Consumer Engineering, 1920s–1970s: Marketing between Expert Planning and Consumer Responsiveness
In: Worlds of Consumption
In: Springer eBooks
In: History
1. Beyond the Mad Men: Consumer Engineering and the Rise of Marketing Management, 1920s–1970s: An Introduction -- I. Twentieth-Century Marketing: Aspirations and Limits, Costs, and Benefits -- 2. Marketing as "Consumer Engineering"? A Concept in Transatlantic Perspective, 1930s–1960s -- 3. What Does "Fast Capitalism" Mean for Consumers? Examples of Consumer Engineering in the United States -- 4. A Theoretical Exploration of Consumer Engineering: Implicit Contracts and Market Making -- II. Consumer Engineers and Transatlantic Exchanges at Mid-Century -- 5. Shopping Malls and Social Democracy: Victor Gruen's Postwar Campaign for Conscientious Consumption in American Suburbia -- 6. Consumer-Based Research: Walter Landor and the Value of Packaging Design in Marketing -- 7. German-Style Consumer Engineering: Victor Vogt's Verkaufspraxis, 1925–1950 -- III. Consumer Engineering Practices in Postwar Europe -- 8. Consumer Credit as a Marketing Tool: The French Experience in European and Transatlantic Comparison, 1950s–1960s -- 9. Adidas and the Creation of a Transnational Market for German Athletic Shoes, 1948–1978 -- 10. Imagined Images, Surveyed Consumers: Market Research as a Means of Consumer Engineering, 1950s–1980s -- IV. Consumer Engineering and Consumer Movements -- 11. Marketing a New Society or Engineering Kitchens? IKEA and the Swedish Consumer Agency -- 12. "The Consumer Crusader": Hugo Schui and the German Consumers Association -- 13. Consumer Engineering by Belgian Consumer Movements: From Modern Marketing with a Transnational Touch to Late-Modern Insecurities, 1957–2000