Catering to the experts: food marketing and health professionals in the early 20th century

Rachel Greenfield
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Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to examine the marketing strategies designed by three innovative early 1900s food companies. It traces the coordination of these businesses’ research funding, advertising, direct mail and promotional tactics to show how they intersected and impacted consumers and health professionals in the period when scientists were first able to quantify the relationship between good health and food. The paper analyzes internal company documents, advertisements and marketing materials from Knox Gelatine, Borden and Sunkist. Design/methodology/approach Research for this paper benefited from the author’s unlimited access to the private documents of the Knox Gelatine Company and its executives. These documents were analyzed chronologically and thematically. They chronicled the company’s attempts to influence the medical world and the ways it cultivated home economists. The paper also used publicly available digitized documents from Sunkist and Borden. The paper would benefit from further detailed analysis of these documents to parse Knox’s targeting by race and ethnicity. Findings In the 1920s, Knox, Borden and Sunkist developed a marketing strategy which leveraged a new class of experts – the hundreds of thousands of medical professionals, home economists, teachers and government agents who advised American women. By distributing specific laboratory research on the nutritional benefits of their products to this emerging class of health professionals and the consumers who trusted them, these companies developed relationships with opinion leaders designed specifically to influence product sales. Research limitations/implications This research benefited from access to the private documents of Knox Gelatine Company which divulge the company’s attempts to influence the medical world and cultivate home economists. The paper would benefit from further analysis of these documents to parse the company’s targeting by race and ethnicity as well as a deeper comparison to companies that tried to work with health professionals unsuccessfully and companies that adopted this tactic in the household products or tobacco area. Opportunities also exist to do a fuller analysis of variations in food marketing by rural versus urban as well as race. Originality/value By reconstructing the sequencing and content of these three companies’ 1920s marketing strategies, this research uncovers a form of early 20th century food marketing directed at health and science professionals which has been neglected in advertising histories.
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迎合专家:20世纪初的食品营销和健康专业人士
本文旨在考察20世纪初三家创新食品公司设计的营销策略。它追溯了这些企业的研究经费、广告、直接邮件和促销策略的协调,以展示在科学家第一次能够量化健康与食品之间的关系时,它们是如何交叉并影响消费者和卫生专业人员的。本文分析了Knox Gelatine、Borden和Sunkist的公司内部文件、广告和营销资料。设计/方法/方法本文的研究得益于作者对Knox gelatin公司及其高管的私人文件的无限制访问。这些文件按时间和主题进行了分析。他们记录了该公司试图影响医学界的努力,以及它培养国内经济学家的方式。该论文还使用了新奇士和博登公司公开提供的数字化文件。本文将受益于对这些文件的进一步详细分析,以分析诺克斯的种族和民族目标。在20世纪20年代,诺克斯、博登和新奇士开发了一种营销策略,利用了一批新的专家——成千上万的医疗专业人士、家庭经济学家、教师和政府代理人员,他们为美国妇女提供建议。通过向这一新兴的健康专业人士和信任他们的消费者分发有关其产品营养益处的具体实验室研究,这些公司与专门为影响产品销售而设计的意见领袖建立了关系。本研究得益于诺克斯明胶公司的私人文件,这些文件披露了该公司试图影响医学界和培养家庭经济学家的企图。本文将受益于对这些文件的进一步分析,以解析公司的种族和民族目标,以及与那些试图与卫生专业人员合作失败的公司和在家庭产品或烟草领域采用这种策略的公司进行更深入的比较。也有机会对农村与城市以及种族之间的食品营销差异进行更全面的分析。通过重构这三家公司20世纪20年代营销策略的顺序和内容,本研究揭示了20世纪初针对健康和科学专业人士的食品营销形式,这在广告史上被忽视了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
33.30%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Launched in 2009, Journal of Historical Research in Marketing is the only quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing high quality, original, academic research that focuses entirely on marketing history and the history of marketing thought. Pedagogical and historiographical / methodological essays are also welcome as long as they are grounded in a marketing and historical context. The essence of an historical perspective is a thorough, systematic, critical awareness of the changes (or continuity) in events over time and of the context in which change or continuity occurs. In addition to regular full length research articles, the Journal occasionally features material under the following sections. Explorations & Insights includes invited commentaries about marketing history and the history of marketing thought. These tend to be shorter (three to six thousand words) than the full articles that run in each issue. Sources of Historical Research in Marketing includes short essays introducing unexplored and novel archives and other primary historical resources, their contents and relevance to marketing history. Archivists or library professionals who believe their collections might be of interest to marketing historians are invited to submit essays to contribute to this section. JHRM also invites historical review essays that focus on historically important marketing books under the section Forgotten Classics. Examples of these historical reviews can be found in past issues of the Journal and those suggest an approach for potential submissions. Authors are advised to check with the editor about the suitability of a book title before submitting a Forgotten Classics review for consideration.
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