{"title":"利基嫉妒:数字时代的营销歧视","authors":"T. Lipinski","doi":"10.5860/choice.44-3955","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Niche Envy: Marketing Discrimination in the Digital Age Joseph Turow. Cambridge, MA: MIT. 2008. 225 pp. $14.95 (pb).Originally published in hardcover in 2006, this paperback version is no less useful today. The title refers to two sorts of envy, first by competitors who envy the customer base or niche that one company may possess and second by consumers who are envious of real or perceived differential treatment another consumer receives. The author thoroughly documents then generally considers the implications of the sophisticated customization of marketing based upon a particular customer's profile. This allows not only for price discrimination but also for product and service discrimination. The choice of what to offer a customer is made not by the consumer but by the marketer: \"the movement of databases to the heart of marketing communication is beginning to affect the media, advertising, and society\" (p. 1-2).Early chapters recount the development of advertising and marketing, especially in the second half of the twentieth century. Chapter 4 discusses the development of marketing through the Internet and the early battles between the industry and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and reviews the various patterns of Internet marketing customization such as search engine marketing (SEM) or customized messages. Chapter 5 (Rethinking Television) discusses the increased use of product placement as a response to new systems, such as TiVo, that allow consumers to skip commercials, and interactivity, in response to reality television, that encourages viewers to determine narrative through voting. This in turn leads to the consideration of interactivity in the advertising content as opposed to the program leading Turow to predict that \"within 15 years customization of all sorts of commercial messages will be feasible and competitively essential\" (p. 117). Turow predicts that the future of television advertising will parallel practice on the Internet.The future of media programming may also be subject to manipulation in that two viewers, depending on each other's profile, can watch the same television show or made for cable movie but see the protagonist drink a different beverage, drive a different car, wear a different designer label, etc. Chapter 6 (The Customized Store) recounts the well-known attempts by Wal-Mart to track every product, so-called basket-level analysis. Customization occurs in various service products, such as the variable wait-time customers are assigned after moving through (See also, Laura Hildner, Defusing the Threat of RFID: Protecting Consumer Privacy through Technology-Specific Legislation at the State Level, 41 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 133 [2006] and Serena G. Stein, Where Will Customers Find Privacy Protection from RFIDs? …","PeriodicalId":39913,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Information Ethics","volume":"18 1","pages":"101"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"82","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Niche Envy: Marketing Discrimination in the Digital Age\",\"authors\":\"T. Lipinski\",\"doi\":\"10.5860/choice.44-3955\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Niche Envy: Marketing Discrimination in the Digital Age Joseph Turow. Cambridge, MA: MIT. 2008. 225 pp. $14.95 (pb).Originally published in hardcover in 2006, this paperback version is no less useful today. The title refers to two sorts of envy, first by competitors who envy the customer base or niche that one company may possess and second by consumers who are envious of real or perceived differential treatment another consumer receives. The author thoroughly documents then generally considers the implications of the sophisticated customization of marketing based upon a particular customer's profile. This allows not only for price discrimination but also for product and service discrimination. The choice of what to offer a customer is made not by the consumer but by the marketer: \\\"the movement of databases to the heart of marketing communication is beginning to affect the media, advertising, and society\\\" (p. 1-2).Early chapters recount the development of advertising and marketing, especially in the second half of the twentieth century. 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引用次数: 82
摘要
《利基嫉妒:数字时代的营销歧视》约瑟夫·图罗著。马萨诸塞州剑桥:麻省理工学院。2008. 225页,14.95美元(pb)。最初在2006年以精装本出版,这本平装本在今天同样有用。这个标题指的是两种嫉妒,第一种是竞争对手嫉妒一个公司可能拥有的客户群或利基市场,第二种是消费者嫉妒另一个消费者得到的真实或感知的差别待遇。作者彻底的文件,然后一般认为基于特定客户的配置文件的复杂定制营销的含义。这不仅允许价格歧视,而且允许产品和服务歧视。向顾客提供什么不是由消费者决定的,而是由营销人员决定的:“数据库向营销传播核心的移动正开始影响媒体、广告和社会”(第1-2页)。前几章叙述了广告和市场营销的发展,特别是在20世纪下半叶。第4章讨论了通过互联网进行营销的发展以及行业与联邦贸易委员会(FTC)之间的早期斗争,并回顾了各种互联网营销定制模式,如搜索引擎营销(SEM)或定制消息。第5章(重新思考电视)讨论了产品植入作为对新系统的回应,如TiVo,它允许消费者跳过商业广告,以及互动,作为对真人秀电视的回应,鼓励观众通过投票来决定叙事。这反过来又导致了对广告内容交互性的考虑,而不是使图罗预测“在15年内,各种商业信息的定制将是可行的,并且具有竞争力”(第117页)。图罗预测,未来的电视广告将与互联网广告并驾齐驱。媒体节目的未来也可能受到操纵,因为两个观众,根据彼此的资料,可以观看相同的电视节目或有线电视电影,但看到主角喝不同的饮料,开不同的车,穿不同的设计师标签,等等。第六章(定制商店)讲述了众所周知的沃尔玛追踪每一件产品的尝试,即所谓的篮子级分析。定制发生在各种服务产品中,例如客户在移动后分配的可变等待时间(参见Laura Hildner,化解RFID的威胁:通过州一级的技术特定立法保护消费者隐私,41哈佛民权-公民自由法律评论133[2006]和Serena G. Stein,消费者将从何处找到RFID的隐私保护?…
Niche Envy: Marketing Discrimination in the Digital Age
Niche Envy: Marketing Discrimination in the Digital Age Joseph Turow. Cambridge, MA: MIT. 2008. 225 pp. $14.95 (pb).Originally published in hardcover in 2006, this paperback version is no less useful today. The title refers to two sorts of envy, first by competitors who envy the customer base or niche that one company may possess and second by consumers who are envious of real or perceived differential treatment another consumer receives. The author thoroughly documents then generally considers the implications of the sophisticated customization of marketing based upon a particular customer's profile. This allows not only for price discrimination but also for product and service discrimination. The choice of what to offer a customer is made not by the consumer but by the marketer: "the movement of databases to the heart of marketing communication is beginning to affect the media, advertising, and society" (p. 1-2).Early chapters recount the development of advertising and marketing, especially in the second half of the twentieth century. Chapter 4 discusses the development of marketing through the Internet and the early battles between the industry and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and reviews the various patterns of Internet marketing customization such as search engine marketing (SEM) or customized messages. Chapter 5 (Rethinking Television) discusses the increased use of product placement as a response to new systems, such as TiVo, that allow consumers to skip commercials, and interactivity, in response to reality television, that encourages viewers to determine narrative through voting. This in turn leads to the consideration of interactivity in the advertising content as opposed to the program leading Turow to predict that "within 15 years customization of all sorts of commercial messages will be feasible and competitively essential" (p. 117). Turow predicts that the future of television advertising will parallel practice on the Internet.The future of media programming may also be subject to manipulation in that two viewers, depending on each other's profile, can watch the same television show or made for cable movie but see the protagonist drink a different beverage, drive a different car, wear a different designer label, etc. Chapter 6 (The Customized Store) recounts the well-known attempts by Wal-Mart to track every product, so-called basket-level analysis. Customization occurs in various service products, such as the variable wait-time customers are assigned after moving through (See also, Laura Hildner, Defusing the Threat of RFID: Protecting Consumer Privacy through Technology-Specific Legislation at the State Level, 41 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 133 [2006] and Serena G. Stein, Where Will Customers Find Privacy Protection from RFIDs? …