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History of marketing

The study of the history of marketing, as a discipline, is meaningful because it helps to define the baselines upon which change can be recognised and understand how the discipline evolves in response to those changes.[1] The practice of marketing has been known for millennia, but the term "marketing" used to describe commercial activities assisting the buying and selling of products or services came into popular use in the late nineteenth century.[2] The study of the history of marketing as an academic field emerged in the early twentieth century.[3]

The term 'marketing' comes from the Latin, 'mercatus', meaning a marketplace. Pictured: La Boqueria, Barcelona, Spain
Scholars have found evidence of marketing practices in the marketplaces of antiquity. Pictured: The Moorish Bazaar, painting by Edwin Lord Weeks, 1873

Marketers tend to distinguish between the history of marketing practice and the history of marketing thought:

  1. the history of marketing practice refers to an investigation into the ways that marketing has been practiced; and how those practices have evolved over time as they respond to changing socio-economic conditions
  2. the history of marketing thought refers to an examination of the ways that marketing has been studied and taught

Although the history of marketing thought and the history of marketing practice are distinct fields of study, they intersect at different junctures.[4] Marketing practitioners engage in innovative practices that capture the attention of marketing scholars who codify and disseminate such practices. At the same time, marketing academics often develop new research methods or theories that are subsequently adopted by practitioners. Thus developments in marketing theory inform marketing practice and vice versa. The history of marketing will remain incomplete if one disassociates academia from practitioners.[4]

The publication, in 1960, of Robert J. Keith's article, "The Marketing Revolution", was a pioneering work in the study of the history of marketing practice.[5] In 1976, the publication of Robert Bartel's book, The History of Marketing Thought, marked a turning-point in the understanding of how marketing theory evolved since it first emerged as a separate discipline around the turn of last century.[6]

Etymology Edit

According to etymologists, the term 'marketing' first appeared in dictionaries in the sixteenth century where it referred to the process of buying and selling at a market.[7] The contemporary definition of 'marketing' as a process of moving goods from producer to consumer with an emphasis on sales and advertising first appeared in dictionaries in 1897.[8] The term, marketing, is a derivation of the Latin word, mercatus meaning market-place or merchant.[9]

Marketing history: an overview Edit

 
In pre-literate societies, the distinctive shape of amphora served some of the functions of a label, communicating information about region of origin, the name of the producer and may have carried product quality claims

Historians of marketing tend to fall into two distinct branches of marketing history - the history of marketing practice and the history of marketing thought. These branches are often deeply divided and have very different roots. The history of marketing practice is grounded in the management and marketing disciplines, while the history of marketing thought is grounded in economic and cultural history. This means that the two branches ask very different types of research questions and employ different research tools and frameworks.[10]

Historians of marketing have undertaken considerable investigation into the emergence of marketing practice, yet there is little agreement about when marketing first began.[11] Some researchers argue that marketing practices can be found in antiquity [12] while others suggest that marketing, in its modern form, emerged in conjunction with the rise of consumer culture in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe [13] while yet other researchers suggest that modern marketing was only fully realised in the decades following the industrial revolution in Britain from where it subsequently spread to Europe and North America.[14] Hollander and others have suggested that the different dates for the emergence of marketing can be explained by problems surrounding the way that marketing has been defined - whether reference to 'modern marketing' as a planned, programmed repertoire of professional practice including activities such as segmentation, product differentiation, positioning and marketing communications versus 'marketing' as a simple form distribution and exchange.[15]

Marketing in antiquity Edit

 
Mosaic showing garum container, from the house of Umbricius Scaurus of Pompeii. The inscription which reads "G(ari) F(los) SCO(mbri) SCAURI EX OFFI(CI)NA SCAURI" has been translated as "The flower of garum, made of the mackerel, a product of Scaurus, from the shop of Scaurus"

A number of studies have found evidence of advertising, branding, packaging and labelling in antiquity.[16][17] Umbricius Scauras, for example, was a manufacturer of fish sauce (also known as garum) in Pompeii, circa 35 B.C. Mosaic patterns in the atrium of his house were decorated with images of amphora bearing his personal brand and quality claims. The mosaic comprises four different amphora, one at each corner of the atrium, and bearing labels as follows:[18]

1. G(ari) F(los) SCO[m]/ SCAURI/ EX OFFI[ci]/NA SCAU/RI Translated as "The flower of garum, made of the mackerel, a product of Scaurus, from the shop of Scaurus"
2. LIQU[minis]/ FLOS Translated as: "The flower of Liquamen"
3. G[ari] F[los] SCOM[bri]/ SCAURI Translated as: "The flower of garum, made of the mackerel, a product of Scaurus"
4. LIQUAMEN/ OPTIMUM/ EX OFFICI[n]/A SCAURI Translated as: "The best liquamen, from the shop of Scaurus"

The reputation of Scauras' fish sauce was known to be of very high quality across the Mediterranean and its reputation travelled as far away as modern France.[19] Curtis has described this mosaic as "an advertisement... and a rare, unequivocal example of a motif inspired by a patron, rather than by the artist."[20] In Pompeii and nearby Herculaneum, archaeological evidence also points to evidence of branding and labelling in relatively common use. Wine jars, for example, were stamped with names, such as "Lassius" and "L. Eumachius;" probably references to the name of the producer. Carbonised loaves of bread, found at Herculaneum, indicate that some bakers stamped their bread with the producer's name.[21]

David Wengrow has argued that branding became necessary following the urban revolution in ancient Mesopotamia in the 4th century BCE, when large-scale economies started mass-producing commodities such as alcoholic drinks, cosmetics and textiles. These ancient societies imposed strict forms of quality control over commodities, and also needed to convey value to the consumer through branding. Producers began by attaching simple stone seals to products which over time were transformed into clay seals bearing impressed images, often associated with the producer's personal identity thus giving the product a personality.[22]

Diana Twede has argued that the "consumer packaging functions of protection, utility and communication have been necessary whenever packages were the object of transactions" (p. 107). She has shown that amphoras used in Mediterranean trade between 1500 and 500 BCE exhibited a wide variety of shapes and markings, which provided information for transactions. Systematic use of stamped labels dates from around the fourth century BCE. In a largely pre-literate society, the shape of the amphora and its pictorial markings conveyed information about the contents, region of origin and even the identity of the producer which were understood to convey information about product quality.[23] Not all historians agree that these markings can be compared with modern brands or labels. Moore and Reid, for example, have argued that the distinctive shapes and markings in ancient containers should be termed proto-brands rather than modern brands.[24]

Marketing in the Middle Ages Edit

 
Market scene by Pieter Aertsen, c.1550

In England and Europe during the Middle Ages, market towns sprang up. Some analysts have suggested that the term, 'marketing,' may have first been used in the context of market towns where the term 'marketing' may have been used by producers to describe the process of carting and selling their produce and wares in market towns. Blintiff has investigated the early Medieval networks of market towns and suggests that by the 12th century there was an upsurge in the number of market towns and the emergence of merchant circuits as traders bulked up surpluses from smaller regional, different day markets and resold them at the larger centralised market towns.[25]

Braudel and Reynold have made a systematic study of these European market towns between the thirteenth and fifteenth century. Their investigation shows that in regional districts markets were held once or twice a week, while daily markets were more common in the larger cities and towns. Over time, permanent shops began to open daily and gradually supplanted the periodic markets. Peddlers filled in the gaps in distribution by travelling door-to-door in order to sell produce and wares. The physical market was characterised by transactional exchange, bartering systems were commonplace and the economy was characterised by local trading. Braudel reports that, in 1600, goods travelled relatively short distances - grain 5–10 miles; cattle 40–70 miles; wool and wollen cloth 20–40 miles. However, following the European age of discovery, goods were imported from afar - calico cloth from India, porcelain, silk and tea from China, spices from India and South-East Asia and tobacco, sugar, rum and coffee from the New World.[26]

 
Bronze plate for printing an advertisement for the Liu family needle shop at Jinan, Song dynasty China. It is considered the world's earliest identified printed advertising medium.

Although the rise of consumer culture and marketing in Britain and Europe have been studied extensively, less is known about developments elsewhere.[27] Nevertheless, recent research suggests that China exhibited a rich history of early marketing practices; including branding, packaging, advertising and retail signage.[28] From as early as 200 BCE, Chinese packaging and branding was used to signal family, place names and product quality, and the use of government imposed product branding was used between 600 and 900 AD.[29] Eckhart and Bengtsson have argued that during the Song Dynasty (960–1127), Chinese society developed a consumerist culture, where a high level of consumption was attainable for a wide variety of ordinary consumers rather than just the elite (p. 212). The rise of a consumer culture led to the commercial investment in carefully managed company image, retail signage, symbolic brands, trademark protection and the brand concepts of baoji, hao, lei, gongpin, piazi and pinpai, which roughly equate with Western concepts of family status, quality grading, and upholding traditional Chinese values (p. 219). Eckhardt and Bengtsson's analysis suggests that brands emerged in China as a result of the social needs and tensions implicit in consumer culture, in which brands provide social status and stratification. Thus, the evolution of brands in China stands in sharp contrast to the West where manufacturers pushed brands onto the market in order to differentiate, increase market share and ultimately profits (pp 218–219).

Marketing in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe Edit

 
Josiah Wedgewood (1730–1795) invented many of the techniques of modern marketing

Scholars have identified specific instances of marketing practices in England and Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. As trade between countries or regions grew, companies required information on which to base business decisions. Individuals and companies carried out formal and informal research on trade conditions. As early as 1380, Johann Fugger travelled from Augsburg to Graben in order to gather information on the international textile industry. He exchanged detailed letters on trade conditions in relevant areas.[30] In the early 1700s British industrial houses were demanding information, that could be used for business decisions. In the early 18th-century, Daniel Defoe, a London merchant, published information on trade and economic resources of England and Scotland.[31][32] Defoe was a prolific publisher and among his many publications are titles devoted to trade including; Trade of Britain Stated, 1707; Trade of Scotland with France, 1713 and The Trade to India Critically and Calmly Considered, 1720; all books that were highly popular with merchants and business houses of the period.[33] While such activities might now be recognised as marketing research, at that time they were known as "commercial research" or "commercial intelligence" and not seen as part of the repertoire of activities that make up contemporary marketing practice.

Eighteenth century advertising showed a high level of sophistication in its execution and ability to reach mass audiences.[34] In a major review of consumer society, McKendrick, Brewer and Plumb found extensive evidence of eighteenth century English entrepreneurs inventing modern marketing techniques, including product differentiation; sales promotion; loss leader; planned obsolescence; fashion magazines; national advertising campaigns, fancy showrooms, and concentration on elite taste-setting customers. English pottery makers Josiah Wedgewood (1730–1795) and Matthew Boulton (1728–1809) were the pioneers of modern mass marketing methods.[35][36] Wedgewood introduced direct mail, travelling salesmen and catalogues in the eighteenth century.[37] Wedgewood's marketing was highly sophisticated and recognisably 'modern' in that he planned production with the sale in mind.[38] He carried out serious investigations into the fixed and variable costs of production and recognised that increased production would lead to lower unit costs. He also inferred that selling at lower prices would lead to higher demand and recognised the value of achieving scale economies in production. By cutting costs and lowering prices, Wedgewood was able to generate higher overall profits.[39] Similarly, one of Wedgewood's colleagues Matthew Boulton, pioneered early mass production techniques and product differentiation at his Soho Manufactory in the 1760s. He also practiced planned obsolescence and understood the importance of 'celebrity marketing' - that is supplying the nobility, often at prices below cost and of obtaining royal patronage, for the sake of the publicity and cudos generated.[40]

Fullerton argues that the practice of market segmentation emerged well before marketers used the notion formally.[41] Certain strands of evidence suggest that simple examples of market segmentation were evident prior to the 1880s. The business historian, Richard S. Tedlow, argues that any attempt to segment markets prior to 1880 was highly fragmented since the economy was characterised by small, regional suppliers who mostly sold goods on a local or regional basis.[42] When retail shops began to appear from the 15th century, retailers needed to separate the "riff raff" from wealthier customers. Outside the major metropolitan cities, few stores could afford to serve one type of clientele exclusively. However, gradually retail shops introduced innovations that would allow them to separate wealthier customers from the lower classes and peasants. One technique was to have a window opening out onto the street from which customers could be served. This allowed the sale of goods to the common people, without encouraging them to come inside. Another solution, that came into vogue from the late sixteenth century was to invite favoured customers into a back-room of the store, where goods were permanently on display. Yet another technique that emerged around the same time was to hold a showcase of goods in the shopkeeper's private home for the benefit of wealthier clients. Samuel Pepys, for example, writing in 1660, describes being invited to the home of a retailer to view a wooden jack.[43] Evidence of early marketing segmentation has also been noted across Europe. A study of the German book trade found examples of both product differentiation and market segmentation in the 1820s.[44]

Marketing in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Edit

 
Henry Ford began manufacturing the mass-produced Model T in 1908. Ford famously said that customers could own a car in any colour as long as it was black.

