Provide a critical self reflection of the process of completing assignment 1 - Marketing
The indicators of a good reflection are: It is personal to you It is clear how the learning relates to your role or prepares for a future role It outlines the content and method of the learning activity It describes how your knowledge, skills and attributes have developed as a result of the learning activity. It identifies any further gaps or learning you did not cover and how you might fill these. It describes how your current practice might change as a result You can approach your Self Reflective writing as per the four stages below: 1. What did I expect to learn? 2. What did I learn? 3. What will I do differently going forwards? 4. My actions and next steps
A strong Assignment Critical Reflection Requires addressing to the following issues: High personal effectiveness: - Critical self-awareness, - Self-reflection and self-management; - Time management; - Sensitivity to diversity in people and different situations and - The ability to continue to learn through reflection on practice and experience
Lecturer’s Notes for Week 8
A brief overview of the Future of Marketing Strategy
The way that business managers used marketing at the past was reflecting a production of products and
services which were promoted by advertisements in order to reach purchases.
The way the business managers or marketers are using marketing now is based on a two way communication
by listening actively to customers’ needs and wants are respond to their expectations with a clever design of
products. They are customizing products based on the target segment of customers and are using new
channels for promotion as well as delivery of products.
A modern way that enables the flow of market information as well provide innovative ideas back to
organization is the use of Crowdsourcing.
Crowdsourcing is used as a collective intellectual gathering of information that comes from the public and
then used to complete a business-related task.
Further information is provided within the power-point presentation located in the 8
th
week’s content
as well to the additional reading material uploaded in this week’s content.
References
Telpaz, A., Webb, R., & Levy, D. J. (2015). Using EEG to Predict Consumers Future Choices. Journal of
Marketing Research, 52(4), 511-529. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1509/jmr.13.0564
Marketing Strategies for the Future
Dr. Paula Stephens
© University of South Wales
Learning Objective
To consider the ways in which marketing strategies might be adapted to incorporate modern marketing tactics, to ensure that the right messages are reaching the right audiences.
© University of South Wales
The way it was?
Businesses produced products and services
Marketers produced advertisements / communications about the products and services
Consumers watched and listened, and then…
…bought and used the products and services.
© University of South Wales
The way that business managers used marketing at the past was reflecting a production of products and services which were promoted by advertisements in order to reach purchases.
3
The New Reality
Marketing strategies involve: -
Two-way interaction
Co-creation
Customised products
New channels.
© University of South Wales
The way the business managers or marketers are using marketing now is based on a two way communication by listening actively to customers’ needs and wants are respond to their expectations with a clever design of products. They are customizing products based on the target segment of customers and are using new channels for promotion as well as delivery of products.
4
A Sharing Economy?
http://www.zipcar.co.uk/how#zipcar-for-
consumer
© University of South Wales
Sharing economy is an umbrella term with a range of meanings, often used to describe economic and social activity involving online transactions. ... Such transactions are often facilitated via community-based online services
5
Crowdsourcing
So…businesses can benefit from their customers wisdom
This results in the loss of some control…
…but they are talking about you anyway!
Feedback can result in a better product/ service, improved relationships, greater brand loyalty and increased sales
© University of South Wales
Crowdsourcing is used as a collective intellectual gathering of information that comes from the public and then used to complete a business-related task.
6
Some reasons to crowdsource
Customer’s input can improve products.
How?????
Examples?????
© University of South Wales
Customer’s input can improve products.
How?????: new ideas, improve deficiencies.
Examples????? Dissatisfy with a product package as it raises difficulties in storage. (this is an example of the need to crowd source or employee’ input for improving a product). Another example is “Fiat Mio” see next slide as well the next examples in the 9th, 10th slide of this presentation
7
The Fiat Mio
© University of South Wales
2009. 11000 ideas submitted over facebook and twitter from 120 countries. Concept car arrived in 2010. Won numerous car show awards.
