Reality in Advertising

Rosser REEVES

Item#: 104622 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Reality in Advertising
Reality in Advertising
Reality in Advertising
Reality in Advertising

REALITY IN ADVERTISING, SCARCE PRESENTATION FIRST EDITION INSCRIBED IN THE YEAR OF PUBLICATION BY LEGENDARY AD EXECUTIVE ROSSER REEVES, A CHIEF INSPIRATION FOR DON DRAPER OF MAD MEN

REEVES, Rosser. Reality in Advertising. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1961. Octavo, original navy cloth, original acetate, original slipcase with mounted gold cover label.

First trade edition, preceded only by the abbreviated privately printed Bates edition, of the highly influential book famed as "a Rosetta stone for the advertising business," authored by Madison Avenue ad executive Reeves—the "Prince of the Hard Sell" and a leading inspiration for Don Draper of Mad Men—inscribed in the year of publication by Reeves, "To Charles Dougherty, With a promise that these principles can be applied to insurance advertising with taste and dignity. Rosser, April 18, 1961," a splendid copy in very scarce original acetate and slipcase.

Famed advertising executive Rosser Reeves, the "Prince of Hard Sell" and chairman of Ted Bates agency, was a major inspiration for television's Don Draper of Mad Men, where "viewers are invited into the glamorous world of Madison Avenue advertising at its best. In real life, this was the world of such famed admen as David Olgivy, Bill Bernbach, Rosser Reeves and Leo Burnett" (Stern and Manning, Lucky Strikes, 192). Reeves' Reality in Advertising was originally "an internal document written primarily for Bates' employees… Reeves revised his initial work and added chapters for an official public release." Fellow ad executive Ogilvy wrote Reeves in August 1960 with praise, saying this book would be held "with 'equal importance' as that of Claude Hopkins' Scientific Advertising" (Haygood, David Ogilvy versus Rosser Reeves). Reeves' memorable slogan for M&M candies especially informs an episode of Mad Men when Draper offers the slogan, "Lucky Strikes is toasted." This specifically calls upon "the marketing strategy that Reeves, the legendary executive at Ted Bates, called the 'unique selling proposition': the elevation of a particular feature (such as chocolate that melts in your mouth, not in your hands) to the status of a brand's inimitable raison d'etre" (Goodlad et al., Mad Men, 12). "First Borzoi Edition" stated on copyright page. Containing original laid-in publisher's notice (4-1/2 by 6-1/2 inches) with printed text reading in part: "Rarely has a book about advertising created so much commotion… hailed as 'the best book for the professional that has ever come out of Madison Avenue'… a 'Rosetta stone for the advertising business'—an essential book for anyone who works in advertising, uses advertising extensively, or simply wants to know how that mysterious thing called advertising really works."

A fine inscribed copy.

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