The mal practice of marketing management
Abstract
Purpose
To draw lessons from Peter Ducker's change of heart during the half‐century between The Practice of Management in 1954 and his death in 2005.
Design/methodology/approach
Commissioned for the viewpoint series, with permission to think aloud.
Findings
Concludes that marketing managers and marketing academics should consider their social and cultural role as “citizen professionals”, and the responsibilities that implies. Instead of talking vaguely about paradigm shifts, they should re‐think the future in the context of all‐too‐evident “discontinuity” (Drucker) and “disruption” (Fukuyama), and beware of “epistemopathology” (Thomas). The alternative is malpractice and mismanagement.
Practical implications
Marketing practitioners may need to be educated into a radically different conceptual framework for the new century.
Originality/value
Draws attention to an unquestioned guru's latter‐day questioning of the very role of “management” in society, and proposes practical lessons for marketing management in the future.
Keywords
Citation
Thomas, M.J. (2006), "The
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited