ABSTRACT

Between 1815 and 1890, the German book market experienced phenomenal growth, driven by German publishers’ dynamic entrepreneurial attitude towards developing and distributing books. Embracing aggressive marketing on a large scale, they developed a growing sense of what their markets wanted. This study, based almost entirely upon primary sources including over seventy years of trade newspapers, is an in depth account of how and why this market developed—decades before there was any written theory about marketing.

This book is therefore about both marketing practice and marketing theory. It provides a uniquely well-researched account of how markets were developed in very sophisticated ways long before there was a formal discipline of marketing: for example, German publishers used segmentation at least 150 years before the first US articles on the subject appeared. Much of their experience was also shared by the UK and US book markets through international interactions between booksellers and other businessmen.

All scholars of marketing will find this historical account a fascinating insight into markets and marketing, This will also be of interest to social historians, scholars of German history, book trade and book trade historians.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

The role of marketing in the growth of the German book markets, 1815–1890

chapter 1|38 pages

Separate, distinct, both sluggish

The German book markets at the close of the Napoleonic Wars, 1815–1820

chapter 3|25 pages

Engines of growth

Dynamic and entrepreneurial marketing, 1820–1843

chapter 7|32 pages

Good times, 1867–1888

The middle- and upper-class book market after mid-century

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion