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charles bukowski foster this power challenge this Charles Bukowski The Marketing Matrix ‘your life is your life’ advertising and promotion ‘Don’t let it be clubbed into dank submission’ ubiquitous distribution versus special offers ‘you can beat death in life sometimes’ new products and services ‘the more you learn to do it, the more light there will be’ multiple shopping opportunities marketing is ubiquitous ‘the ‘aggregate marketing system’ in the US employs over 30 million people, servicing 285m customers who spent five trillion dollars a year. Just counting this money would take 150 millennia; longer than the whole period of human civilisation’ (Wilkie & Moore, 2002, Marketing’s Relationship to Society) This is having a profound impact every aspect of our lives, our communities and, increasingly, our planet change ‘It requires a social and cultural, or if you wish, a spiritual transformation of our country’ Jimmy Reid (1976), Inaugural address as Rector of Glasgow University ‘It is my sincere contention that anyone who can be totally adjusted to our society is in greater need of psychiatric analysis and treatment than anyone else’ ibid The Marketing Matrix: why I’m not lovin' it, will not just do it, and, sure as hell, will never be worth it Gerard Hastings Who’s Afraid of the Nanny State? A Charles Perkins Centre and Sydney Law School Symposium Monday 28 April, 2014 ISM Institute for Social Marketing structure 1. Marketing: rhetoric and reality 2. Autonomy, choice and the human spirit 3. Back to Bukowski: reasserting our autonomy The rhetoric of marketing the customer is always right; consumer sovereignty; the customer always comes first; consumer choice; customer satisfaction producing what you can sell, not selling what you can produce ‘retail therapy’ it all sounds most agreeable (particularly for rich folk like us) But then I remember another story… negative equity materialism damaged lives shortened lives The holy trinity of public health: food, alcohol and tobacco nearly 2/3rds of Australians are now overweight or obese – this will take 1 in 5 health $s by 2018 (Lang and Rayner, 2012) 3rd greatest cause of premature death – even tho half the world don’t drink (WHO) 1 in 2 smokers are killed by their smoking 8 million a year by 2030 (Doll and Peto 1992; WHO) shortened lives The holy trinity of public health: food, alcohol and tobacco The unholy trinity of corporate marketing The obvious truth that this marketing has an effect shortened lives Industrial Epidemics ‘The concept of an epidemic associated with the commercialization of a dangerous product ….diseases of consumers, workers and community residents caused by industrial promotion of consumable products …. In each instance, public health oriented policies run the risk of being opposed by industrial corporations in a health versus profit trade-off.’ (Jahiel and Babor 2007) all this starts young… suffer the little children ‘Children are important to marketers for three fundamental reasons: 1. They represent a large market in themselves because they have their own money to spend. 88% of smokers 2. They influence their parents’ selection of as children products andstart brands Surgeon General (2012) 3. They will grow up to be consumers of everything; hence marketers need to start building up their brand consciousness and loyalty as early as possible.’ Foxall and Goldsmith (1994) Consumer Psychology for Marketers p203 http://www.kelloggskrave.com/home.html play has become just another marketing tool suffer the little children The Scandal of Infant Formula ‘I shouldn’t be standing in front of you, on the 25 year anniversary of the Code, telling you so little has changed and that companies continue to encourage mothers to spend money they don’t have on manufactured food most of them don’t need. I shouldn’t be standing in front of you because it shouldn’t still be happening. But it is, because the voluntary code clearly isn’t working, and children are dying as a result’ Jasmine Whitbread, CEO, Save the Children UK (2007) but we are educated, autonomous adults; we wouldn’t fall for this trickery… structure 1. Marketing: rhetoric and reality 2. Autonomy, choice and the human spirit 3. Back to Bukowski: reasserting our autonomy Food ‘After the mid twentieth century there was, for the first time in world history, enough food in the world to feed everybody adequately. The problem was that it was very unequally distributed.’ …. ‘By the late twentieth century the people of the industrialised countries of western Europe, Japan and north America ate half the world’s food though they constituted only a quarter of the world’s population…. …a domestic cat in the US ate more meat than people living in Africa and Latin America.’ (Clive Ponting 2000) We are all implicated in this outrage Does this feel like an autonomous decision? medicines ‘Of the 1,400 new drugs developed between 1975 and 1999, only 13 were designed to treat or prevent tropical diseases and three to treat tuberculosis. In the year 2000, no drugs were being developed to treat tuberculosis, compared to 8 for impotence or erectile dysfunction and 7 for baldness.’ (Bakan 2004) Does this feel like an autonomous decision? The scandal of HIV/AIDS medication Between 1998-2003 10 million poor people, mainly in Africa, died because pharma companies insisted on protecting their patents coffee Does this feel like an autonomous decision? Up to £450 per kilo £185 per kilo £17 per kilo £2.26 per kilo inequalities The source of so much hardship in our society… 732 times median worker’s pay* *Executive Pay Watch: in1980 factor was 32 How do you spend $25 million every year? Fear not, a friendly marketer will come to the rescue ‘The solution to the problem appeared some years ago in the form of automatic winders …a box equipped with an electric motor and an “artificial wrist” on which to mount the timepiece’ ‘the Thesaurus (Euro 86,000) a desk entirely dedicated to the storage of watches’ the myth of customer choice A large supermarket has 40,000 lines Marketing ‘helps’ us choose: BOGOFs, mood music, positioning, soil sprinkled on potatoes.. Moving a product from side to main isle increases sales by 400% Tesco says almost 30,000 tonnes of food 'wasted' http://www.bbc .co.uk/news/uk -24603008 accessed 24 10 2013 industry wide Does this feel like an autonomous decision? Facebook strikes Diageo advertising deal ‘Facebook has struck a multimillion-dollar advertising partnership with Diageo, owner of drinks brands including Smirnoff and Guinness, in the latest move by the social networking website to form closer ties with marketers…. Financial Times, 18 September 2011 Facebook are working with us to make sure that we are not only fan collecting but that they are actively engaged and driving advocacy for our brands. We are looking for increases in customer engagement and increases in sales and share… Kathy Parker, Diageo’s Senior Vicepresident Global Marketing Does this feel like an autonomous decision? If you’re not paying for it, you’re not the customer. You’re the product being sold Value or values? ‘Olympism is a philosophy of life which places sport at the service of human kind’ (IOC Olyimpic Charter, 2011) Does this feel like an gender stereotyping autonomous decision? our planet http://www.wwf.org.au/our Unlocked by melting ice-caps, the great polar oil rush has begun Independent 6/9/11 the problem in a nutshell all this is okay = Does this feel like an every increasing growth every increasing consumption autonomous decision? marketing (gets us shopping; keeps us quiescent) this is a catastrophe…. structure 1. Marketing: rhetoric and reality 2. Autonomy, choice and the human spirit 3. Back to Bukowski: reasserting our autonomy be critical tell our own story only connect ‘military industrial complex’ (Dwight D Eisenhower1961) ‘alert and knowledgeable citizenry’ Back to Bukowski: reasserting our autonomy • Be critical: Question the assumptions underpinning what we think to be true, to uncover what we can objectively state to be true. Be an alert and knowledgeable citizen. • Tell our own stories: Back to Bukowski: reasserting our autonomy • Be critical: Question the assumptions underpinning what we think to be true, to uncover what we can objectively state to be true. Be an alert and knowledgeable citizen. • Tell our own stories: Mandela We enter this world alone, we will leave it alone And we know we will leave it; we know we will die We seek a higher purpose; to better ourselves Self-transcendence: ‘to escape from the tormenting consciousness of being merely ourselves’ (Aldous Huxley) Hard work – the danger of ‘bogus transcendence’ The bogus liberation of consumption ‘If he needs a million acres to make him feel rich, seems to me he needs it ‘cause he feels awful poor inside hisself, and if he’s poor in hisself, there ain’t no million acres gonna make him feel rich, an’ maybe he’s disappointed that nothin’ he can do’ll make him feel rich…’ ‘I ain’t trying to preach no sermon, but I never seen nobody that’s busy as a prairie dog collectin’ stuff that wasn’t disappointed’. Steinbeck, Grapes of Wrath, p.264-5. The myth of customer satisfaction: in reality we end up perpetually dissatisfied, otherwise we would stop shopping The bogus liberation of consumption Political power ‘user friendly makes a hash of democracy. Democracy requires that citizens be willing to make some effort to find out how the world around them works. Few American proponents of the war in Iraq, wanted to learn about Iraq (most couldn’t in fact locate it on a map)’ Richard Sennett (2006) The Culture of the New Capitalism ‘a really efficient totalitarian state would be one in which the all-powerful executive of political bosses and their managers control an army of