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The dividualised consumer : sketching the new mask of the consumer

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posted on 2014-10-29, 11:11 authored by Robert Cluley, Steven Dexter Brown
Recent online marketing innovations such as ad-servers, ad-networks and ad-exchanges allow marketers to extract value from consumer data in new ways. But these new market devices do not just exploit technological innovations. They are constructed around a revolutionary new mask of the consumer. They treat consumers not as fixed individuals but as dividualised consumers – that is to say, collections of data that can be exposed, dissected and segmented into new marketable groups. After sketching out how marketing devices and theories have worked to define new marketplace behaviours, the paper turns to Deleuze’s explanation of control societies to consider the social implications of these new marketing techniques within societies that are increasingly mediated through networked relationships.

History

Citation

Journal of Marketing Management, 2014, DOI:10.1080/0267257X.2014.958518

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/School of Management

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Marketing Management

Publisher

Westburn Publishers (Taylor & Francis)

issn

0267-257X

eissn

1472-1376

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2016-04-01

Publisher version

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0267257X.2014.958518#.VFDJnBaHiE8

Notes

Author Posting © Westburn Publishers Ltd, 2014. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copy-edit version of an article which has been published in its definitive form in the Journal of Marketing Management, and has been posted by permission of Westburn Publishers Ltd for personal use, not for redistribution. The article was published in Journal of Marketing Management, 2014, DOI:10.1080/0267257X.2014.958518

Language

en

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