How early ad schools shaped the modern marketing professional
Swedish correspondence courses in the 1930s-40s systematically created a new class of advertising workers through template-based training that prized rule-following creativity over artistic genius. The finding reveals how standardized education—not talent or innovation—built the infrastructure of modern consumer marketing, with lessons relevant to how industries scale expertise today.
Originaltitel: The technicians of consumer society: the creation of advertising men and practical advertising knowledge in early twentieth-century Sweden
<p><strong>Purpose: </strong>The purpose of this paper is to investigate an unexplored part of advertising history; namely, the education of a large, mundane, nonelite group of advertising professionals, so-called advertising technicians and the knowledge they acquired. Examining correspondence courses in the technology of advertising, we focus particularly on the production of technified knowledge and mass personas.</p><p><strong>Design/methodology/approach: </strong>The study is based on a qualitative analysis of course material from Sweden’s two largest correspondence schools in the 1930s and 1940s. Two theoretical concepts guide the analysis: the concept of market devices and the notion of personas, both of which we use to show how the courses crafted a particular kind of advertising professional as well as knowledge.</p><p><strong>Findings: </strong>The study shows that courses created a template-based persona of the advertising technician, who possessed what we call bounded originality characterized by diligence, modesty and rule-governed creative imagination. Similarly, the courses created a body of knowledge that was controllable and highly practice-oriented. The advertising technician was expected to embody and internalize the advertising knowledge, thus, becoming an extension of this knowledge on the market.</p><p><strong>Originality/value: </strong>By directing the searchlight at the cadre of ordinary, middle-class advertising professionals instead of the high-profile “advertising creatives” and innovators, the paper brings to the foreground the nonelite level of the advertising industry. These practitioners went to work in the business world to produce the everyday advertising that was not necessarily groundbreaking but was needed in a growing mass-consumption society.</p>