cue, the women lit up their cigarettes in front of the eager photographers.

  • 03:44

    The result was press coverage in several major newspapers including the New York Times which

  • 03:49

    helped to break the taboo against women smoking in public.

  • 03:53

    The study of mass psychology has brought to light the fact that a group can have certain

  • 03:58

    mental characteristics distinct from that of an individual.

  • 04:06

    Learning how the masses are influenced by various factors allows us to effect change

  • 04:10

    in public opinion with a fair amount of accuracy.

  • 04:14

    However, propaganda will never be an exact science, in the same way psychology or sociology

  • 04:20

    isn’t, because they deal with humans.

  • 04:22

    If you can influence leaders, you automatically influence the groups they rule or have authority

  • 04:29

    over.

  • 04:30

    The group mind has impulses, emotions and habits rather than thoughts as such.

  • 04:36

    It makes up its mind by impulsively following the example of a trusted leader or authority

  • 04:41

    figure.

  • 04:42

    If this is not available, the herd ‘thinks’ by clichés or images that stand for a group

  • 04:47

    of experiences or ideas.

  • 04:52

    An old propagandist would treat the human mind as an individual machine and rely on

  • 04:56

    certain stimulus often repeated creating a habit.

  • 05:00

    Similarly they would reiterate an idea to create conviction with individuals.

  • 05:05

    For example, to advertise bacon and eggs, adverts would contain phrases along the lines

  • 05:10

    of ‘eat more eggs’, ‘bacon is good for you’ and ‘bacon and eggs are cheap and

  • 05:17

    healthy’.

  • 05:18

    A new propagandist such as Bernays who understands group psychology would first look at who influences

  • 05:23

    eating habits.

  • 05:25

    The answer is doctors and physicians.

  • 05:26

    They would then suggest to these doctors and physicians to publically state that eating

  • 05:31

    bacon and eggs is good for you.

  • 05:32

    The propagandist knows that a large number of people will follow the advice of their

  • 05:37

    doctor due to the psychological relationship between a person and their doctor.

  • 05:42

    A doctor signifies health which in turn signifies long life.

  • 05:48

    Bernays used these exact methods of leader influence to convince the public that bacon

  • 05:52

    and eggs was the true all-American breakfast.

  • 05:55

    Bernays sold more bacon, not by telling Americans that bacon is tasty, but by asking doctors

  • 06:00

    the question: ‘Is it more healthy to eat a hearty breakfast or a skimpy breakfast?’.

  • 06:04

    His advertisements then said, ‘Nine out of ten doctors recommend a hearty breakfast

  • 06:10

    like this one’ with a photo of bacon and eggs.

  • 06:16

    An old advertiser would try to persuade an individual to buy an item immediately, for

  • 06:20

    example: ‘Buy this piano – NOW’.

  • 06:24

    Using reiteration and emphasis directed upon the individual, the advertiser tries to break

  • 06:28

    down sales resistance.

  • 06:30

    A new advertiser would instead of directly penetrating sales resistance, try to remove

  • 06:35

    it by creating circumstances that will swing emotional currents that will build purchaser

  • 06:40

    demand.

  • 06:41

    For example, a new advertiser when selling a piano would try to develop acceptance of

  • 06:46

    the idea of a music room in the house, perhaps by arranging an exhibition of music rooms

  • 06:50

    by well-known designers, inviting key people of influence with regards to buying habits,

  • 06:55

    i.e. famous musicians.

  • 06:57

    The music room will be accepted and people with a music room will naturally think of

  • 07:01

    buying a piano, believing it comes as their own idea.

  • 07:06

    Instead of saying to the purchaser ‘please buy a piano’, they have caused the purchaser

  • 07:09

    to say ‘please sell me a piano’.

  • 07:14

    All these methods and techniques were used for Bernays’ most extreme propaganda campaign:

  • 07:19

    the overthrow of the Guatemalan government.

  • 07:21

    The government had introduced labour laws that allowed workers to strike if their demand

  • 07:25

    for higher wages were not met.

  • 07:27

    The United Fruit Company had been the largest landowner and employer in Guatemala for several

  • 07:32

    years and these laws would affect their profits.

  • 07:35

    Edward Bernays was hired by the United Fruit Company to persuade Americans that the then

  • 07:40

    Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz was a communist, when in reality he was a liberal capitalist.

  • 07:48

    Bernays ran an intensive campaign of misinformation to portray the company as the victim of the

  • 07:52

    government for several years including taking American journalists to Guatemala and arranging

  • 07:57

    for them to interview only those who opposed Arbenz.

  • 08:00

    Bernays’ involvement led to US President Eisenhower to intervene and ultimately Arbenz

  • 08:06

    was overthrown in a US-sponsored coup designed to make the world safe for large U.S. corporations.

All

The example sentences of PURCHASER in videos (5 in total of 5)

this determiner included verb, past tense a determiner set noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction instruction noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction what wh-pronoun the determiner purchaser noun, singular or mass should modal n't adverb do verb, base form , because preposition or subordinating conjunction if preposition or subordinating conjunction those determiner
instead adverb of preposition or subordinating conjunction saying verb, gerund or present participle to to the determiner purchaser noun, singular or mass please verb, base form buy verb, base form a determiner piano noun, singular or mass , they personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present caused verb, past participle the determiner purchaser noun, singular or mass
to to see verb, base form the determiner share noun, singular or mass price noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner purchaser noun, singular or mass drop noun, singular or mass a determiner little adjective , and coordinating conjunction the determiner share noun, singular or mass price noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner target noun, singular or mass
a determiner requirement noun, singular or mass on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner purchaser noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun successors noun, plural to to erect verb, base form a determiner fence noun, singular or mass around preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner land noun, singular or mass this determiner then adverb
but coordinating conjunction a determiner purchaser noun, singular or mass will modal value verb, base form your possessive pronoun work noun, singular or mass according verb, gerund or present participle to to how wh-adverb much adjective they personal pronoun pay verb, non-3rd person singular present for preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun .

Use "purchaser" in a sentence | "purchaser" example sentences

How to use "purchaser" in a sentence?

  • Good things soon find a purchaser.
    -Plautus-
  • I do not believe the expenditure of $2.50 for a book entitles the purchaser to the personal friendship of the author.
    -Evelyn Waugh-
  • Encouraging underground uranium mining on the Colorado Plateau um, the federal government was the only purchaser of uranium ore to try to manufacture uh, atomic bombs.
    -Tom Udall-
  • Mankind are more indebted to industry than ingenuity; the gods set up their favors at a price, and industry is the purchaser.
    -Joseph Addison-
  • Everyone is a buyer, everyone's a potential purchaser and everyone's a potential vendor.
    -Joe Hockey-
  • Not to be covetous, is money; not to be a purchaser, is a revenue.
    -Marcus Tullius Cicero-
  • There is no such thing as an innocent purchaser of stocks.
    -Louis D. Brandeis-

Definition and meaning of PURCHASER

What does "purchaser mean?"

/ˈpərCHəsər/

noun
Someone who buys things; buyer.

What are synonyms of "purchaser"?
Some common synonyms of "purchaser" are:
  • buyer,
  • shopper,
  • customer,
  • consumer,
  • client,
  • patron,
  • investor,
  • user,
  • clientele,
  • patronage,
  • public,
  • trade,
  • market,
  • vendee,
  • emptor,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.