8
Fairly Nuts
© University of South Wales
Ben and Jerry conducted a worldwide search for new flavours by asking its customers to jump onto its online flavour lab, whip together the ice cream of your dreams and give it an appealing name. It promised Fair Trade ingredients from certified suppliers.
9
Turning scientific research into a video game
© University of South Wales
A University of Washington online game. With Foldit players solve puzzles for points. The puzzles are really science problems. It lead to a breakthrough for a new anti aids drug.
10
It wins customer loyalty and positive word of mouth
People want to be helpful, be thanked, be part of a team
Self preservation theory explains why pleasing others helps us to feel better about ourselves.
Social media collaboration feeds into this.
© University of South Wales
Crowdsource is an important tool for building customer loyalty and positive word of mouth since every customers want to feel helpful, thanked, and be part of a greater team.
11
It’s inexpensive
Good for start-ups, entrepreneurs and small businesses with limited resources
Asking questions in social channels is less expensive that a traditional survey or focus group.
© University of South Wales
Crowdsource is inexpensive way to improve current products of create new ones based on peoples shared opinions therefore it is considering a good tool for start-ups, entrepreneurs and small businesses with limited resources. Asking questions and receiving answers in social channel like facebook, twitter associates lower costs and assist the enhancement of information for product development or imporvement.
12
Customers can create your content for you
E.g. REI (outdoor wear) crowdsourced content.
Asked fans to upload images of themselves enjoying the outdoors: over 10,000 photos received (and half million visits to the website)
http://smartblogs.com/social-media/2015/01/29/andys-answers-how-rei-created-a-sustainable-user-generated-content-resource/
© University of South Wales
So what is the future of marketing strategy…
It’s about putting the public back in public relations and social back in social media
It’s not about new technologies
It’s time to rethink the value proposition of marketing
There is a need for courage and creativity:.
© University of South Wales
The future of marketing strategy is to listen actively the customers needs as well suggestions through social communication channels or networks as a way to facilitate courage and creativity.
14
Reading
Telpaz, (2015), “Using EEG to Predict Consumers’ Future Choices,” Journal of Marketing Research Vol. LII (August), 511-529
© University of South Wales
From segmentation to fragmentation - role of Marketing stretgy - Reading.pdf
European Journal of Marketing
From segmentation to fragmentation: Markets and marketing strategy in the postmodern era
A. Fuat Firat Clifford J. Shultz II
Article information:
To cite this document:
A. Fuat Firat Clifford J. Shultz II, (1997),From segmentation to fragmentation, European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 31 Iss
3/4 pp. 183 - 207
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000004321
From
segmentation to
fragmentation
183
From segmentation to
fragmentation
Markets and marketing strategy in the
postmodern era
A. Fuat Firat and Clifford J. Shultz II
Faculty of Marketing, Arizona State University West, School of
Management, Phoenix, USA
Introduction
There have been several philosophical debates in the history of marketing
thought about the discipline’s mission and role within business and society.
Among these debates are science versus art, the extent to which the marketing
concept should be broadened, and the recent debates on method and philosophy.
From them emerged and continue to emerge new directions and challenges for
marketing and marketers. Of course, these debates are (were) usually spurred
by social forces or evolving business conditions that inspire(d) the need for
fresh thinking. One of the most compelling forces today would appear to be the
advent of postmodernism. As a new perspective, which has been very effective
in the arts and humanities (Foster, 1985; Kaplan, 1987; Stephanson, 1988), as
well as in architecture (Jencks, 1987), postmodernism seems likely to make, and
by some accounts is already making (Gitlin, 1989; Habermas, 1983; Hutcheon,
1988; Jameson, 1992), an impact on contemporary culture, generally, and
consumer culture, specifically. This impact has not been lost on marketing
scholars, many of whom have begun to examine postmodernism within the
context of their discipline (Brown, 1993a, 1993b; Firat, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993;
Firat and Venkatesh, 1993, 1995; Firat et al., 1993, 1994; Ogilvy, 1990; Sherry,
1991; van Raaij, 1993; Venkatesh, 1989, 1992). Moreover, subsumed under the
impact of postmodernism across institutions is the belief that postmodernism
may also considerably affect the way that marketing organizations will need to
conduct business into the next century. Inde ed, the modus operandi for
marketers in a postmodern era may be “business as unusual”. Consequently,
there may be a need for traditional marketing management practitioners to
reassess their assumptions about markets and the strategies they use to create
competitive advantage and to capture market share.
