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What Would Don Draper Say About Digital Advertising?

My father, Ernest Dichter, and other midcentury “Mad Men” such as David Ogilvy and Leo Burnett, have been largely forgotten. Nonetheless they held sway in the advertising industry from the late 1940s to well into the 1970s. My father’s work in those years—based on his training in Vienna as a Freudian psychologist—helped shift the ground under the advertising industry. Among other things, he pioneered the use of focus groups in market research, and argued that qualitative research methods were more adept than surveys at revealing what people really wanted. Instead of surveys, he practiced “depth interviewing,” open-ended conversations that could last up to two hours. He and his colleagues’ research uncovered the emotional and symbolic side of the relationship between consumers and the products companies wanted to sell. In his work on cigarette smoking in the 1940s, he concluded that the act of lighting the cigarette was an integral part of the experience, the power of fire being mastered. For him ordinary objects had souls, things resonated with primal human instincts, and no product was just what it seemed to be. 

Over the decades his research institute undertook work for virtually every major U.S. company from B.F. Goodrich to Procter and Gamble, General Foods to Time magazine, American Airlines to Forest Lawn Memorial Park. He led the “Put a Tiger in Your Tank” campaign for Esso and advised on the marketing of the Barbie Doll. He and his colleagues conducted hundreds of studies in every arena from ice cream to tires, from funerals to candy, from gasoline to prunes. In his work on prunes, to overcome the perception of the prune as a fruit associated with old age and constipation, he advocated calling prunes “the California wonder fruit” and using children in prune ads to give the fruits a different “personality.” For better or worse, he played a significant role in the rise of American consumerism. 

Were he and other “Mad Men” of the time alive today, in the era of digital advertising, they might ask, with some incredulity, “Do they realize what they are doing?” 

During the last decade, digital advertising has overtaken TV, print, and radio advertising. Almost three-quarters of the $1 trillion global advertising industry today is digital, a figure almost double what it was in 2016, with growth continuing into the foreseeable future. Moreover, advertising executives today would argue that they’ve never understood the consumer better, that digital technology now provides almost unlimited data about what interests each consumer, what they are searching for and want to buy.

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