Until the nineteenth century, Western economies were characterised by small regional suppliers who sold goods on a local or regional basis. However, as transportation systems improved from the mid nineteenth century, the economy became more unified allowing companies to distribute standardised, branded goods at national level. This gave rise to a much broader mass marketing mindset. Manufacturers tended to insist on strict standardisation in order to achieve scale economies with a view to keeping production costs down and also to achieving market penetration in the early stages of a product's life cycle.[45] The Model T Ford was an example of a product being manufactured at a price that was affordable for the burgeoning middle classes.

In the early twentieth century, as market size increased, it became more commonplace for manufacturers to produce a variety of models pitched at different quality points designed to meet the needs of various demographic and lifestyle market segments, giving rise to the widespread practice of market segmentation and product differentation.[46] Between 1902 -1910 George B Waldron, working at Mahin's advertising agency, used tax registers, city directories and census data to show advertisers the proportion of educated versus illiterate consumers and the earning capacity of different occupations in what is believed to be the first example of demographic segmentation of a population.[47] Within little more than a decade, Paul Cherington had developed the 'ABCD' household typology - the first socio-demographic segmentation tool.[48] By the 1930s, market researchers such as Ernest Dichter were carrying out qualitative research into brand purchasers realised that demographic factors alone were insufficient to explain different marketing behaviour of various user groups. This insight led to the exploration of other factors such as lifestyles, values, attitudes and beliefs in market segmentation and advertising.[49]

When Wendell R. Smith published his now classic article, Product Differentiation and Market Segmentation as Alternative Marketing Strategies in 1956, he noted that he was simply documenting marketing practices that had been observed for some time and which he described as a "natural force".[50] Other theorists agree that Smith was simply codifying implicit knowledge that had been used in marketing and brand management from the early twentieth century.[51][52]

 
Haven-Mason Hall at the University of Michigan, where the first academic course in marketing was taught

As industry grew, the demand for skilled business professionals also grew. To meet this demand, universities began offering courses in commerce, economics and marketing. Marketing, as a discipline, was first taught in universities in the very early twentieth century.[53] However, researchers only became interested in investigating the history of marketing in the mid twentieth century. From the outset, researchers tended to identify two strands of historical research; the history of marketing practice [54] and the history of marketing thought which was fundamentally concerned with the rise of marketing education and dissecting the way that marketing was taught and studied.[6][55] Early historical studies were primarily descriptive.

History of marketing practice Edit

The practice of marketing may have been carried out for millennia, but the modern concept of marketing as a professional practice appears to have emerged the post industrial corporate world.[56] In addition to the studies of specific cultures or time periods, discussed in the preceding section, some historians of marketing have sought to write more general histories of marketing's evolution in the modern era. A key question that has preoccupied researchers is whether it is possible to identify specific orientations or mindsets that inform key periods in marketing's evolution. Marketers disagree about the way that marketing practice has evolved over time.[57]

Orientations and philosophies Edit

In the marketing literature, continuing debate surrounds the orientations or philosophies that might have informed marketing practice at different periods of time. An orientation may be defined as "the type of activity or subject that an organisation seems most interested in and gives most attention to".[58] In relation to marketing orientations, the term has been defined as a "philosophy of business management".[59] or "a corporate state of mind"[60] or as an "organisational culture".[61]

Common periods Edit

The general lack of agreement amongst scholars as to what constitutes clearly identifiable periods and the orientation that characterised each distinct period has spawned a lengthy list of orientations. Space prevents an exhaustive description of all periods or eras. However, the salient features of the most commonly cited periods appear in the following section.

Production orientation Edit

 
The production orientation is one of the oldest philosophies that guides sellers

A production orientation is often proposed as the first of the so-called orientations that dominated business thought. Keith dated the production era from the 1860s to the 1930s, but other theorists argue that evidence of the production orientation can still be found in some companies or industries. Specifically Kotler and Armstrong note that the production philosophy is "one of the oldest philosophies that guides sellers" and "is still useful in some situations".[62]

The production orientation is characterised by:[63]

  • Focus on production, manufacturing, and efficiency
  • Attainment of economies of scale, economies of scope, experience effects or all three
  • Assumption that demand exceeds supply
  • Mindset that is encapsulated by Say's Law; "Supply creates its own demand" or "if somebody makes a product, somebody else will want to buy it"
  • Limited research that is largely limited to technical-product research rather than customer research
  • Rose to prominence in an environment which had a shortage of manufactured goods relative to demand, so goods sold easily.
  • Minimal promotion and advertising, marketing communications limited to raising awareness of the product's existence

Selling orientation Edit

 
The sales orientation, often characterised by door-to-door selling is thought to have begun during the Great Depression of the 1890s and continues to this day. Pictured: A Rawleigh's salesman in 1915

The selling orientation is thought to have begun during the Great Depression and continued well into the 1950s although examples of this orientation can still be found today.[64] Kotler et al. note that the selling concept "is typically practised with unsought goods".[65]

The selling orientation is characterised by:

  • Aggressive selling to push products, often involving door-to-door selling
  • Accepting every possible sale or booking, regardless of its suitability for the business
  • Strong transactional focus (ignores potential relationships)

Marketing orientation Edit

The marketing orientation or the marketing concept emerged in the 1950s.

Characteristics of the marketing orientation:[66]

  • Thorough understanding of the customer's needs, wants and behaviors should be the focal point of all marketing decisions
  • Marketing efforts (sales, advertising, product management, pricing) should be integrated and in tune with the customer
  • New product concepts should flow from extensive market analysis and product testing

Societal marketing concept Edit

Phillip Kotler is often credited with first proposing the societal marketing orientation or concept in an article published in the Harvard Business Review in 1972.[67][68] However, some marketing historians, notably Wilkie and Moore, have argued that a societal perspective was evident in marketing theory and in marketing texts, since the discipline's inception in the early 1900s[69] or that societal marketing is merely an extension of the marketing concept.[70]

The societal marketing concept adopts the position that marketers have a greater social responsibility than simply satisfying customers and providing them with superior value. Instead, marketing activities should strive to benefit society's overall well-being. Marketing organisations that have embraced the societal marketing concept typically identify key stakeholder groups including: employees, customers, local communities, the wider public and government and consider the impact of their activities on all stakeholders. They ensure that marketing activities do not damage the environment and are not hazardous to broader society. Societal marketing developed into sustainable marketing.

Characteristics of societal marketing:[71]

  • An attempt to balance corporate commitments to groups and individuals in its environment, including customers, other businesses, employees and investors.
  • Companies must include social and ethical considerations into their marketing practices
  • Consideration is given to the environment includes problems such as air, water, and land pollution
  • Consideration is given to consumer rights, unfair pricing and ethics in advertising

Relationship orientation Edit

Starting in the 1990s, a new stage of marketing emerged called relationship marketing. The focus of relationship marketing is on a long-term relationship that benefits both the company and the customer.[72] The relationship is based on trust and commitment, and both companies tend to shift their operating activities to be able to work more efficiently together.[73] One of the most prominent reasons for relationship marketing comes from Kotler's idea that it costs about five times more to obtain a new customer than to maintain the relationship with an existing customer.[74] A relationship marketing approach seeks to maximise the value of all the potential exchanges an organisation could have into the future.[75]

The characteristics of relationship marketing include:[76]

  • Focus on the relationship between seller and buyer
  • Investment in the lifetime of relationships rather than single transactions by calculating customer lifetime value (CLV)
  • Orientation on product benefits and/or customer value
  • Better customer service, commitment, and contact
  • Quality is the concern of all
  • All activities are coordinated with the customer interface, including the customer's involvement in the firm's processes
  • Customised offerings where practical

Empirical support for relationship marketing as a distinct paradigm is very weak. One study suggests that relationship marketing is really a sub-component of large scale movements of the value-added process rather than a separate era or framework.[77] Some theorists suggest that marketing is moving from a relationship marketing paradigm and towards a social media paradigm where marketers have access to a more controlled environment and are able to customise offers and communications messages.[72][78]

Periodisations Edit

To investigate the history of marketing practice, scholars often turn to a method known as periodisation.[79] Periodisation refers to the process or study of categorizing the past into discrete, quantified, named units for the purpose of analysis or study.[80] Scholars do not agree on the periods that characterise the history of marketing practice. In a major review of the periodisation approach, Hollander et al. have identified fourteen different "stage theories" or "short periodisations" as well as a total of nineteen "long periodisations" that have been carried out since 1957. Of these, the contributions of Robert Keith (1960) and Ronald Fullerton (1988) are the most frequently cited.[81]

Keith's periodisation Edit

 
Robert Keith's marketing eras (production →selling →marketing) were based entirely on his experience at the Pillsbury Company

In 1960, Robert J. Keith, the then Vice President of Pillsbury,[82] set the stage for decades of controversy when he published an article entitled the "Marketing Revolution" in which he set out the way that the Pillsbury Company had shifted from a focus on production in the 1860s through to a consumer focus in the 1950s. He traced three distinct eras in Pillsbury's evolution:[83]

  • Production-oriented era (1869–1930s): characterised by a "focus on production processes"
  • Sales-oriented era (1930s–1950s): characterised by investment in research to develop new products and advertising to persuade markets of product benefits
  • Marketing-oriented era (1950s–present): characterised by a focus on the customer's latent and existing needs

In addition, Keith hypothesised that a "marketing control era" was about to emerge. Although Keith's article explicitly documented Pillsbury's evolution, the article appears to suggest that the stages observed at Pillsbury constitute a standard or normal evolutionary path (production→sales→marketing) for most large organisations.

