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Neil H. Borden

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Native name
  
Pete Borden

Occupation
  
Professor

Spouse(s)
  
Esther Page

Institution
  
Harvard Business School

Nationality
  
American

Years active
  
1922-1962

Alma mater
  
Harvard Business School


Born
  
December 7, 1895 (
1895-12-07
)
Boulder, Colorado

Board member of
  
Harvard Business Review

Died
  
1 October 1980, Topsfield, Massachusetts, United States

Books
  
National advertising in newsp, Cases in International Marketing, Harvard Advertising Awards 1, The economic effects of, Advertising in our economy

Neil Hopper Borden (1895-1980) was an American academic, who served as a professor of advertising at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. He coined the term "marketing mix".

Contents

Early life

Neil H. Borden, nicknamed Pete, was born in Boulder, Colorado in 1895. He was one of the seven children of Edmund and Irene Borden. He graduated from the University of Colorado in 1919, with a Bachelor of Arts (Economics) degree. On advice of his economics professor, he decided to focus on a teaching career in the emerging field of business administration. In order to finance his higher studies, he worked as a principal at the Lafayette High School during 1919-1920. His economics professor helped him get a scholarship at Columbia University. His friend Wilford White suggested he go to Harvard instead, an idea supported by the University's dean.

At Harvard

Borden studied business administration at Harvard during 1920-1922. During this time, he earned money through an assistantship and as the bookkeeper of The Harvard Crimson. An exceptional student, he was made an assistant dean when he obtained his MBA degree in 1922. He did not hold a doctorate. He started teaching marketing under Melvin T. Copeland, and succeeded Daniel Starch as the teacher of advertising in 1925. He served as an assistant professor during 1925-1928. During this period, Arch Wilkinson Shaw helped him raise $60,000 for research. The research was published in form of Problems in Advertising, a book of advertising case studies, in 1927. The case study method was the basis of Borden's teaching style.

Borden next served as an associate professor during 1928-1938, before becoming a professor in 1938. During the Great Depression of 1929, the advertisers, such as Louis H. Weld of McCann Erickson, requested Harvard academics for an objective analysis of advertising's economic impact. Borden was selected to write a book on the topic, supported by a grant of $30,000 from the wife of Alfred W. Erickson. To accomplish this objective, Borden worked with an advisory committee of academic fellows and the Advertising Research Foundation. Several businesses and advertising agencies contributed material to his research. He took a leave of six months to focus on the book, when his teaching began to suffer. The 970-page book, The Economic Effects of Advertising, was published in January 1942.

Borden served as the President of the National Association of Marketing Teachers, and also as the national President (1953-1954) of its successor organization, the American Marketing Association. During 1956-1962, he was the chairman of the Harvard Business Review board. He retired from teaching in 1962, and focused on writing.

Personal life

Neil H. Borden married Esther Page in 1902. The couple had two sons and two daughters.

Awards and honors

  • Kappa Tau Alpha Research Award (1945)
  • American Marketing Association Research Award (1945–46)
  • Charles Coolidge Parlin Memorial Award (1949) by American Marketing Association
  • Distinguished Service Medal In Advertising by Syracuse University (1949)
  • Paul D. Converse Award (1951) by American Marketing Association, for advancing the science of marketing
  • Elected to Hall of Fame in Distribution (1953)
  • American Advertising Federation Hall of Fame (1991)
  • Books authored

  • Neil H. Borden (1927). Problems in Advertising. A. W. Shaw & Co. 
  • Neil H. Borden (1942). The Economic Effects of Advertising. Chicago: Richard D. Irwin. 
  • Neil H. Borden (1945). Advertising in Our Economy: A Condensed Version of the Economic Effects of Advertising. Chicago: Richard D. Irwin. 
  • Neil H. Borden; Malcolm D. Taylor; Howard T. Hovde (1946). National Advertising in Newspapers. Harvard University Press. 
  • Neil H. Borden (1950). Advertising: Text and Cases. Richard D. Irwin. 
  • Neil H. Borden; Martin V. Marshall (1959). Advertising Management: Text and Cases. Richard D. Irwin. 
  • References

    Neil H. Borden Wikipedia