Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the scope of social marketing by re-examining some of its core concepts: the balance between the “wants” of individuals with the “needs” of society; the nature of exchange; the inclusion of techniques not explicitly considered part of the panoply of marketing; techniques available to social marketing, such as “nudge” style techniques, regulation or behavioural conditioning; the view that behaviour change must be its definitive goal; the ethical and political dimensions of social marketing; and the definition of social marketing. Design/methodology/approach – The authors pose seven questions based on these concepts which they debate. Findings – The authors conclude that a more inclusive view of what constitutes social marketing is required: one that avoids absolutism or defining the field in terms of the tactics it employs. The paper calls for a set of ethical codes which would enable social marketers to better defend approaches that deploy more implicit and strongly persuasive techniques common in the commercial world but unacknowledged in social marketing. Originality/value – The paper questions some of the settled views of the field, such as the focus on “behaviour change” and the notion of “exchange” and “voluntary” behaviour change. The paper debates the ethical implications of using “invisible” or coercive techniques, and the nature of customer-centricity. The paper also debates the politics of social marketing and encourages debate about interventions which go beyond rational exchange.

Highlights

  • The social marketing discipline is maturing fast

  • If social marketing is going to progress, it needs to go through a process of accepting the power that it can bring to bear and the responsibility this implies, rejoicing in its diversity of approach and being able to clearly set out how ethical issues are processed when selecting interventions (e.g. Hastings et al, 2004)

  • A common focus of our discussion has been widening the concept of social marketing

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Summary

Introduction

The social marketing discipline is maturing fast. There are a growing number of academic courses, conferences, seminars, associations and networks in social marketing around the world; an increasing number of citations in academic journals; frequent use of the term in UK Government policy papers; and a growth in for-profit and not-for-profit organisations offering social marketing services. As such, the authors detect more than a little collective defensiveness embedded in the profession of social marketing, with an internal rhetoric of the discipline creating a narrative that social marketing ‘puts the customer first, is ‘concerned with doing good’, facilitates ‘open and fully informed exchange based offers that people are free to reject’, and so on, even if these approaches do not achieve the best long term results. While these are potentially accurate statements in their own right, they are incomplete descriptions of the discipline’s scope. If social marketing is going to progress, it needs to go through a process of accepting the power that it can bring to bear and the responsibility this implies, rejoicing in its diversity of approach and being able to clearly set out how ethical issues are processed when selecting interventions (e.g. Hastings et al, 2004)

Can social marketing ever include involuntary behaviour change?
Is behaviour change really the bottom line?
Is there a need to go beyond a focus on singular behaviour change?
What is the relationship between social good and democracy?
Political and civic mandate for action exists
What happens if market-orientation and democratic values are at odds?
Conclusion
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