Keith's notion of distinct eras in the evolution of marketing practice has been widely criticised and his periodisation described as "hopelessly flawed".[84][85] Specific criticisms of Keith's tripartite periodisation include that:

  • It ignores historical facts about business conditions[86]
  • It misstates the nature of supply and demand[86]
  • It slights the growth of marketing institutions[87]

The article, which is entirely based on Keith's personal recollections and did not use a single reference, is best described as anecdotal. Systematic studies carried out since Keith's work have failed to replicate Keith's periodisation. Instead, other studies suggest that many companies exhibited a marketing orientation in the 19th-century and that the business schools were teaching marketing decades before Pillsbury adopted a marketing-oriented approach.[88] Jones and Richardson also investigated historical accounts of marketing practice and found evidence for both the sales and marketing era during the so-called production era and concluded that the idea of a "marketing revolution" was a myth.[89] A detailed study of the chocolate manufacturer, Rowntree, found that this company had shifted from a production orientation through to a marketing orientation by the 1930s, without having transitioned through the so-called sales orientation.[90] Other critiques of Keith's work have pointed out that the so-called "production era" fails to align with historical facts and have also suggested that it is a myth.[91] Keith's eras have become known, somewhat cynically, as the standard chronology.[92]

Fullerton's periodisation Edit

 
The English industrial revolution is often seen as a trigger for the rise of modern marketing

In 1988, Fullerton developed a more subtle and nuanced periodisation for the so-called marketing eras.[93][94] Fullerton's eras were:[91]

  • Era of antecedents (1500–1750): a long gestational period in which people were largely self-sufficient and rural; economy characterised by low levels of consumption; commerce was seen as suspicious
  • Era of origins (1750–1870): precipitated by the dislocations of the English industrial revolution and the rise of a more urban population, this era is characterised by more attention to persuasive tactics designed to stimulate demand
  • Era of institutional development (1850–1929): many of the large institutions and modern marketing practices emerged during this period
  • Era of refinement and formalization (1930–present): further development and refinement of principles and practices developed in the preceding period

In spite of the intense criticism leveled at Keith's eras of marketing practice, his periodisation is the most frequently cited in textbooks[79] and has become the accepted wisdom.[14] One content analysis of 25 introductory and advanced texts found that Keith's eras were reproduced in all but four.[95][88] Another study, which examined 15 of the top selling marketing texts, found that the although the incidence of repeating Keith's eras was waning, it had not been replaced by Fullerton's periodisation, nor any other more meaningful framework.[96]

Other periodisations Edit

For all the controversies surrounding marketing stages or periods, Keith and others appear to have contributed a lasting legacy.[97] A study by Grundey (2010) suggests that many contemporary textbooks begin with Keith's eras and expand on it by including newer concepts such as the societal marketing concept, the relationship marketing concept and the interfunctional concept, as shown in the table below.[98] More recently, Kotler and Keller added the holistic marketing concept to the list of eras in marketing.[99] Marketing theorists continue to debate whether the holistic era represents a genuine new orientation or whether it is an extension of the marketing concept. Grundey summarised five different periodisations in the history of marketing, as shown in the following table, as a means of highlighting the general lack of agreement among scholars.[98]

Marketing philosophies or orientations in popular texts
Dibb & Simkin, 2004[100] Lancaster & Reynolds, 2005[101] Blythe, 2005[102] Drummmond & Ensor, 2005[103] Morgan, 1996[104]
1. Production orientation 1. Production orientation 1. Production orientation 1. Production orientation 1. Cost philosophy
2. Financial orientation 2. Sales orientation 2. Product orientation 2. Product orientation 2. Product philosophy
3. Sales orientation 3. Marketing orientation 3. Sales orientation 3. Sales orientation 3. Production philosophy
4. Marketing orientation 4. Customer orientation 4. Financial orientation 4. Sales philosophy
5. Customer orientation 5. Societal marketing 5. Marketing orientation 5. Erratic philosophy
6. Competitor orientation 6. Relationship orientation 6. Marketing philosophy
7. Interfunctional orientation 7. Social marketing philosophy

History of marketing thought Edit

 
University of Pennsylvania was among the first universities to offer courses in marketing

Dating the history of marketing, as an academic discipline, is just as problematic as the history of marketing practice. Marketing historians cannot agree on how to date the beginnings of marketing thought.[105] Eric Shaw, for instance, suggests that a period of pre-academic marketing thought can be identified prior to 1900.[106] Other historians suggest that the theory of marketing only emerged in the 20th century when the discipline began to offer courses at universities.[107] Nevertheless, the birth of marketing as a discipline is usually designated to the first decade of the twentieth century when "marketing courses" appeared in universities. In 1902, the University of Michigan offered what many believe to be the very first course in marketing.[108] The University of Illinois also started offering coursework in marketing in 1902.[109] In the academic year, 1904-1905, the University of Pennsylvania commenced teaching marketing. Other universities soon followed, including the Harvard Business School.[110] In 1914 Harvard's required course "Economic Resources of the United States" was renamed "Marketing."[111]

Prior to the emergence of marketing courses, marketing was not recognised as a discipline in its own right; rather it was treated as a branch of economics and was often called applied economics. Subjects, which today might be recognised as marketing-related, were embedded in economics courses. Early marketing theories were described as modifications or adaptations of economic theories.[112]

The impetus for the separation of marketing and economics was due, at least in part, to economic's focus on production as the creator of economic value and general failure to investigate distribution. In the late 19th century and early 20th century, as markets became more globalised, distribution began to assume increasing importance. Some economics professors began to run courses examining various aspects of the marketing system, including "distributive and regulative systems." Other courses, such as the "marketing of products" and the "marketing of farm-products" followed. As the first decades of the 20th century progressed, books and articles concerning marketing topics began to emerge.[113] In 1936, the publication of the new Journal of Marketing gave marketing academics a forum for exchanging ideas and research methods and also gave the discipline a real sense of its own distinct identity as a maturing academic discipline.[114]

A periodisation approach Edit

Several scholars have attempted to describe the evolution of marketing thought chronologically and to connect it with broader intellectual and academic trends. Bartels (1965) provided a brief account of marketing's formative periods, and Shah and Gardner (1982) briefly considered the development of the six dominant schools in contemporary marketing.[115] However, these initial attempts have been criticised as overly descriptive.[116] One of the first theorists to consider the stages in the development of marketing thought was Robert Bartels, who in The History of Marketing Thought, (1965) used a periodisation approach. He categorised the development of marketing theory decade by decade from the beginning of the 20th century:

  • 1900s: discovery of basic concepts and their exploration
  • 1910s: conceptualisation, classification and definition of terms
  • 1920s: integration on the basis of principles
  • 1930s: development of specialisation and variation in theory
  • 1940s: reappraisal in the light of new demands and a more scientific approach
  • 1950s: reconceptualisation in the light of managerialism, social development and quantitative approaches
  • 1960s: differentiation on bases such as managerialism, holism, environmentalism, systems, and internationalism
  • 1970s: socialisation; the adaptation of marketing to social change

Bartels was the first historian to provide a "long view of marketing’s past and wide sweep of its subdisciplines" and in so doing, he nurtured an interest in the history of marketing thought.[117]

A 'schools of thought' approach Edit

Other marketing historians have eschewed the periodisation approach, and instead considered whether distinct schools within marketing reflect different facets of common theory and whether a more unifying intellectual structure has emerged. These approaches tend to identify distinct schools of thought. A school of thought refers to an intellectual tradition or a group of scholars who share a common philosophy or set of ideas.[118] Marketing historians, Shaw and Jones, define a school of thought as one that has "a substantial body of knowledge; developed by a number of scholars; and describing at least one aspect of the what, how, who, why, when and where of performing marketing activities."[119]

To a certain extent, there is some agreement that in early marketing thought, three so-called traditional schools, namely the commodity school, the functional school and the institutional school co-existed.[120] Marketing historians such as Eric Shaw and Barton A. Weitz point to the publication of Wroe Alderson's book, Marketing Behavior and Executive Action (1957), as a break-point in the history of marketing thought,[121] moving from the macro functions-institutions-commodities approach to a micromarketing management paradigm. Following on from Alderson, marketing began to incorporate other fields of knowledge besides economics, notably behavioral science and psychology, becoming a multi-disciplinary field. For many scholars, Alderson's book marks the beginning of the Marketing Management Era. Of those historians who identify schools, there is no real agreement about which schools were dominant at different stages in marketing's development. Although the distinctive features of these schools can be identified and described, many of the early text-books included elements drawn from two or more schools of thought- for example, in a series of chapters devoted to commodities followed by a series of chapters devoted to the institutional and functional schools.[122]

In the following section, a brief overview of the contributions of key thinkers will be outlined with respect to the prevailing schools that have dominated marketing thought.

Hunt and Goolsby, identified four schools of thought that have dominated marketing, namely; the commodity school, the institutional school, the functional school and the managerial school.[123]

  • The Commodity School: A focus on different types of goods in the marketplace and how they are marketed.[124]
  • The Institutional School: Emphasised the functions of middlemen (or intermediaries); similar to the functional school, but with a focus on channel flows.[125]
  • The Functional School: A focus on the characteristics of marketing, identifying the functions and systems of marketing; adopts a systems approach.[119]
  • The Managerial School: A focus on the problems faced by marketing managers; focuses on the perspective of the seller.[126]

Some marketing historians like Jagdish Sheth have identified the modern "marketing schools" as:[127]

  • The Managerial school emerged during the late 1950s and became arguably the predominant and most influential school of thought in the field
  • The Consumer/buyer behavior school, which dominated the academic field in the second half of the twentieth century (apart from the Managerial school), features theories emerging from behavioral science
  • The Social exchange school, which focuses on exchange as the fundamental concept of marketing

Yet other commentators identify a broader range of schools. O'Malley and Lichrou, for example, document the schools as:[128]

  • Functional: What activities does marketing perform? Focus on intermediaries and value adding.
  • Commodities: How are goods classified? Focus on classification of goods; trade flows
  • Marketing Institutions: Who performs marketing functions on commodities? Focus on retailers, wholesalers, intermediaries, distribution channels
  • Marketing Management: How should marketers and managers market products and services to consumers? Business firm as seller/ supplier
  • Marketing Systems: What is a marketing system and how does it work? Channels of distribution and aggregate systems,
  • Consumer behaviour: How and why do consumers buy? organisational buyer and consumer buyer
  • Macro-marketing: How do marketing systems impact on society? Industries, channels, consumer movement, environmentalism
  • Exchange: What are the forms of exchange? Who are the parties to the exchange process? Aggregations of buyers and sellers
  • Marketing history: When did marketing practice and ideas emerge and evolve? Marketing thought and marketing practice

Brief description of the dominant schools of thought Edit

By the 1920s, the marketing discipline was organised into three schools of thought: the commodity school, the institutional school and the functional school. The following sections briefly outlines the schools of thought as conceptualised by key thinkers in the discipline. Although these can be treated as separate schools of thought, considerable overlap between them is evident. The three schools that preceded marketing management exhibited a highly descriptive approach and collectively these are often called the classical schools. These schools borrowed heavily from economics and were largely concerned with aggregate demand and lacked a focus on the individual firm.[129] By the 1960s, all previous schools of thought had been eclipsed by the managerial school because it offered a problem-solving approach and presented marketers with potential solutions to marketing problems that were frequently encountered.[130]

The commodity school Edit

 
The commodity school focused on the objects of exchange. Pictured: Cacao beans

The commodity school is thought to have originated with an article by C.C. Parlin (1916) with a focus on the objects of exchange and was primarily concerned with classifying commodities. A different article published by Copeland, and published in the Harvard Business Review (1923) proposed the convenience-shopping-specialty goods classification which is still in use today. Other theorists developed a plethora of methods for classifying goods.[131]

The institutional school Edit

The institutional school focused its attention on the agents of market transactions, specifically those organisations active in the intermediary channel system, such as wholesalers and retailers. It was primarily concerned with documenting the channels of distribution, the functions performed by channel members and the value-adding services they provided. In short, the institutional school was fundamentally concerned with the activities required to achieve efficiency within distribution systems. The institutional school was heavily influenced by economics, but in the 1970s, began to take on ideas from behavioural science.[132] A key work in the institutional school tradition is Weld's The Marketing of Farm Products, (1916) while other important contributors included: Butler's Marketing and Merchandising, (1923); Breyer's Commodity and Marketing (1931); Converse's Marketing: Methods and Policies (1921) and Duddy & Revzan's Marketing: An Institutional Approach (1947).[133]