Contributions by marketing scholars have generally focused on the implicit
impact of postmodernism on marketing (Brown, 1993a, 1993b; Firat, 1992; van
Raaij, 1993), yet our review of the literature led us to conclude that the
implications of postmodernism for strategic marketing have received little if
any attention from marketing scholars. Our objective, then, is to expand the
discussion of postmodernism’s impact on the discipline of marketing and, more
European Journal of Marketing,
Vol. 31 No. 3/4, 1997, pp. 183-207.
© MCB University Press, 0309-0566
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specifically, to suggest strategic contingencies for marketing managers and
research opportunities for marketing and consumer research scholars.
The expanding influence of postmodernism
Postmodernism, for a time considered to be a fad by some members of almost
all academic disciplines, could prove to be a serious contender as a new
perspective from which to view and to act in the world, generally, and the
business world, specifically (see Brown, 1993b). This premiss clearly has far-
reaching implications for marketing managers. Despite its academic and
popular adversaries (see Bhaskar, 1991; Eagleton, 1990; Habermas, 1983; Hill,
1993), postmodernist insights and ideas seem to be commanding growing
attention and creating serious interest across many disciplines, including
architecture (Frampton 1983; Jencks, 1987), art (Levin, 1988; Wallis, 1984),
philosophy (Derrida, 1982; Lyotard, 1984; Madison, 1988), literary criticism
(Jameson, 1992; Wilson, 1989), women’s studies (Nicholson, 1990) and history
(Winders, 1991). Although marketing and consumer research disciplines have
been relatively slow to recognize the impacts and existence of postmodernism
as compared to sociology (Bauman, 1992), political science (Angus and Jhally,
1989; Aronowitz, 1988), and even the management discipline (Bergquist, 1993),
recently postmodernist implications have begun to be explored by marketing
scholars (as previously cited). In marketing, these implications may be more
than practical, operational, or even theoretical. They may, by some accounts
(Firat and Venkatesh, 1995), result in substantial redefinition of the character
and the role of the field. For example, an articulation of postmodernist insights
for marketing and the consumers of a possibly postmodern era may suggest
that some of the most central tenets and/or principles of marketing – e.g. the
marketing concept – be re-thought and modified extensively. The purpose of
this paper is to explore these practitioner relevant implications, especially as
they pertain to segmentation and positioning, two of the most central and
strategic concepts in marketing management (Kotler, 1991).
Segmentation and positioning have been singled out because they are
cornerstones of marketing management, yet emerging trends would suggest
traditional conceptions of either may not be as meaningful or satisfactory as
once thought, if we hope to understand or explain emerging market conditions.
Therefore, marketers may ne ed to develop different conceptions and
approaches to segmentation and positioning if they wish to achieve marketing
objectives. The aforementioned literature implies the need for transformation(s)
in how we view markets. That is, if and when postmodern changes (further)
entrench themselves in our societies, no clear or specific recommendations have
been promulgated that will enable practitioners to respond to the concomitant
marketing challenges. We intend to recommend proactive strategies and
frameworks for marketers interested in successfully responding to those
challenges.
To accomplish this task we shall refer to the framework developed by Firat
and Venkatesh (1993), taking into consideration the extensions to this
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From
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185
framework offered by van Raaij (1993) and Brown (1993a, 1993b). These
authors have provided insights into the complex and at times confusing
discussions on the meaning and domain of postmodernist discourse and culture
in order to discer n the connections and mutual influences betwe en
postmodernism and marketing. In this vein, each paper has proposed several
connections betwe en postmoder nism and, for example, marketing and
advertising practices, which demonstrate the postmodernist tendencies of
marketing, especially in recent years.
