Advertising and consumerism vocabulary: the words that lift a frequent topic.
Advertising, brands and consumer culture run through Task 2 and Part 3, from how products are sold to what that does to society. The ideas are familiar; the marks are in precise, topic-specific language. Swap the everyday word for the right collocation and the same point reads a band higher.
Why this matters. Lexical Resource is a quarter of your mark, and on a familiar topic the examiner has read the plain version a thousand times. The lift is not rarer words; it is accurate collocation used naturally. A common phrase used correctly beats a showy word used wrongly, every time.
Four clusters that cover most Advertising questions.
You do not need a glossary. You need a handful of accurate collocations in each of these areas, ready to deploy.
Advertising
advertising campaign · target audience · brand awareness · persuade consumers
How products are promoted, the base lexis.
The campaign raised brand awareness among young people.
Consumer behaviour
consumer culture · impulse buying · disposable income · brand loyalty
How people buy, a common Task 2 line.
Advertising encourages impulse buying.
Techniques & media
product placement · celebrity endorsement · social media influencers · misleading claims
The methods advertisers use, where Part 3 reaches.
Celebrity endorsement can boost sales sharply.
Effects & criticism
materialism · pressure to buy · overconsumption · exploit insecurities
The downsides a balanced answer weighs.
Critics say advertising fuels materialism.
Name the technique, not just ‘adverts’
The weak answer says “adverts make people buy things”. The lift is naming how: brand awareness, celebrity endorsement, product placement, impulse buying. One precise term shows you understand the mechanism.
The same point, from Band 6 to Band 8.
At Band 5
Advertising is discussed with very general words (adverts, buy, companies, famous people), with vague verbs (adverts make you buy). Precise terms (consumer, brand) are missing.
At Band 6
“Companies use adverts with famous people to make us want to buy their products, even things we do not need.” The idea is fine, but general.
At Band 7
“Advertising builds brand awareness and, through celebrity endorsement, encourages consumers to make impulse purchases.” Topic collocations (brand awareness, celebrity endorsement, impulse purchases) carry real information.
At Band 8+
“While advertising informs consumers of genuine choices, its relentless promotion of consumer culture can foster materialism and pressure people into overconsumption.” Precise lexis, abstraction, and a controlled complex sentence.
The upgrade most worth making.
Each swap takes a vague, everyday phrase and replaces it with the collocation an examiner expects on this topic. Use them where they fit naturally, not all at once.
| Instead of… | Use… | For example |
|---|---|---|
| adverts | advertising / a campaign | The advertising campaign ran for months. |
| make people want to buy | persuade consumers | Ads persuade consumers to try new brands. |
| buying without thinking | impulse buying | Bright displays encourage impulse buying. |
| using famous people | celebrity endorsement | Celebrity endorsement lifts a brand. |
| showing products in films | product placement | Product placement is common in films. |
| making people know a brand | brand awareness | Social media builds brand awareness. |
| buying too much | overconsumption | Advertising can drive overconsumption. |
| loving money and possessions | materialism | Critics link advertising to materialism. |
Two cautions. Stay balanced, advertising both informs and manipulates, so weigh the two. And avoid slang: ads is borderline in Task 2, so prefer advertising. For the general method, see vocabulary & cohesion →
Ten to drill.
Choose the more precise, topic-appropriate option for each gap. Press Check answers for your score and the reason behind each one. Nothing is sent anywhere.
You can collect topic words. Using the right one, accurately, under timed pressure is the work.
Memorised “big” words used wrongly cost marks; precise collocations used naturally earn them, and the difference is hard to judge in your own writing.
In a lesson I mark your topic vocabulary the way an examiner does, where a collocation is exactly right, where it is forced, and where a plain word would have been stronger. Lessons are £20 for fifty minutes, one to one, in proper British English; the first step is a free 25-minute introduction. This page is drawn from the vocabulary work in the forthcoming PEG Guide to IELTS Speaking.