The functional school Edit

The functional school was thought to have originated with the publication of Shaw's article, Some Problems in Market Distribution, (1912) The functional school was primarily concerned with documenting the functions of marketing. In other words, it attempted to address the question, What work does marketing do? Different theorists within the functional school produced long lists of marketing's functions. Although there was little agreement about what should be included in the list, much of it revolved around the value added by marketing intermediaries. In those early years, advertising and promotion was rarely seen as a marketing function. In addition to Shaw, key thinkers in the functional school included Weld, Vanderblue and Ryan.[134]

Marketing management Edit

 
The marketing management school focuses on typical problems encountered by marketers

Wroe Alderson changed marketing thought with the publication of his work, Marketing Behaviour and Executive Action (1957) in which he was primarily concerned with the problems and challenges faced by marketers and the types of solutions that had been found to be successful. This shifted the emphasis away from the functions of marketing and towards a more problem-solving approach, thereby paving the way for a more managerial approach within the discipline.[135] Some historians have claimed that Alderson's article signalled a paradigm shift in thinking, towards a new macromarketing approach.[136]

The marketing management school emerged as the dominant school in the 1960s following the publication of Basic Marketing: A Managerial Approach, written by E. Jerome McCarthy and replaced the so-called functional school which had been the dominant school for the first part of the twentieth century. In the words of Hunt and Goolsby, the publication of McCarthy's text, sounded the "beginning of the end for the functional school."[137] However, Hunt and Goolsby note that the 1960s was a transitional period in which both the functional school and the managerial school co-existed.[138] Shaw and Jones have described the emergence of the managerial school in the mid-twentieth century as a "paradigm shift."[139]

While the management school continued to borrow from economics, it also introduced ideas from the new and emerging fields of sociology and psychology, which offered useful insights for explaining aspects of consumer behaviour such as the influence of culture and social class. Key works in the marketing management tradition include Wroe Alderson's Marketing Behavior and Executive Action, (1957), Howard's Marketing Management (1957), Lazer's Managerial Marketing: Perspectives and Viewpoints, (1957) and McCarthy's Basic Marketing: A Managerial Approach (1960).[140]

The salient features of the managerial approach to marketing are:

  • "an overt marketing-as-management orientation, and
  • an overt reliance on the behavioral and quantitative sciences as means of knowing." [141]

Key innovations that influenced marketing practice Edit

  • 1450: Gutenberg's metal movable type, leading eventually to mass-production of flyers and brochures [142]
  • 1600s: Paid advertising in Italy
  • 1600s: Use of handbills and posters is common practice in Elizabethan England
  • 1605: World's first newspaper published in Germany [143]
  • 1600s and 1700s: Posters and handbills used for promotion in England [142]
  • 1665: The Oxford Gazette first published in England (later renamed the London Gazette and still published today) [144]
 
Newspapers were an early form of mass communication. Pictured: The Boston News-Letter, 1704
  • 1700s: Widespread emergence of newspapers and magazines in England and France; by the 1730s daily newspapers in London devoted more than half the available space to advertising [34]
  • 1719: The Daily Post first published; early instance of a periodical dedicated to business, science and innovation
  • 1836: Paid advertising in a newspaper (in France) [142][145]
  • 1839: Posters on private property banned in England [142]
 
The telegraph was an early form of mass communication
  • 1864: Earliest recorded use of the telegraph for mass unsolicited spam
  • 1867: Earliest recorded billboard rentals
  • 1876: Films produced by French film-makers, Auguste and Louis Lumiere, made at the request of a representative of Lever Brothers in France and feature Sunlight soap, are thought to be the first recorded instance of paid product placement.[146]
 
Sunlight was an early advertiser in cinema, radio and TV. Pictured: Advertisement for Sunlight Soap washing powder, 1897
  • 1880s: Early examples of trademarks as branding
  • 1902: The first marketing course, taught by Edward David Jones, was offered at the University of Michigan
  • 1905: The University of Pennsylvania offered a course in "The Marketing of Products"[147]
  • 1908: Harvard Business School opens - Harvard was an early influence on marketing thought [148]
  • 1920: The magazine, Variety, reports that 50% of cinemas show advertising programmes [149]
  • 1920s: Radio advertising commences
  • 1940s: Electronic computers developed
  • 1941: First recorded use of television advertising
  • 1955: Television viewing exceeded radio listening for the first time in Britain [150]
  • 1950s: Systematization of telemarketing[151]
  • 1957: Three key scholarly texts published Wroe Alderson's Marketing Behavior and Executive Action; Howard's Marketing Management and Lazer's Managerial Marketing: Perspectives and Viewpoints
  • 1960 E. Jerome McCarthy published his now classic, Basic Marketing: A Managerial Approach (1960).
  • 1970s: E-commerce developed
  • 1980s: Development of database marketing as precursor to CRM[152]
  • 1980s: Emergence of relationship marketing
  • 1980s: Emergence of computer-oriented spam
  • 1984: Introduction of guerrilla tactics
  • 1985: Desktop publishing democratises the production of print-advertising (precursor to consumer-generated media and content)
  • 1991: IMC gains academic status [153]
  • Mid 1990s: Modern search engines started appearing in the mid-1990s, with Google making its debut in 1998 [142]
  • 1990s CRM and IMC (in various guises and names) gain dominance in promotions and marketing planning,[154][155]
  • 1996: Identification of viral marketing
  • 2000s: Integrated marketing gains widespread acceptance with its first dedicated academic research centre opened in 2002[156][157]
  • 2003 -2006: Emergence of social media. MySpace and LinkedIn emerged in 2003, Facebook in 2004 and Twitter in 2006.[142]

See also Edit

General histories Edit

Early marketing theorists Edit

  • Wroe Alderson (1898-1965) - proponent of marketing science and instrumental in developing the managerial school of marketing
  • Igor Ansoff (1918-2002) - marketing/ management strategist; noted for the product/market growth matrix
  • David Aaker - highly awarded educator and author in the area of marketing and organisational theory
  • N. W. Ayer & Son - probably the first advertising agency to use mass media (i.e. telegraph) in a promotional campaign
  • Leonard Berry (professor) - author and educator with strong interest in health marketing and relationship marketing
  • Neil H. Borden (1922-1962) - coined the term, 'marketing mix'
  • Clayton Christensen - educator, author and consultant, published in the areas of innovation and entrepreneurship
  • George S. Day - author and educator; has published in the area of strategic marketing
  • Ernest Dichter (1907-1991) - pioneer of motivational research
  • Andrew S. C. Ehrenberg (1926-2010) - made contributions to the methodology of data collection, analysis and presentation, and to understanding buyer behaviour and how advertising works
  • Edward Filene (1860-1937) - early pioneer of modern retailing methods
  • Seth Godin - Popular author, entrepreneur, public speaker and marketer
  • Paul E. Green -academic and author; the founder of conjoint analysis and popularised the use of multidimensional scaling, clustering, and analysis of qualitative data in marketing.
  • Shelby D. Hunt -former editor of the Journal of Marketing and organisational theorist
  • John E. Jeuck (1916-2009) - early marketing educator
  • Philip Kotler (1931-) - popularised the managerial approach to marketing; prolific author
  • E. St. Elmo Lewis - developed the AIDA model used in sales and advertising
  • Christopher Lovelock (1940-2008) - author of many books and articles on services marketing
  • Theodore Levitt (1925-2006) - former editor of Harvard Business Review, prolific author of marketing articles and famed for his article, "Marketing Myopia"
  • E. Jerome McCarthy - popularised the managerial approach and developed the concept of the 4Ps
  • Arthur Nielsen - early market researcher; pioneered methods for radio and TV ratings
  • David Ogilvy (businessman) - advertising guru, early pioneer of product positioning
  • Vance Packard - journalist and author, wrote The Hidden Persuaders (1957) which explored the use of motivational research in marketing practice
  • Charles Coolidge Parlin(1872-1942) - pioneer of market and advertising research methods
  • Rosser Reeves - advertising guru; advocate of frequency; pioneered the concept of the unique selling proposition (USP) - now largely replaced by the positioning concept
  • Al Ries - advertising executive, author and credited with coining the term, 'positioning' in the late 1960s
  • Don E. Schultz - father of 'integrated marketing communications'
  • Arch Wilkinson Shaw (1876-1962) - early management theorist, proponent of the scientific approach to marketing
  • Byron Sharp - N.Z. academic; one of the first to document buyer loyalty in empirical work
  • Daniel Starch - developed the so-called Starch scores to measure impact of magazine advertising; Starch scores are still in use
  • Henry Charles Taylor (1873-1969) - the agricultural marketer
  • Richard S. Tedlow - author and educator; published in the area of marketing history
  • J Walter Thompson - founded one of the earliest modern advertising agencies
  • Jack Trout - advertising executive, author and partnered with Al Ries in popularising the positioning concept
  • Stephen Vargo- together with R.F. Lusch developed the service-dominant approach to marketing
  • Henry Grady Weaver (1889-1949) - developed the survey questionnaire for use in market research
  • Jerry (Yoram) Wind - former editor of the Journal of Marketing, educator and marketer
  • Gerald Zaltman - developed the Metaphor Elicitation Technique (ZMET)
  • Valarie Zeithaml - together with A. Parasurman and L.L. Berry, developed the model of service quality and the SERVQUAL instrument

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Further reading Edit

  • Adage, 'History of Marketing' from the Great Depression of the 1930s, featuring highlights from AdAge articles, http://adage.com/article/ad-age-graphics/ad-age-a-history-marketing/142967
  • Gillett A.G., Tennent K.D. (2020) The Rise of Marketing. In: Bowden B., Muldoon J.,Gould A., McMurray A. (eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Management History. Palgrave Macmillan, published online first. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-62348-1_92-1
  • Hubbard P., "Advertising and Print Culture in the Eighteenth Century," In: Craciun A., Schaffer S. (eds), The Material Cultures of Enlightenment Arts and Sciences, [Palgrave Studies in the Enlightenment, Romanticism and the Cultures of Print], London, Palgrave Macmillan, 2016
  • Jones, D.G. B. and Tadajewski, M., (eds),The Routledge Companion to Marketing History, Oxon, Routledge, 2016
  • Lavin, M. and Archdeacon, T.J., "The Relevance of Historical Method For Marketing Research", in Interpretive Consumer Research, Elizabeth C. Hirschman (ed.), Provo, UT, Association for Consumer Research, 1998, pp 60–68, <Online: http://acrwebsite.org/volumes/12176/volumes/sv07/SV-07>
  • Sheth, J.N. (ed.) Legends in Marketing (six volume set), Sage Publications, 2017
  • Wright, John S. and Parks B. Dimsdale, Pioneers in Marketing: A Collection of 25 Biographies of Men Who Contributed to the Growth of Marketing Thought and Action," Georgia State University, 1974