In their framework, Firat and Venkatesh (1993) offer five conditions of
postmodern culture:
(1) hyperreality;
(2) fragmentation;
(3) reversal of consumption and production;
(4) decentring of the subject; and
(5) paradoxical juxtapositions (of opposites)
and a general consequence of these conditions – loss of commitment. Van Raaij
(1993) adds to these conditions the consequence of openness, which he defines
as pluralism; that is, pluralism as the dominant approach to all relationships, or
as the acceptance of difference. Brown further expands the framework by
articulating three tendencies of the postmodern consumer(s):
(1) readiness for living a perpetual present;
(2) emphasis on form/style (Brown, 1993b); and
(3) greater acceptance of or resignation to (a) state(s) of disorder and chaos
(Brown, 1993a).
Brief descriptions of these conditions are provided in Table I. The purpose of
this paper is not to discuss postmodernism per se since such discussion is
available in the aforementioned literature. Instead, we shall try to elaborate
points that will help us to provide some further understanding of the
transformation mentioned in the title of this paper: “From segmentation to
fragmentation”.
A recognition of the rudimentary aspects of a transition from modernity to
postmodernity will highlight the differences that such a transformation will
affect on the constitution of the market. We shall discuss these market
implications of the transition throughout the following sections of the paper. We
shall also propose, at different points in the paper, marketing strategies that will
be required to keep up with or proactively respond to the changes in the market.
Foundations of modern marketing thought
A brief discussion of the tenets of modern marketing is in order to help a better
understanding of the changes required for transition to postmodern marketing
strategies. Marketing thought and practice have experienced changes in
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orientations and approaches across history. While present in the practices of
certain organizations early in the development of modern business practices
(Fullerton, 1988), “modern marketing” thought has not dominated practice until
after the Second World War (Kotler, 1972). Modern marketing is distinguishable
from other marketing orientations in several aspects, among which is the
“marketing concept”. This concept, as articulated by several marketing
scholars (e.g. Alderson, 1965; Bagozzi, 1975; Kotler, 1972; Kotler and Levy, 1969;
Levy and Zaltman, 1975) captures many of the more essential characteristics of
modern marketing; characteristics which reflect its indebtedness to tenets of
modernism in general.
Modern thought put the subject (human being) at the centre and elaborated
the project of modernity in terms of the relationships this subject develops with
the objects he or she acts on in order to improve conditions of life. The totality
of these subject-object relations constitute the economy, and the rationality of
Postmodern conditions Brief descriptions
Openness/tolerance Acceptance of difference (different styles, ways of being
and living) without prejudice or evaluations of superiority
and inferiority
Hyperreality Constitution of social reality through hype or simulation
that is powerfully signified and represented
Perpetual present Cultural propensity to experience everything (including
the past and future) in the present, “here and now”
Paradoxical juxtapositions Cultural propensity to juxtapose anything with anything
else, including oppositional, contradictory and essentially
unrelated elements
Fragmentation Omnipresence of disjointed and disconnected moments
and experiences in life and sense of self – and the growing
acceptance of the dynamism which leads to fragmentation
in markets
Loss of commitment Growing cultural unwillingness to commit to any single
idea, project or grand design
Decentring of the subject Removal of the human being from the central importance
she or he held in modern culture – and the increasing
acceptance of the potentials of his/her objectfication
Reversal of consumption and Cultural acknowledgement that value is created not in
production production (as posited by modern thought) but in
consumption – and the subsequent growth of attention
and importance given to consumption
Emphasis on form/style Growing influence of form and style (as opposed to
content) in determining meaning and life
Acceptance of disorder/chaos Cultural acknowledgement that rather than order, crises
and disequilibria are the common states of existence – and
the subsequent acceptance and appreciation of this
condition
Table I.