slaves who do not need to be coerced because they love their servitude’. Huxley, A. (1958) Brave New World Revisited The bogus liberation of consumption Political power 91 of the largest 150 economies on our planet are corporations, not countries, ‘with Wal-Mart larger than Sweden or Saudi Arabia and Exxon Mobil larger than Denmark or South Africa. Royal Dutch Shell is larger than Morocco, Vietnam and Slovakia combined’ (Bendell, 2011) Our shopping gives thisover power ‘Corporations thatthem are turning these huge profits can own everything: the media, the universities, the mines, the weapons industry, insurance hospitals, drug companies, non-governmental. They can buy judges, journalists, politicians, publishing houses, television stations, bookshops and even activists’ (Arundhati Roy 2011) The bogus liberation of consumption Spiritual vacancy Problems, challenges and overcoming adversity are vital parts of our humanity ‘Imagine what would have happened if Adam and Eve had not lived in a garden but in a smart building. The divine designer would probably have arranged that they never saw apples’ (Ursula Franklin in Morozov 2013) it is also lonely work Back to Bukowski: reasserting our autonomy • Be critical: Question the assumptions underpinning what we think to be true, to uncover what we can objectively state to be true. An alert and knowledgeable citizenry • Tell our own stories: We enter this world alone, we will leave it alone We all know we are going to die self-transcendence • Only connect: Listen to and link our stories Societal transcendence Watch the Canary The ‘marginalised are like the miner’s canary: their distress is the first sign of a danger that threatens us all’ Guinier & Torres (2002): The Miner’s Canary, Harvard University Press (disadvantaged) ‘communities signal problems with the ways we have structured power and privilege. These pathologies are not located in the canary. Indeed we reject the incrementalist approach that locates complex social and political problems in the individual. Such an approach would solve the problems of the mines by outfitting the canary with a tiny gas mask to withstand the toxic atmosphere’. Guinier and Torres (2002) ‘if the miners were watching the canary they would not wait for it to fall off its perch, legs up. They would notice that it is talking to them. “I can’t breathe, but you know what? You are being poisoned too. If you save me you save yourself. Why is that mine owner sending all of us down here to be poisoned anyway?” The miners might then realise that they cannot escape this lifethreatening social arrangement without a strategy that disrupts the way things are.’ ibid Indigenous peoples ‘another imagination – an imagination outside of capitalism as well as communism. An imagination that has an altogether different understanding of what constitutes happiness and fulfilment’. She goes on to argue for greater recognition for indigenous peoples, ‘the people who still know the secrets of sustainable living’ and ‘are not relics of the past, but the guides to our future’. Arundhati Roy (2011) The Guardian and New Internationalist ‘Before our white brothers arrived to make us civilized men, we didn't have any kind of prison. Because of this, we had no delinquents. Without a prison, there can be no delinquents. We had no locks nor keys and therefore among us there were no thieves. When someone was so poor that he couldn't afford a horse, a tent or a blanket, he would, in that case, receive it all as a gift. We were too uncivilized to give great importance to private property. We didn't know any kind of money and consequently, the value of a human being was not determined by his wealth. We had no written laws laid down, no lawyers, no politicians, therefore we were not able to cheat and swindle one another. John (Fire) Lame Deer Sioux Lakota (1903-1976) We were really in bad shape before the white men arrived and I don't know how to explain how we were able to manage without these fundamental things that (so they tell us) are so necessary for a civilized society’ John (Fire) Lame Deer Sioux Lakota (1903-1976) conclusion 1. Marketers and marketing are very powerful 2. But Bukowski is right we also have power 3. And we are seeking change I have discussed these issues in many public meetings in the last two years and I always ended by asking for suggestions as to how we can fight back – this is the current top ten… Current Top Ten Actions pay attention self-produce something you would have bought disloyalty cards: swap them regularly stop wearing logos get a favourite wild flower make all our shopping choices moral choices tell four friends about this stuff list 10 things that make you happy; count how many depend on shopping. resist much, obey little (walt whitman) calculate your ‘servitude index’ (how long, after tax, it takes you to earn $10) What are your ideas for bringing about this change?