history, marketing, study, history, marketing, discipline, meaningful, because, helps, define, baselines, upon, which, change, recognised, understand, discipline, evolves, response, those, changes, practice, marketing, been, known, millennia, term, marketing, . The study of the history of marketing as a discipline is meaningful because it helps to define the baselines upon which change can be recognised and understand how the discipline evolves in response to those changes 1 The practice of marketing has been known for millennia but the term marketing used to describe commercial activities assisting the buying and selling of products or services came into popular use in the late nineteenth century 2 The study of the history of marketing as an academic field emerged in the early twentieth century 3 The term marketing comes from the Latin mercatus meaning a marketplace Pictured La Boqueria Barcelona SpainScholars have found evidence of marketing practices in the marketplaces of antiquity Pictured The Moorish Bazaar painting by Edwin Lord Weeks 1873Marketers tend to distinguish between the history of marketing practice and the history of marketing thought the history of marketing practice refers to an investigation into the ways that marketing has been practiced and how those practices have evolved over time as they respond to changing socio economic conditions the history of marketing thought refers to an examination of the ways that marketing has been studied and taughtAlthough the history of marketing thought and the history of marketing practice are distinct fields of study they intersect at different junctures 4 Marketing practitioners engage in innovative practices that capture the attention of marketing scholars who codify and disseminate such practices At the same time marketing academics often develop new research methods or theories that are subsequently adopted by practitioners Thus developments in marketing theory inform marketing practice and vice versa The history of marketing will remain incomplete if one disassociates academia from practitioners 4 The publication in 1960 of Robert J Keith s article The Marketing Revolution was a pioneering work in the study of the history of marketing practice 5 In 1976 the publication of Robert Bartel s book The History of Marketing Thought marked a turning point in the understanding of how marketing theory evolved since it first emerged as a separate discipline around the turn of last century 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Marketing history an overview 2 1 Marketing in antiquity 2 2 Marketing in the Middle Ages 2 3 Marketing in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe 2 4 Marketing in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries 3 History of marketing practice 3 1 Orientations and philosophies 3 2 Common periods 3 2 1 Production orientation 3 2 2 Selling orientation 3 2 3 Marketing orientation 3 2 4 Societal marketing concept 3 2 5 Relationship orientation 3 3 Periodisations 3 3 1 Keith s periodisation 3 3 2 Fullerton s periodisation 3 3 3 Other periodisations 4 History of marketing thought 4 1 A periodisation approach 4 2 A schools of thought approach 4 3 Brief description of the dominant schools of thought 4 3 1 The commodity school 4 3 2 The institutional school 4 3 3 The functional school 4 3 4 Marketing management 5 Key innovations that influenced marketing practice 6 See also 6 1 General histories 6 2 Early marketing theorists 7 References 8 Further readingEtymology EditAccording to etymologists the term marketing first appeared in dictionaries in the sixteenth century where it referred to the process of buying and selling at a market 7 The contemporary definition of marketing as a process of moving goods from producer to consumer with an emphasis on sales and advertising first appeared in dictionaries in 1897 8 The term marketing is a derivation of the Latin word mercatus meaning market place or merchant 9 Marketing history an overview Edit In pre literate societies the distinctive shape of amphora served some of the functions of a label communicating information about region of origin the name of the producer and may have carried product quality claimsHistorians of marketing tend to fall into two distinct branches of marketing history the history of marketing practice and the history of marketing thought These branches are often deeply divided and have very different roots The history of marketing practice is grounded in the management and marketing disciplines while the history of marketing thought is grounded in economic and cultural history This means that the two branches ask very different types of research questions and employ different research tools and frameworks 10 Historians of marketing have undertaken considerable investigation into the emergence of marketing practice yet there is little agreement about when marketing first began 11 Some researchers argue that marketing practices can be found in antiquity 12 while others suggest that marketing in its modern form emerged in conjunction with the rise of consumer culture in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe 13 while yet other researchers suggest that modern marketing was only fully realised in the decades following the industrial revolution in Britain from where it subsequently spread to Europe and North America 14 Hollander and others have suggested that the different dates for the emergence of marketing can be explained by problems surrounding the way that marketing has been defined whether reference to modern marketing as a planned programmed repertoire of professional practice including activities such as segmentation product differentiation positioning and marketing communications versus marketing as a simple form distribution and exchange 15 Marketing in antiquity Edit Mosaic showing garum container from the house of Umbricius Scaurus of Pompeii The inscription which reads G ari F los SCO mbri SCAURI EX OFFI CI NA SCAURI has been translated as The flower of garum made of the mackerel a product of Scaurus from the shop of Scaurus A number of studies have found evidence of advertising branding packaging and labelling in antiquity 16 17 Umbricius Scauras for example was a manufacturer of fish sauce also known as garum in Pompeii circa 35 B C Mosaic patterns in the atrium of his house were decorated with images of amphora bearing his personal brand and quality claims The mosaic comprises four different amphora one at each corner of the atrium and bearing labels as follows 18 1 G ari F los SCO m SCAURI EX OFFI ci NA SCAU RI Translated as The flower of garum made of the mackerel a product of Scaurus from the shop of Scaurus 2 LIQU minis FLOS Translated as The flower of Liquamen 3 G ari F los SCOM bri SCAURI Translated as The flower of garum made of the mackerel a product of Scaurus 4 LIQUAMEN OPTIMUM EX OFFICI n A SCAURI Translated as The best liquamen from the shop of Scaurus The reputation of Scauras fish sauce was known to be of very high quality across the Mediterranean and its reputation travelled as far away as modern France 19 Curtis has described this mosaic as an advertisement and a rare unequivocal example of a motif inspired by a patron rather than by the artist 20 In Pompeii and nearby Herculaneum archaeological evidence also points to evidence of branding and labelling in relatively common use Wine jars for example were stamped with names such as Lassius and L Eumachius probably references to the name of the producer Carbonised loaves of bread found at Herculaneum indicate that some bakers stamped their bread with the producer s name 21 David Wengrow has argued that branding became necessary following the urban revolution in ancient Mesopotamia in the 4th century BCE when large scale economies started mass producing commodities such as alcoholic drinks cosmetics and textiles These ancient societies imposed strict forms of quality control over commodities and also needed to convey value to the consumer through branding Producers began by attaching simple stone seals to products which over time were transformed into clay seals bearing impressed images often associated with the producer s personal identity thus giving the product a personality 22 Diana Twede has argued that the consumer packaging functions of protection utility and communication have been necessary whenever packages were the object of transactions p 107 She has shown that amphoras used in Mediterranean trade between 1500 and 500 BCE exhibited a wide variety of shapes and markings which provided information for transactions Systematic use of stamped labels dates from around the fourth century BCE In a largely pre literate society the shape of the amphora and its pictorial markings conveyed information about the contents region of origin and even the identity of the producer which were understood to convey information about product quality 23 Not all historians agree that these markings can be compared with modern brands or labels Moore and Reid for example have argued that the distinctive shapes and markings in ancient containers should be termed proto brands rather than modern brands 24 Marketing in the Middle Ages Edit Market scene by Pieter Aertsen c 1550In England and Europe during the Middle Ages market towns sprang up Some analysts have suggested that the term marketing may have first been used in the context of market towns where the term marketing may have been used by producers to describe the process of carting and selling their produce and wares in market towns Blintiff has investigated the early Medieval networks of market towns and suggests that by the 12th century there was an upsurge in the number of market towns and the emergence of merchant circuits as traders bulked up surpluses from smaller regional different day markets and resold them at the larger centralised market towns 25 Braudel and Reynold have made a systematic study of these European market towns between the thirteenth and fifteenth century Their investigation shows that in regional districts markets were held once or twice a week while daily markets were more common in the larger cities and towns Over time permanent shops began to open daily and gradually supplanted the periodic markets Peddlers filled in the gaps in distribution by travelling door to door in order to sell produce and wares The physical market was characterised by transactional exchange bartering systems were commonplace and the economy was characterised by local trading Braudel reports that in 1600 goods travelled relatively short distances grain 5 10 miles cattle 40 70 miles wool and wollen cloth 20 40 miles However following the European age of discovery goods were imported from afar calico cloth from India porcelain silk and tea from China spices from India and South East Asia and tobacco sugar rum and coffee from the New World 26 Bronze plate for printing an advertisement for the Liu family needle shop at Jinan Song dynasty China It is considered the world s earliest identified printed advertising medium Although the rise of consumer culture and marketing in Britain and Europe have been studied extensively less is known about developments elsewhere 27 Nevertheless recent research suggests that China exhibited a rich history of early marketing practices including branding packaging advertising and retail signage 28 From as early as 200 BCE Chinese packaging and branding was used to signal family place names and product quality and the use of government imposed product branding was used between 600 and 900 AD 29 Eckhart and Bengtsson have argued that during the Song Dynasty 960 1127 Chinese society developed a consumerist culture where a high level of consumption was attainable for a wide variety of ordinary consumers rather than just the elite p 212 The rise of a consumer culture led to the commercial investment in carefully managed company image retail signage symbolic brands trademark protection and the brand concepts of baoji hao lei gongpin piazi and pinpai which roughly equate with Western concepts of family status quality grading and upholding traditional Chinese values p 219 Eckhardt and Bengtsson s analysis suggests that brands emerged in China as a result of the social needs and tensions implicit in consumer culture in which brands provide social status and stratification Thus the evolution of brands in China stands in sharp contrast to the West where manufacturers pushed brands onto the market in order to differentiate increase market share and ultimately profits pp 218 219 Marketing in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe Edit Josiah Wedgewood 1730 1795 invented many of the techniques of modern marketingScholars have identified specific instances of marketing practices in England and Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries As trade between countries or regions grew companies required information on which to base business decisions Individuals and companies carried out formal and informal research on trade conditions As early as 1380 Johann Fugger travelled from Augsburg to Graben in order to gather information on the international textile industry He exchanged detailed letters on trade conditions in relevant areas 30 In the early 1700s British industrial houses were demanding information that could be used for business decisions In the early 18th century Daniel Defoe a London merchant published information on trade and economic resources of England and Scotland 31 32 Defoe was a prolific publisher and among his many publications are titles devoted to trade including Trade of Britain Stated 1707 Trade of Scotland with France 1713 and The Trade to India Critically and Calmly Considered 1720 all books that were highly popular with merchants and business houses of the period 33 While such activities might now be recognised as marketing research at that time they were known as commercial research or commercial intelligence and not seen as part of the repertoire of activities that make up contemporary marketing practice Eighteenth century advertising showed a high level of sophistication in its execution and ability to reach mass audiences 34 In a major review of consumer society McKendrick Brewer and Plumb found extensive evidence of eighteenth century English entrepreneurs inventing modern marketing techniques including product differentiation sales promotion loss leader planned obsolescence fashion magazines national advertising campaigns fancy showrooms and concentration on elite taste setting customers English pottery makers Josiah Wedgewood 1730 1795 and Matthew Boulton 1728 1809 were the pioneers of modern mass marketing methods 35 36 Wedgewood introduced direct mail travelling salesmen and catalogues in the eighteenth century 37 Wedgewood s marketing was highly sophisticated and recognisably modern in that he planned production with the sale in mind 38 He carried out serious investigations into the fixed and variable costs of production and recognised that increased production would lead to lower unit costs He also inferred that selling at lower prices would lead to higher demand and recognised the value of achieving scale economies in production By cutting costs and lowering prices Wedgewood was able to generate higher overall profits 39 Similarly one of Wedgewood s colleagues Matthew Boulton pioneered early mass production techniques and product differentiation at his Soho Manufactory in the 1760s He also practiced planned obsolescence and understood the importance of celebrity marketing