Brief description of
postmodern conditions
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managing these relations is the substance of economics. It could be claimed,
therefore, that the economy and its science, economics, had to take “centre
stage” in modern society. In fact, it would be difficult to argue the contrary; that
the economy does not constitute the major interest in modern society. The
dominant train of thought throughout modern history has been that if the
economy is not healthy, nothing else can survive.
Marketing and the marketing concept tend to be products of this modernist
focus on the economy. The success of the marketing organization is contingent
on the acceptance of its products in the market and to the resolution of the
product offering in a market exchange (in a transaction involving economic
resources). Marketing textbooks (see Bagozzi, 1986; Kotler, 1991; Park and
Zaltman, 1987; Stanton, 1975) usually indicate that the final purpose of
marketing practice is to maximize in the long-term (or optimize) such
exchanges, or sales, and thereby, profits. While the social reason for being
(raison d’être/justification of existence) is professed to be the satisfaction of
consumer ne eds, existence is proclaimed to be possible only through
economic/financial success in a competitive environment. Given that the whole
society’s existence depends on economic health, economically rational
behaviour becomes central to the operation of any institution or entity, and the
focal importance of the health of the economy above all else (including, some
critics would contend (Evernden, 1989; Henion, 1976), human, animal and plant
life) is reaffirmed in the individual behaviours of marketing organizations.
Social and political order comes to be perceived as dependent on a healthy
economic order (Schmookler, 1992). Each marketing organization reflects this
order in its own operations. One major reflection is in the centrality of the
product and each product’s contribution to the success of the organization,
since, in modernism, economic value is represented in and by the benefits
inherent to the uses of the product. In other words, value is a property of the
product; it is “[t]he total utility which is yielded by the object in question”
(Bannock et al., 1978). The marketing organization realizes or actualizes
economic value through its products. One reason for the centrality of the
product is that modern marketing presupposes that value for the consumer is
materialized in the prescribed benefits of product attributes being offered, and
that it is this value which results in consumer satisfaction. Postmodernists
would suggest that all of the above assertions are suspect, as we shall discuss.
The above premisses are also reflected on the conceptualizations of the
consumer in modern thought. The consumer, as the subject at the centre of the
modernist project, is an individual with a mind that can be independent from
the natural, sensational (emotional) limitations and weaknesses of the body
(Rorty, 1979). As such a subject, the consumer is not only conceptualized to be
the centre of the modernist project (i.e., improving human lives by controlling
nature through scientific technologies), but also to be very centred, self-
conscious, and committed to a reasoned and reasonable goal or end.
Consequently, modern marketing thought tends to hold that a unity (in some
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arguments, authenticity) of self or self-concept, a sense of one’s identity and
character, can and does exist. The consumer, then, armed with such a united
concept of self and a commitment to it (many times represented in a personal
quest) strives for the satisfaction of (clearly) identified needs for this self. Such
unity of purpose, character and self logically suggests a stability in the
consumer’s orientations and behaviour. This allows segmentation into
relatively homogeneous behaviour/need/orientation groups, or the more recent
types (as in the VALS typology) possible and useful as a marketing principle
and tool.
Postmodern impacts on marketing
Openness/tolerance
Postmodernists have argued that many of the modernist premisses, including
those which shaped modern marketing thought, are based on myths, in the
same vein that any social existence is (Campbell, 1990). The postmodernist
position is generally that since all social experience is founded on a narrative –
that is, a story constructed by a social group about life, its conditions, and its
requirements – in which a community believes and, by acting upon such belief,
transforms it into the social reality it experiences, no narrative ought to have a
privileged status. Postmodernism, therefore, is open to and tolerant of all
narratives, even including the modernist ones, as long as they tolerate other
narratives also. They do, however, challenge and object to, especially, two
aspects of modern narratives: the modernist assumption that a social reality
independent of a socially constructed one (or of human agency) exists; and the
modernist claim to having the only tr ue way of objectively knowing and,
therefore, accurately representing this reality thanks to traditional methods of
scientific enquiry. These aspects suggest that knowledge and understanding
can only be determined by a given set of prescribed orientations and methods,
however imperfect, whereas for the postmodernist – as for Mill (1859/1978) or
Nietzsche (1954) – richer insights may be provided by knowing that the
imperfections of one’s methods limit how much one may ever know.
