How Advertisers Convinced Americans They Smelled Bad
A schoolgirl and a former traveling Bible salesman helped turn deodorants and antiperspirants from niche toiletries into an $18 billion industry
- By Sarah Everts
- Smithsonian.com, August 03, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
However the potential profit was not lost on everybody: “I feel there is a market for deodorants among men that is practically unscratched. The copy approach is always directed at women. Why not an intelligent campaign in a leading men’s magazine?”
“If someone like Mennen’s got out a deodorant, men would buy it. Present preparations have a feminine association most men only shy at.”
According to Casteels research, the first deodorant for men was launched in 1935, put in black bottle and called Top-Flite, like the modern, but unrelated golf ball brand.
As with the products for women, advertisers preyed on men’s insecurities: In the Great Depression of the 1930s men were worried about losing their job. Advertisements focused on the embarrassment of being stinky in the office, and how unprofessional grooming could foil your career, she says.
“The Depression shifted the roles of men,” Casteel says. “Men who had been farmers or laborers had lost their masculinity by losing their jobs. Top Flite offered a way to become masculine instantly—or so the advertisement said.” To do so, the products had to distance themselves from their origins as a female toiletry.
For example, Sea-Forth, a deodorant sold in ceramic whiskey jugs starting in the 1940s, “because the company owner Alfred McKelvy said he ‘couldn’t think of anything more manly than whiskey,’” Casteel says.
And so anti-sweat products became a part of America’s daily grooming routine for both men and women. A multitude of products flooded the marketplace, with names like, Shun, Hush, Veto, NonSpi, Dainty Dry, Slick, Perstop and Zip—to name just a few. With more companies invested in anti-sweat technology, the decades between 1940 and 1970 saw the development of new delivery systems, such as sticks, roll-ons (based on the ball-point pen), sprays and aerosols, as well as a bounty of newer, sometimes safer, formulations.
Naysayers might argue that western society would have eventually developed its dependence on deodorants and antiperspirants without Murphey and Young, but they certainly left their mark in the armpits of America, as did the heat of New Jersey’s summer of 1912.
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Comments (20)
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I'd suggest trying Lavilin! I do a lot of triathlons and usually train 5-6 days a week. I’m not a particularly smelly person, but given all the running, biking, and swimming I do, Lavilin works really effectively. It’s waterproof, so even though I swim 6 days a week and shower twice a day, the deodorant still lasts up to a week!
Posted by Catherine on April 30,2013 | 01:53 PM
Great article - thanks so much. James Webb Young is an interesting figure in advertising. I like in this case that he employed the still relatively young practice of market research to come up with the insight that drove Odorono's advertising copy. Young has been given credit for the development of the testimonial ad, the money-back guarantee and the coupon (but I have seen evidence of all three long before the 20th Century). I do like his attempt at articulating a creative process: 1. Immersion 2. Digestion 3. Incubation 4. Illumination 5. Reality or verification Thanks to the Smithsonian for sharing content such as this. Cheers
Posted by Jeff Swystun on November 20,2012 | 06:17 PM
One of the best inventions of the 20th century. I'm sure everybody has had a coworker with B.O. who gets all offended if someone mentions it. Also, the walking stink-bombs who cheerfully say they use it because they don't need it. The smell isn't caused by sweat, but it's the excretions and dead carcass' of bacteria which feed on the dead layers of skin and the nutrients which are present in the sweat. It's gross and while people may think it's "natural", which of course it is, it is a major turn off. Yes, even with a macro-biotic, tofu, raw vegetables diet, you still stink. The term, "Smelly Hippies" is true. I was there then and I know Deadheads who still won't get with the program.
Posted by Guglielmo Boogliodemus on August 23,2012 | 12:56 AM
I'd just like to point out that Japan doesn't really sell stick deodorant and you can tell with your nose when you're packed into the trains with everyone else. Don't know how stinky I am naturally, but would not give up my American products while I'm living here in Tokyo :)
Posted by Paul on August 21,2012 | 11:16 AM
Ms Campbell, you are wrong about breast cancer rates. It was known to exist for centuries, and not as a rarity. Did you not even see the miniseries about John Adams in which one of his blood kin received a primitive radical mastectomy because she had breast cancer? It wasn't that rare. As for the chemicals, there have been so many introduced in the world, blaming antiperspirant alone doesn't make much sense.
Posted by Brenda on August 20,2012 | 12:32 AM
"Yet 100 years later, the deodorant and antiperspirant industry is worth $18 billion." No, the industry isn't WORTH $18 billion. It COSTS $18 billion, a price paid by fools.
Posted by Sleeps With Cats on August 20,2012 | 09:44 PM
100 years ago when antiperspirants and deodorants were introduced, breast cancer was virtually unheard of Unfortunately, not true. Breast cancer may be one of the oldest known forms of cancerous tumors in humans. The oldest description of cancer was discovered in Egypt and dates back to approximately 1600 BC. The French surgeon Jean Louis Petit (1674–1750) and later the Scottish surgeon Benjamin Bell (1749–1806) were the first to remove the lymph nodes, breast tissue, and underlying chest muscle. Their successful work was carried on by William Stewart Halsted who started performing mastectomies in 1882. Prominent women who died of breast cancer include Empress Theodora, wife of Justinian; Anne of Austria, mother of Louis XIV of France; Mary Washington, mother of George http://www.news-medical.net/health/History-of-Breast-Cancer.aspx And for a very personal and harrowing account: http://newjacksonianblog.blogspot.com/2010/12/breast-cancer-in-1811-fanny-burneys.html
Posted by Susan811 on August 20,2012 | 08:16 PM
I have ridden crowded buses in less developed countries on hot days and not really noticed odor. If you notice people's odors, maybe you need a life.
Posted by Steve D on August 20,2012 | 07:47 PM
I prefer being odoriferous since a male is socially allowed to smell not-so-fresh and I revel in seldom being stuck in a lengthy line waiting for whatever. A few sniffs and those around me tend to disappear, akin to a reed sea opening wide to allow the passage of a lone chap.
Posted by Obbop on August 20,2012 | 07:43 PM
If people were dousing their "emerging stink with perfume", didn't they already believe they smelled bad?
Posted by Jamoche on August 14,2012 | 04:47 PM
"The advertisement caused shock waves in a 1919 society that still didn’t feel comfortable mentioning bodily fluids. Some 200 Ladies Home Journal readers were so insulted by the advertisement that they canceled their magazine subscription, Sivulka says." This suggestion that the reaction was simple prudery "because it was Victorian times" seems to go against the main thrust (and title) of this article, that the women *were* being manipulated and when you come right down to it, insulted. There is no need for these products in most clean people, with some exceptions of course. Maybe the women that are presented as being prudish really were insulted.
Posted by Isabel on August 12,2012 | 11:41 PM
The truly unforgivable advertising ploy? "Intimate" deodorants. Remember the ads? "That'not-so-fresh'feeling?" Preying upon womens'insecurities. For shame.
Posted by on August 12,2012 | 06:12 PM
To Anna, about the size of the advertisements: Use the zoom function on your browser. I did, they're worth the read. :)
Posted by just2say on August 11,2012 | 01:38 AM
Absolutely fascinating to read how the team went about creating the need for deodorants.
Posted by Anthony James on August 11,2012 | 01:35 PM
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