that is supplying the nobility often at prices below cost and of obtaining royal patronage for the sake of the publicity and cudos generated 40 Fullerton argues that the practice of market segmentation emerged well before marketers used the notion formally 41 Certain strands of evidence suggest that simple examples of market segmentation were evident prior to the 1880s The business historian Richard S Tedlow argues that any attempt to segment markets prior to 1880 was highly fragmented since the economy was characterised by small regional suppliers who mostly sold goods on a local or regional basis 42 When retail shops began to appear from the 15th century retailers needed to separate the riff raff from wealthier customers Outside the major metropolitan cities few stores could afford to serve one type of clientele exclusively However gradually retail shops introduced innovations that would allow them to separate wealthier customers from the lower classes and peasants One technique was to have a window opening out onto the street from which customers could be served This allowed the sale of goods to the common people without encouraging them to come inside Another solution that came into vogue from the late sixteenth century was to invite favoured customers into a back room of the store where goods were permanently on display Yet another technique that emerged around the same time was to hold a showcase of goods in the shopkeeper s private home for the benefit of wealthier clients Samuel Pepys for example writing in 1660 describes being invited to the home of a retailer to view a wooden jack 43 Evidence of early marketing segmentation has also been noted across Europe A study of the German book trade found examples of both product differentiation and market segmentation in the 1820s 44 Marketing in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Edit Henry Ford began manufacturing the mass produced Model T in 1908 Ford famously said that customers could own a car in any colour as long as it was black Until the nineteenth century Western economies were characterised by small regional suppliers who sold goods on a local or regional basis However as transportation systems improved from the mid nineteenth century the economy became more unified allowing companies to distribute standardised branded goods at national level This gave rise to a much broader mass marketing mindset Manufacturers tended to insist on strict standardisation in order to achieve scale economies with a view to keeping production costs down and also to achieving market penetration in the early stages of a product s life cycle 45 The Model T Ford was an example of a product being manufactured at a price that was affordable for the burgeoning middle classes In the early twentieth century as market size increased it became more commonplace for manufacturers to produce a variety of models pitched at different quality points designed to meet the needs of various demographic and lifestyle market segments giving rise to the widespread practice of market segmentation and product differentation 46 Between 1902 1910 George B Waldron working at Mahin s advertising agency used tax registers city directories and census data to show advertisers the proportion of educated versus illiterate consumers and the earning capacity of different occupations in what is believed to be the first example of demographic segmentation of a population 47 Within little more than a decade Paul Cherington had developed the ABCD household typology the first socio demographic segmentation tool 48 By the 1930s market researchers such as Ernest Dichter were carrying out qualitative research into brand purchasers realised that demographic factors alone were insufficient to explain different marketing behaviour of various user groups This insight led to the exploration of other factors such as lifestyles values attitudes and beliefs in market segmentation and advertising 49 When Wendell R Smith published his now classic article Product Differentiation and Market Segmentation as Alternative Marketing Strategies in 1956 he noted that he was simply documenting marketing practices that had been observed for some time and which he described as a natural force 50 Other theorists agree that Smith was simply codifying implicit knowledge that had been used in marketing and brand management from the early twentieth century 51 52 Haven Mason Hall at the University of Michigan where the first academic course in marketing was taughtAs industry grew the demand for skilled business professionals also grew To meet this demand universities began offering courses in commerce economics and marketing Marketing as a discipline was first taught in universities in the very early twentieth century 53 However researchers only became interested in investigating the history of marketing in the mid twentieth century From the outset researchers tended to identify two strands of historical research the history of marketing practice 54 and the history of marketing thought which was fundamentally concerned with the rise of marketing education and dissecting the way that marketing was taught and studied 6 55 Early historical studies were primarily descriptive History of marketing practice EditThe practice of marketing may have been carried out for millennia but the modern concept of marketing as a professional practice appears to have emerged the post industrial corporate world 56 In addition to the studies of specific cultures or time periods discussed in the preceding section some historians of marketing have sought to write more general histories of marketing s evolution in the modern era A key question that has preoccupied researchers is whether it is possible to identify specific orientations or mindsets that inform key periods in marketing s evolution Marketers disagree about the way that marketing practice has evolved over time 57 Orientations and philosophies Edit In the marketing literature continuing debate surrounds the orientations or philosophies that might have informed marketing practice at different periods of time An orientation may be defined as the type of activity or subject that an organisation seems most interested in and gives most attention to 58 In relation to marketing orientations the term has been defined as a philosophy of business management 59 or a corporate state of mind 60 or as an organisational culture 61 Common periods Edit The general lack of agreement amongst scholars as to what constitutes clearly identifiable periods and the orientation that characterised each distinct period has spawned a lengthy list of orientations Space prevents an exhaustive description of all periods or eras However the salient features of the most commonly cited periods appear in the following section Production orientation Edit The production orientation is one of the oldest philosophies that guides sellersA production orientation is often proposed as the first of the so called orientations that dominated business thought Keith dated the production era from the 1860s to the 1930s but other theorists argue that evidence of the production orientation can still be found in some companies or industries Specifically Kotler and Armstrong note that the production philosophy is one of the oldest philosophies that guides sellers and is still useful in some situations 62 The production orientation is characterised by 63 Focus on production manufacturing and efficiency Attainment of economies of scale economies of scope experience effects or all three Assumption that demand exceeds supply Mindset that is encapsulated by Say s Law Supply creates its own demand or if somebody makes a product somebody else will want to buy it Limited research that is largely limited to technical product research rather than customer research Rose to prominence in an environment which had a shortage of manufactured goods relative to demand so goods sold easily Minimal promotion and advertising marketing communications limited to raising awareness of the product s existenceSelling orientation Edit The sales orientation often characterised by door to door selling is thought to have begun during the Great Depression of the 1890s and continues to this day Pictured A Rawleigh s salesman in 1915The selling orientation is thought to have begun during the Great Depression and continued well into the 1950s although examples of this orientation can still be found today 64 Kotler et al note that the selling concept is typically practised with unsought goods 65 The selling orientation is characterised by Aggressive selling to push products often involving door to door selling Accepting every possible sale or booking regardless of its suitability for the business Strong transactional focus ignores potential relationships Marketing orientation Edit The marketing orientation or the marketing concept emerged in the 1950s Characteristics of the marketing orientation 66 Thorough understanding of the customer s needs wants and behaviors should be the focal point of all marketing decisions Marketing efforts sales advertising product management pricing should be integrated and in tune with the customer New product concepts should flow from extensive market analysis and product testingSocietal marketing concept Edit Main article Societal marketing Phillip Kotler is often credited with first proposing the societal marketing orientation or concept in an article published in the Harvard Business Review in 1972 67 68 However some marketing historians notably Wilkie and Moore have argued that a societal perspective was evident in marketing theory and in marketing texts since the discipline s inception in the early 1900s 69 or that societal marketing is merely an extension of the marketing concept 70 The societal marketing concept adopts the position that marketers have a greater social responsibility than simply satisfying customers and providing them with superior value Instead marketing activities should strive to benefit society s overall well being Marketing organisations that have embraced the societal marketing concept typically identify key stakeholder groups including employees customers local communities the wider public and government and consider the impact of their activities on all stakeholders They ensure that marketing activities do not damage the environment and are not hazardous to broader society Societal marketing developed into sustainable marketing Characteristics of societal marketing 71 An attempt to balance corporate commitments to groups and individuals in its environment including customers other businesses employees and investors Companies must include social and ethical considerations into their marketing practices Consideration is given to the environment includes problems such as air water and land pollution Consideration is given to consumer rights unfair pricing and ethics in advertisingRelationship orientation Edit Main article Relationship marketing Starting in the 1990s a new stage of marketing emerged called relationship marketing The focus of relationship marketing is on a long term relationship that benefits both the company and the customer 72 The relationship is based on trust and commitment and both companies tend to shift their operating activities to be able to work more efficiently together 73 One of the most prominent reasons for relationship marketing comes from Kotler s idea that it costs about five times more to obtain a new customer than to maintain the relationship with an existing customer 74 A relationship marketing approach seeks to maximise the value of all the potential exchanges an organisation could have into the future 75 The characteristics of relationship marketing include 76 Focus on the relationship between seller and buyer Investment in the lifetime of relationships rather than single transactions by calculating customer lifetime value CLV Orientation on product benefits and or customer value Better customer service commitment and contact Quality is the concern of all All activities are coordinated with the customer interface including the customer s involvement in the firm s processes Customised offerings where practicalEmpirical support for relationship marketing as a distinct paradigm is very weak One study suggests that relationship marketing is really a sub component of large scale movements of the value added process rather than a separate era or framework 77 Some theorists suggest that marketing is moving from a relationship marketing paradigm and towards a social media paradigm where marketers have access to a more controlled environment and are able to customise offers and communications messages 72 78 Periodisations Edit To investigate the history of marketing practice scholars often turn to a method known as periodisation 79 Periodisation refers to the process or study of categorizing the past into discrete quantified named units for the purpose of analysis or study 80 Scholars do not agree on the periods that characterise the history of marketing practice In a major review of the periodisation approach Hollander et al have identified fourteen different stage theories or short periodisations as well as a total of nineteen long periodisations that have been carried out since 1957 Of these the contributions of Robert Keith 1960 and Ronald Fullerton 1988 are the most frequently cited 81 Keith s periodisation Edit Robert Keith s marketing eras production selling marketing were based entirely on his experience at the Pillsbury CompanyIn 1960 Robert J Keith the then Vice President of Pillsbury 82 set the stage for decades of controversy when he published an article entitled the Marketing Revolution in which he set out the way that the Pillsbury Company had shifted from a focus on production in the 1860s through to a consumer focus in the 1950s He traced three distinct eras in Pillsbury s evolution 83 Production oriented era 1869 1930s characterised by a focus on production processes Sales oriented era 1930s 1950s characterised by investment in research to develop new products and advertising to persuade markets of product benefits Marketing oriented era 1950s present characterised by a focus on the customer s latent and existing needsIn addition Keith hypothesised that a marketing control era was about to emerge Although Keith s article explicitly documented Pillsbury s evolution the article appears to suggest that the stages observed at Pillsbury constitute a standard or normal evolutionary path production sales marketing for most large organisations Keith s notion of distinct eras in the evolution of marketing practice has been widely criticised and his periodisation described as hopelessly flawed 84 85 Specific criticisms of Keith s tripartite periodisation include that It ignores historical facts about business conditions 86 It misstates the nature of supply and demand 86 It slights the growth of marketing institutions 87 The article which is entirely based on Keith s personal recollections and did not use a single reference is best described as anecdotal Systematic studies carried out since Keith s work have failed to replicate Keith s periodisation Instead other studies suggest that many companies exhibited a marketing orientation in the 19th century and that the business schools were teaching marketing decades before Pillsbury adopted a marketing oriented approach 88 Jones and Richardson also investigated historical accounts of marketing practice and found evidence for both the sales and marketing era during the so called