Postmoder nist thought especially challenges these narratives because,
perceiving such a unique quality in themselves, the modernist narratives
suggest superiority to all others and tend to reject all others as irrational,
insensible, unrealistic, utopian, and even as fantasy and palmistry.
Unfortunately for those who would wish to benefit from postmoder nist
insights, there may seem to be an incommensurate ontological schism between
modernist and postmodernist positions. As opposed to the knowing subject of
modernity, postmodernism conceptualizes the consumer as the communicating
subject, one who actively communicates the social reality she or he prefers to
live rather than passively inheriting one constr ucted without his/her
participation. Marketing in a postmodern culture, therefore, has to be open to
and tolerant of the non-traditional demands communicated by consumers,
including those of interference into organizational cultures.
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Hyperreality and perpetual present
The disillusionments with the modernist project have given rise to many
diverse movements, especially in the most modern societies of the world, which
seem to have eroded the commitment to modernity. One result of the erosion of
commitment to modernity is an increasing tendency and willingness on the
part of the members of society to seek the “simulated reality” rather than an
extant reality, imposing and immutable (Baudrillard, 1983; Eco, 1986; Postman,
1985). There are many indications of this tendency that have an impact on
marketing. One is the transformation of our urban centres into theme parks
(Sorkin, 1993). Indeed, the city, itself, the reality that much of modern society
experiences in everyday life, is a simulation completely constructed by the
human imagination (Gottdiener and Lagopoulos, 1986). Yet, increasingly, we
find different sections of our cities replicating/reflecting different thematic
constructions. In Beverly Hills, California, for example, one finds Rodeo Drive
(named “Via Rodeo”), a very well-known part of this well-known town,
representing a theme from Rome. The shopping malls, most imposing parts of
our (sub)urban experience, of course, are theme parks in their own right. The
Borgata in Scottsdale, Arizona, which replicates a Renaissance Italian town, or
the Raffles Center in Singapore, the Circular Quay in Sydney, Australia,
represent good examples of this thematization of these important landmarks of
our time, where, possibly, outside their homes and work places, (sub)urban
populations may be spending the largest portions of their time. Clearly,
however, shopping malls do not stand alone as theme parks. Thematization is
well integrated into work areas, park areas, wharf areas, etc. In this sense,
markets are increasingly de(re)constr ucted by thematizing marketers in
conjunction with the consumers who seek the simulated experiences that
enhance and re-enchant their present encounters with(in) life.
For postmodernist observers of contemporary culture, these environments
represent a nostalgia on the part of contemporary urban populations for
experiencing what, in the imagination, once was or could have been. This is a
partly disinterested nostalgia, however, not a wish to be indeed transported
totally into such a time or existence, but only voyeuristically to experience it for
the moment that it excites and titillates the senses. Furthermore, this interest is
not solely for what could have been in the past but also in the future. It is the
representation of an imagined past or future in the present, and the present is
the period on to which postmodernism turns its gaze. Premodern culture
focused on the past, the moder n culture on the future. The focus in
postmodernism is: right here, right now. But this immediacy does not have to
stabilize, become uniform and boring. The postmodern consumer wants to
experience the diversity of many themes, past and future, not get fixed in any
single one.
