Read the passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the best answer to each of the following questions from 31 to 40.
Imagine the following scenario: on your way home, a so-called tourist approaches you in the street and politely asks you to take a photograph with their camera. You oblige, and afterwards they begin describing how they recently purchased the camera and how it happens to be on special offer. [I] This is the essence of stealth marketing. You may assume you have never encountered such a tactic, yet that assumption is precisely what makes it effective. In all probability, you already have. [II]
Unlike conventional advertising, stealth or so-called word-of-mouth marketing is not openly recognisable. We immediately identify advertisements on billboards or in glossy magazines, but stealth marketing is deliberately concealed; it relies on subtle manipulation. Globally, more than $500 billion is spent on advertising each year, yet compared with large-scale campaigns, stealth strategies are comparatively inexpensive and strikingly effective. How does this mechanism function in practice? Consider Company X. Hoping to launch a product aimed at teenagers, the company seeks to ensure that it appears cool and desirable. [III] To achieve this, they recruit young people to discreetly promote it. Seventeen-year-old Tanya Fulham is one such participant. As the campaign expanded online, Company X gradually took over several popular teen blogs without users realising they were being commercially influenced.
Tanya is attractive, athletic, and academically capable. She follows fashion, enjoys shopping, and listens to the latest music trends. With over 150 friends on her social media page, she exerts considerable influence over her peers’ opinions and choices. She is now engaged by an undercover marketing agency. Individuals like Tanya promote brands in blogs and across digital platforms. “It’s exciting to receive free samples of fashionable new products that my friends don’t yet know about,” Tanya remarks. “It makes me feel significant, as though I possess privileged, insider knowledge.” But do her friends realise she is financially compensated? “No, they don’t,” she admits, “but I don’t regard it as dishonest. If I genuinely like something, I share it. Payment does not change that fact.”
Perhaps Tanya is justified. After all, people frequently recommend a novel they are reading, a café they have discovered, or a device they have purchased. Moreover, in an age where we are continuously connected - bombarded with more than 3,000 advertisements a day - the difference may seem negligible.
[IV] Nonetheless, critics remain concerned. “We assume that a person is simply being helpful,” explains retail psychologist David Green, “yet it is entirely different when their comments are motivated by payment. Such practices erode authenticity, leaving us uncertain about whom to trust.” In reality, stealth marketers are already among us - and what makes the phenomenon so disquieting is that they are indistinguishable from everyone else.
(Adapted from Insight)
Question 31. As stated in paragraph 1, the effectiveness of stealth marketing ____________.
A. goes unnoticed by experts
B. lies in its invisibility
C. involves exploiting generosity
D. hides its true purpose