production era and concluded that the idea of a marketing revolution was a myth 89 A detailed study of the chocolate manufacturer Rowntree found that this company had shifted from a production orientation through to a marketing orientation by the 1930s without having transitioned through the so called sales orientation 90 Other critiques of Keith s work have pointed out that the so called production era fails to align with historical facts and have also suggested that it is a myth 91 Keith s eras have become known somewhat cynically as the standard chronology 92 Fullerton s periodisation Edit The English industrial revolution is often seen as a trigger for the rise of modern marketingIn 1988 Fullerton developed a more subtle and nuanced periodisation for the so called marketing eras 93 94 Fullerton s eras were 91 Era of antecedents 1500 1750 a long gestational period in which people were largely self sufficient and rural economy characterised by low levels of consumption commerce was seen as suspicious Era of origins 1750 1870 precipitated by the dislocations of the English industrial revolution and the rise of a more urban population this era is characterised by more attention to persuasive tactics designed to stimulate demand Era of institutional development 1850 1929 many of the large institutions and modern marketing practices emerged during this period Era of refinement and formalization 1930 present further development and refinement of principles and practices developed in the preceding periodIn spite of the intense criticism leveled at Keith s eras of marketing practice his periodisation is the most frequently cited in textbooks 79 and has become the accepted wisdom 14 One content analysis of 25 introductory and advanced texts found that Keith s eras were reproduced in all but four 95 88 Another study which examined 15 of the top selling marketing texts found that the although the incidence of repeating Keith s eras was waning it had not been replaced by Fullerton s periodisation nor any other more meaningful framework 96 Other periodisations Edit For all the controversies surrounding marketing stages or periods Keith and others appear to have contributed a lasting legacy 97 A study by Grundey 2010 suggests that many contemporary textbooks begin with Keith s eras and expand on it by including newer concepts such as the societal marketing concept the relationship marketing concept and the interfunctional concept as shown in the table below 98 More recently Kotler and Keller added the holistic marketing concept to the list of eras in marketing 99 Marketing theorists continue to debate whether the holistic era represents a genuine new orientation or whether it is an extension of the marketing concept Grundey summarised five different periodisations in the history of marketing as shown in the following table as a means of highlighting the general lack of agreement among scholars 98 Marketing philosophies or orientations in popular texts Dibb amp Simkin 2004 100 Lancaster amp Reynolds 2005 101 Blythe 2005 102 Drummmond amp Ensor 2005 103 Morgan 1996 104 1 Production orientation 1 Production orientation 1 Production orientation 1 Production orientation 1 Cost philosophy2 Financial orientation 2 Sales orientation 2 Product orientation 2 Product orientation 2 Product philosophy3 Sales orientation 3 Marketing orientation 3 Sales orientation 3 Sales orientation 3 Production philosophy4 Marketing orientation 4 Customer orientation 4 Financial orientation 4 Sales philosophy5 Customer orientation 5 Societal marketing 5 Marketing orientation 5 Erratic philosophy6 Competitor orientation 6 Relationship orientation 6 Marketing philosophy7 Interfunctional orientation 7 Social marketing philosophyHistory of marketing thought Edit University of Pennsylvania was among the first universities to offer courses in marketingDating the history of marketing as an academic discipline is just as problematic as the history of marketing practice Marketing historians cannot agree on how to date the beginnings of marketing thought 105 Eric Shaw for instance suggests that a period of pre academic marketing thought can be identified prior to 1900 106 Other historians suggest that the theory of marketing only emerged in the 20th century when the discipline began to offer courses at universities 107 Nevertheless the birth of marketing as a discipline is usually designated to the first decade of the twentieth century when marketing courses appeared in universities In 1902 the University of Michigan offered what many believe to be the very first course in marketing 108 The University of Illinois also started offering coursework in marketing in 1902 109 In the academic year 1904 1905 the University of Pennsylvania commenced teaching marketing Other universities soon followed including the Harvard Business School 110 In 1914 Harvard s required course Economic Resources of the United States was renamed Marketing 111 Prior to the emergence of marketing courses marketing was not recognised as a discipline in its own right rather it was treated as a branch of economics and was often called applied economics Subjects which today might be recognised as marketing related were embedded in economics courses Early marketing theories were described as modifications or adaptations of economic theories 112 The impetus for the separation of marketing and economics was due at least in part to economic s focus on production as the creator of economic value and general failure to investigate distribution In the late 19th century and early 20th century as markets became more globalised distribution began to assume increasing importance Some economics professors began to run courses examining various aspects of the marketing system including distributive and regulative systems Other courses such as the marketing of products and the marketing of farm products followed As the first decades of the 20th century progressed books and articles concerning marketing topics began to emerge 113 In 1936 the publication of the new Journal of Marketing gave marketing academics a forum for exchanging ideas and research methods and also gave the discipline a real sense of its own distinct identity as a maturing academic discipline 114 A periodisation approach Edit Several scholars have attempted to describe the evolution of marketing thought chronologically and to connect it with broader intellectual and academic trends Bartels 1965 provided a brief account of marketing s formative periods and Shah and Gardner 1982 briefly considered the development of the six dominant schools in contemporary marketing 115 However these initial attempts have been criticised as overly descriptive 116 One of the first theorists to consider the stages in the development of marketing thought was Robert Bartels who in The History of Marketing Thought 1965 used a periodisation approach He categorised the development of marketing theory decade by decade from the beginning of the 20th century 1900s discovery of basic concepts and their exploration 1910s conceptualisation classification and definition of terms 1920s integration on the basis of principles 1930s development of specialisation and variation in theory 1940s reappraisal in the light of new demands and a more scientific approach 1950s reconceptualisation in the light of managerialism social development and quantitative approaches 1960s differentiation on bases such as managerialism holism environmentalism systems and internationalism 1970s socialisation the adaptation of marketing to social changeBartels was the first historian to provide a long view of marketing s past and wide sweep of its subdisciplines and in so doing he nurtured an interest in the history of marketing thought 117 A schools of thought approach Edit Other marketing historians have eschewed the periodisation approach and instead considered whether distinct schools within marketing reflect different facets of common theory and whether a more unifying intellectual structure has emerged These approaches tend to identify distinct schools of thought A school of thought refers to an intellectual tradition or a group of scholars who share a common philosophy or set of ideas 118 Marketing historians Shaw and Jones define a school of thought as one that has a substantial body of knowledge developed by a number of scholars and describing at least one aspect of the what how who why when and where of performing marketing activities 119 To a certain extent there is some agreement that in early marketing thought three so called traditional schools namely the commodity school the functional school and the institutional school co existed 120 Marketing historians such as Eric Shaw and Barton A Weitz point to the publication of Wroe Alderson s book Marketing Behavior and Executive Action 1957 as a break point in the history of marketing thought 121 moving from the macro functions institutions commodities approach to a micromarketing management paradigm Following on from Alderson marketing began to incorporate other fields of knowledge besides economics notably behavioral science and psychology becoming a multi disciplinary field For many scholars Alderson s book marks the beginning of the Marketing Management Era Of those historians who identify schools there is no real agreement about which schools were dominant at different stages in marketing s development Although the distinctive features of these schools can be identified and described many of the early text books included elements drawn from two or more schools of thought for example in a series of chapters devoted to commodities followed by a series of chapters devoted to the institutional and functional schools 122 In the following section a brief overview of the contributions of key thinkers will be outlined with respect to the prevailing schools that have dominated marketing thought Hunt and Goolsby identified four schools of thought that have dominated marketing namely the commodity school the institutional school the functional school and the managerial school 123 The Commodity School A focus on different types of goods in the marketplace and how they are marketed 124 The Institutional School Emphasised the functions of middlemen or intermediaries similar to the functional school but with a focus on channel flows 125 The Functional School A focus on the characteristics of marketing identifying the functions and systems of marketing adopts a systems approach 119 The Managerial School A focus on the problems faced by marketing managers focuses on the perspective of the seller 126 Some marketing historians like Jagdish Sheth have identified the modern marketing schools as 127 The Managerial school emerged during the late 1950s and became arguably the predominant and most influential school of thought in the field The Consumer buyer behavior school which dominated the academic field in the second half of the twentieth century apart from the Managerial school features theories emerging from behavioral science The Social exchange school which focuses on exchange as the fundamental concept of marketingYet other commentators identify a broader range of schools O Malley and Lichrou for example document the schools as 128 Functional What activities does marketing perform Focus on intermediaries and value adding Commodities How are goods classified Focus on classification of goods trade flows Marketing Institutions Who performs marketing functions on commodities Focus on retailers wholesalers intermediaries distribution channels Marketing Management How should marketers and managers market products and services to consumers Business firm as seller supplier Marketing Systems What is a marketing system and how does it work Channels of distribution and aggregate systems Consumer behaviour How and why do consumers buy organisational buyer and consumer buyer Macro marketing How do marketing systems impact on society Industries channels consumer movement environmentalism Exchange What are the forms of exchange Who are the parties to the exchange process Aggregations of buyers and sellers Marketing history When did marketing practice and ideas emerge and evolve Marketing thought and marketing practiceBrief description of the dominant schools of thought Edit By the 1920s the marketing discipline was organised into three schools of thought the commodity school the institutional school and the functional school The following sections briefly outlines the schools of thought as conceptualised by key thinkers in the discipline Although these can be treated as separate schools of thought considerable overlap between them is evident The three schools that preceded marketing management exhibited a highly descriptive approach and collectively these are often called the classical schools These schools borrowed heavily from economics and were largely concerned with aggregate demand and lacked a focus on the individual firm 129 By the 1960s all previous schools of thought had been eclipsed by the managerial school because it offered a problem solving approach and presented marketers with potential solutions to marketing problems that were frequently encountered 130 The commodity school Edit The commodity school focused on the objects of exchange Pictured Cacao beansThe commodity school is thought to have originated with an article by C C Parlin 1916 with a focus on the objects of exchange and was primarily concerned with classifying commodities A different article published by Copeland and published in the Harvard Business Review 1923 proposed the convenience shopping specialty goods classification which is still in use today Other theorists developed a plethora of methods for classifying goods 131 The institutional school Edit The institutional school focused its attention on the agents of market transactions specifically those organisations active in the intermediary channel system such as wholesalers and retailers It was primarily concerned with documenting the channels of distribution the functions performed by channel members and the value adding services they provided In short the institutional school was fundamentally concerned with the activities required to achieve efficiency within distribution systems The institutional school was heavily influenced by economics but in the 1970s began to take on ideas from behavioural science 132 A key work in the institutional school tradition is Weld s The Marketing of Farm Products 1916 while other important contributors included Butler s Marketing and Merchandising 1923 Breyer s Commodity and Marketing 1931 Converse s Marketing Methods and Policies 1921 and Duddy amp Revzan s Marketing An Institutional Approach 1947 133 The functional school Edit The functional school was thought to have originated with the publication of Shaw s article Some Problems in Market Distribution 1912 The functional school was primarily concerned with documenting the functions of marketing In other words it attempted to address the question What work does marketing do Different theorists within the functional school produced long lists of marketing s functions Although there was little agreement about what should be included in the list much of it revolved around the value added by marketing intermediaries In those early years advertising and promotion was rarely seen as a marketing function In addition to Shaw key thinkers in the functional school included Weld Vanderblue and Ryan 134 Marketing management Edit The marketing management school focuses on typical problems