The hyperreal – reality based on simulation (Baudrillard, 1993; Eco, 1986) –
allows the realization of this wish. The touristic consumer samples the many
sights, sounds, themes and tastes of yesterday and tomorrow – which are all
now and here, in the present (Gitlin, 1989) – immersing themself into the
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Journal
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experiences and moving among them to experience each for a moment, as long
as it keeps its appeal. The postmodern consumer seeks those experiences that
can make “present” all or most of the exciting elements of space/time settings
without the difficulties and hardships. This postmodern claim seems to find
support in the interest that consumers display for the IMAX Theatre at the
Grand Canyon where they can really experience the canyon in all its (historic)
grandeur without the trekking, the heat or the cold, and the possibility of
missing many sights. The interest in simulation seems to be evident in the fact
that visitors to the cloud forest in Costa Rica have to be shown in slide shows all
that they will miss when hiking the forest. It is evident in the numbers of
tourists who visit EPCOT Center’s World Showcase in Disney World, Orlando,
Florida, from around the world to experience Paris and London and Italy and
Morocco, etc. It is evident in the interest in the volcano in front of The Mirage
Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, the safari at Fossil Rim Park in Texas, and the San
Francisco earthquake showcase on Pier 39 in San Francisco. Each place is one
where consumers go to have sensational experiences without the dangers
involved. Finally, it is very evident in the extraordinary interest exhibited in all
media for the coming advent of virtual reality and/or integ rative
communication technologies that will allow simulated presence and sharing of
virtual spaces by people actually far away from each other (Bylinsky, 1991;
Daily News Tribune, 1990). The success of the marketing examples above
indicate the greater attention marketing organizations have to give to the
hyperreal and its representation in the present.
Fragmentation and loss of commitment
Rather than suppress fragmentation or try to find unifying themes to resolve it,
postmodernism calls for an unabashed practice of it. Recognition of the above
discussed interest among the consumers of, especially, contemporary market
economies in experiencing the different simulated existences, and an
interpretation of human history in terms of socially constructed realities, lends
validity to making such a call. This is a call for a tolerance towards different
ways of being, life styles and realities. The postmoder n sensibility even
encourages the experiencing of many different ways of being, not conforming
or committing only to a single one. Such a stance clearly allows for an
expansion of fragmentation, of fragmented moments of experience and
existence in a lifetime. Since contemporary consumers find commitment to a
single project or metanarrative across modernity to have brought little promise
but much misery, they have an affinity to not commit or conform to any unified,
consistent, centred field, idea, system, or narrative (Jay, 1986; Lyotard; 1992;
Wilson, 1989), or “regime of truth” (Foucalt, 1980). Fragmentation seems to be
omnipresent in the everyday lives of modern consumers.
Indeed, to the postmodern observer, fragmentations abound in everyday life
experiences. They dominate the media, the most important and omnipresent
mode of exposure to our universe in contemporary society. Fragmentation in
the medium of television permeates advertisements, music videos, situation
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From
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comedies and other prog rammes. Advertisements and music videos,
increasingly resembling each other, are collages of fleeting moments that excite
the senses, yet rarely connect to a central, unified theme or focus. Consider the
“Just do it” Nike advertisements. The purpose of the collage is to leave the
consumer not with a centred idea or cognition but with an overall image, an
image that is, itself, not linked to the fragmented images in the collage, but
triggered by their impact on the senses. The programmes on television or the
most popular films from the movie establishments are not really that different.
Each is made up of largely independent but highly exciting, short, fleeting
segments that stand on their own through their spectacular qualities, whether
technical, artistic or stylistic. While in modern film, for example, each scene
was constructed to contribute to the narration of a story line, as postmodern
trends diffuse in the film industry, films increasingly concentrate on the
spectacle with inconsequential story lines that enable the spectacular scenes
that can be created through technique and style (Marchetti, 1989). Similar
fragmentation is also experienced in the spoken or printed vignettes on the
radio or in newspapers and magazines, as well as in the highlighted brand
names that flash by on billboards to reinforce the experiences on television and
films. The …
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e a 1 to 2 slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on the different models of case management. Include speaker notes... .....Describe three different models of case management.
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Summary & Evaluation: Reference & 188. Academic Search Ultimate
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For example
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While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
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After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
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