encountered by marketersWroe Alderson changed marketing thought with the publication of his work Marketing Behaviour and Executive Action 1957 in which he was primarily concerned with the problems and challenges faced by marketers and the types of solutions that had been found to be successful This shifted the emphasis away from the functions of marketing and towards a more problem solving approach thereby paving the way for a more managerial approach within the discipline 135 Some historians have claimed that Alderson s article signalled a paradigm shift in thinking towards a new macromarketing approach 136 The marketing management school emerged as the dominant school in the 1960s following the publication of Basic Marketing A Managerial Approach written by E Jerome McCarthy and replaced the so called functional school which had been the dominant school for the first part of the twentieth century In the words of Hunt and Goolsby the publication of McCarthy s text sounded the beginning of the end for the functional school 137 However Hunt and Goolsby note that the 1960s was a transitional period in which both the functional school and the managerial school co existed 138 Shaw and Jones have described the emergence of the managerial school in the mid twentieth century as a paradigm shift 139 While the management school continued to borrow from economics it also introduced ideas from the new and emerging fields of sociology and psychology which offered useful insights for explaining aspects of consumer behaviour such as the influence of culture and social class Key works in the marketing management tradition include Wroe Alderson s Marketing Behavior and Executive Action 1957 Howard s Marketing Management 1957 Lazer s Managerial Marketing Perspectives and Viewpoints 1957 and McCarthy s Basic Marketing A Managerial Approach 1960 140 The salient features of the managerial approach to marketing are an overt marketing as management orientation and an overt reliance on the behavioral and quantitative sciences as means of knowing 141 Key innovations that influenced marketing practice Edit1450 Gutenberg s metal movable type leading eventually to mass production of flyers and brochures 142 1600s Paid advertising in Italy 1600s Use of handbills and posters is common practice in Elizabethan England 1605 World s first newspaper published in Germany 143 1600s and 1700s Posters and handbills used for promotion in England 142 1665 The Oxford Gazette first published in England later renamed the London Gazette and still published today 144 Newspapers were an early form of mass communication Pictured The Boston News Letter 17041700s Widespread emergence of newspapers and magazines in England and France by the 1730s daily newspapers in London devoted more than half the available space to advertising 34 1719 The Daily Post first published early instance of a periodical dedicated to business science and innovation 1836 Paid advertising in a newspaper in France 142 145 1839 Posters on private property banned in England 142 The telegraph was an early form of mass communication1864 Earliest recorded use of the telegraph for mass unsolicited spam 1867 Earliest recorded billboard rentals 1876 Films produced by French film makers Auguste and Louis Lumiere made at the request of a representative of Lever Brothers in France and feature Sunlight soap are thought to be the first recorded instance of paid product placement 146 Sunlight was an early advertiser in cinema radio and TV Pictured Advertisement for Sunlight Soap washing powder 18971880s Early examples of trademarks as branding 1902 The first marketing course taught by Edward David Jones was offered at the University of Michigan 1905 The University of Pennsylvania offered a course in The Marketing of Products 147 1908 Harvard Business School opens Harvard was an early influence on marketing thought 148 1920 The magazine Variety reports that 50 of cinemas show advertising programmes 149 1920s Radio advertising commences 1940s Electronic computers developed 1941 First recorded use of television advertising 1955 Television viewing exceeded radio listening for the first time in Britain 150 1950s Systematization of telemarketing 151 1957 Three key scholarly texts published Wroe Alderson s Marketing Behavior and Executive Action Howard s Marketing Management and Lazer s Managerial Marketing Perspectives and Viewpoints 1960 E Jerome McCarthy published his now classic Basic Marketing A Managerial Approach 1960 1970s E commerce developed 1980s Development of database marketing as precursor to CRM 152 1980s Emergence of relationship marketing 1980s Emergence of computer oriented spam 1984 Introduction of guerrilla tactics 1985 Desktop publishing democratises the production of print advertising precursor to consumer generated media and content 1991 IMC gains academic status 153 Mid 1990s Modern search engines started appearing in the mid 1990s with Google making its debut in 1998 142 1990s CRM and IMC in various guises and names gain dominance in promotions and marketing planning 154 155 1996 Identification of viral marketing 2000s Integrated marketing gains widespread acceptance with its first dedicated academic research centre opened in 2002 156 157 2003 2006 Emergence of social media MySpace and LinkedIn emerged in 2003 Facebook in 2004 and Twitter in 2006 142 See also EditAdvertising Advertising management concerned with the theories and tactics that inform the practice of advertising Branding List of the oldest newspapers Market economy Marketing Marketing research Market segmentation Market place Psychological pricing Retail General histories Edit History of advertising article History of advertising section History of branding History of brand management History of market segmentation History of marketing research History of merchants and trading History of retailing History of shopping History of strategic marketing Origins of consumer behaviour Origins of the positioning concept Early marketing theorists Edit Wroe Alderson 1898 1965 proponent of marketing science and instrumental in developing the managerial school of marketing Igor Ansoff 1918 2002 marketing management strategist noted for the product market growth matrix David Aaker highly awarded educator and author in the area of marketing and organisational theory N W Ayer amp Son probably the first advertising agency to use mass media i e telegraph in a promotional campaign Leonard Berry professor author and educator with strong interest in health marketing and relationship marketing Neil H Borden 1922 1962 coined the term marketing mix Clayton Christensen educator author and consultant published in the areas of innovation and entrepreneurship George S Day author and educator has published in the area of strategic marketing Ernest Dichter 1907 1991 pioneer of motivational research Andrew S C Ehrenberg 1926 2010 made contributions to the methodology of data collection analysis and presentation and to understanding buyer behaviour and how advertising works Edward Filene 1860 1937 early pioneer of modern retailing methods Seth Godin Popular author entrepreneur public speaker and marketer Paul E Green academic and author the founder of conjoint analysis and popularised the use of multidimensional scaling clustering and analysis of qualitative data in marketing Shelby D Hunt former editor of the Journal of Marketing and organisational theorist John E Jeuck 1916 2009 early marketing educator Philip Kotler 1931 popularised the managerial approach to marketing prolific author E St Elmo Lewis developed the AIDA model used in sales and advertising Christopher Lovelock 1940 2008 author of many books and articles on services marketing Theodore Levitt 1925 2006 former editor of Harvard Business Review prolific author of marketing articles and famed for his article Marketing Myopia E Jerome McCarthy popularised the managerial approach and developed the concept of the 4Ps Arthur Nielsen early market researcher pioneered methods for radio and TV ratings David Ogilvy businessman advertising guru early pioneer of product positioning Vance Packard journalist and author wrote The Hidden Persuaders 1957 which explored the use of motivational research in marketing practice Charles Coolidge Parlin 1872 1942 pioneer of market and advertising research methods Rosser Reeves advertising guru advocate of frequency pioneered the concept of the unique selling proposition USP now largely replaced by the positioning concept Al Ries advertising executive author and credited with coining the term positioning in the late 1960s Don E Schultz father of integrated marketing communications Arch Wilkinson Shaw 1876 1962 early management theorist proponent of the scientific approach to marketing Byron Sharp N Z academic one of the first to document buyer loyalty in empirical work Daniel Starch developed the so called Starch scores to measure impact of magazine advertising Starch scores are still in use Henry Charles Taylor 1873 1969 the agricultural marketer Richard S Tedlow author and educator published in the area of marketing history J Walter Thompson founded one of the earliest modern advertising agencies Jack Trout advertising executive author and partnered with Al Ries in popularising the positioning concept Stephen Vargo together with R F Lusch developed the service dominant approach to marketing Henry Grady Weaver 1889 1949 developed the survey questionnaire for use in market research Jerry Yoram Wind former editor of the Journal of Marketing educator and marketer Gerald Zaltman developed the Metaphor Elicitation Technique ZMET Valarie Zeithaml together with A Parasurman and L L Berry developed the model of service quality and the SERVQUAL instrumentReferences Edit Jones Brian D G Shaw Eric H 2006 A History of Marketing Thought Handbook of Marketing Weitz Barton A Wensley Robin editors Sage pp 582 pages ISBN 978 1 4129 2120 6 English Language and Usage http english stackexchange com questions 335201 etymology of marketing how when did it change meaning Brian Jones D G and Shaw E H The History of Marketing Thought in Handbook of Marketing Weitz R and Wensley R eds London UK 2003 p 50 a b Hollander Stanley C Rassuli Kathleen M Jones D G Brian 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Geigenmuller Anja Leischnig Alexander Eds Springer DOI 10 1007 978 3 658 02925 8 22 pp 431 447 Shaw E H and Jones D G B A history of schools of marketing thought Marketing Theory Vol 5 No 3 2005 p 245 and 252 Shaw E H and Jones D G B A history of schools of marketing thought Marketing Theory Vol 5 No 3 2005 pp 257 58 Sheth J N and Gardner D M Marketing Theory Evolution and Evaluation New York Wiley 1988 O Malley L and Lichrou M Marketing Theory in Baker M J and Hart S The Marketing Book 7th ed Routledge Oxon UK 2016 pp 37 52 Sheth J N History of Consumer Behavior a Marketing Perspective in Historical Perspectives in Consumer Research National and International Perspectives Jagdish N Sheth and Chin Tiong Tan eds Singapore Association for Consumer Research 1985 pp 5 7 Jones Brian D G Shaw Eric H A History of Marketing Thought in Handbook of Marketing Weitz B A and Wensley R eds Sage p 54 and p 56 Jones Brian D G Shaw Eric H A History of Marketing Thought in Handbook of Marketing Weitz B 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88 pdf Hunt Shelby D and Goolsby Jerry The Rise and Fall of the Functional Approach to Marketing A Paradigm Displacement Perspective in Historical Perspectives in Marketing Essays in Honour of Stanley Hollander Terence Nevett and Ronald Fullerton eds Lexington MA Lexington Books pp 35 51 sdh ba ttu edu Rise 20and 20Fall 20 88 pdf p 41 Shaw E H and Jones D G B A History of Marketing Thought Marketing Theory 2005 Vol 5 No 3 p 239 Brian Jones D G and Shaw E H The History of Marketing Thought in Handbook of Marketing Weitz R and Wensley R eds London UK 2003 p 60 Wilkie W L and Moore E S Macromarketing as a Pillar of Marketing Thought Journal of Macromarketing Vol 26 No 2 December 2006 p 225 a b c d e f Bennett S From Print to Social Media The History of Marketing AdWeek Trade Magazine 10 August 2012 Strassburg J 1605 The Origins of the Newspaper in Europe German History Vol 24 no 3 2006 pp 387 412 http gh oxfordjournals org content 24 3 387 abstract doi 10 1191 0266355406gh380oa Mitchell Archives The First True Newspaper in History Berg M and Clifford H Selling Consumption in the Eighteenth Century Advertising and the Trade Card in Britain and France The Journal of the Social History Society Volume 4 No 2 2007 Lehu J M Branded Entertainment Product Placement amp Brand Strategy in the Entertainment Business Kogan Page 2007 pp 19 20 Bartels Robert 1976 The History of Marketing Thought 2 ed Jones D G B and Monieson D D Early Development of the Philosophy of Marketing Thought In Marketing Critical Perspectives on Business and Management Vol 2 Michael John Baker ed London Routledge 2001 p 92 Lehu J M Branded Entertainment Product Placement amp Brand Strategy in the Entertainment Business Kogan Page 2007 p 20 Bingham A Family Newspapers Sex Private Life and the British Popular Press 1918 1978 Oxford University Press 2009 p 40 Bennett Shea From Print to Social Media The History of Marketing AdWeek Trade Magazine 10 August 2012 Jenkinson A Do organisations now understand the importance of information in providing excellent customer experience Journal of Database Marketing amp Customer Strategy Management Vol 13 no 4 2006 pp 248 260 Schultz D E Integrated Marketing Communications The Status of Integrated Marketing Communications Programs in the US Today Journal of Promotion Management Vol 1 No 1 1991 99 104 Pickton D and Broderick A Integrated Marketing Communications 2nd ed Financial Times Prentice Hall Harlow England 2008 Payne A Handbook of CRM Achieving Excellence in Customer Management Burlington MA Butterworth Heinemann 2008 Chapter 1 See www centreforintegratedmarketing com at the University of Bedfordshire England Iacobucci D and Calder B eds Kellogg on Integrated Marketing Hoboken N J John Wiley amp Sons 2003Further reading EditAdage History of Marketing from the Great Depression of the 1930s featuring highlights from AdAge articles http adage com article ad age graphics ad age a history marketing 142967 Gillett A G Tennent K D 2020 The Rise of Marketing In Bowden B Muldoon J Gould A McMurray A eds The Palgrave Handbook of Management History Palgrave Macmillan published online first https doi org 10 1007 978 3 319 62348 1 92 1 Hubbard P Advertising and Print Culture in the Eighteenth Century In Craciun A Schaffer S eds The Material Cultures of Enlightenment Arts and Sciences Palgrave Studies in the Enlightenment Romanticism and the Cultures of Print London Palgrave Macmillan 2016 Jones D G B and Tadajewski M eds The Routledge Companion to Marketing History Oxon Routledge 2016 Lavin M and Archdeacon T J The Relevance of Historical Method For Marketing Research in Interpretive Consumer Research Elizabeth C Hirschman ed Provo UT Association for Consumer Research 1998 pp 60 68 lt Online http acrwebsite org volumes 12176 volumes sv07 SV 07 gt Sheth J N ed Legends in Marketing six volume set Sage Publications 2017 Wright John S and Parks B Dimsdale Pioneers in Marketing A Collection of 25 Biographies of Men Who Contributed to the Growth of Marketing Thought and Action Georgia State University 1974 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of marketing amp oldid 1155315182, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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