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Consumer Management in the Internet Age

How Customers Became Managers in the Modern Workplace

Joshua Sperber

Consumer Management in the Internet Age: How Customers Became Managers in the Modern Workplace analyzes online consumer management, a practice in which customers monitor, report on, and—sometimes unwittingly—discipline workers through writing and posting online reviews. Based on case studies of the websites Yelp and Rate My Professors (RMP), Joshua Sperber analyzes how online reviewing, a popular contemporary hobby, tells us much about the collapse of the barriers separating work and leisure as well as our need for collective purpose and community wherever we can find it. This book explores the economic implications of online reviews, as reviews provide both valuable free content for websites and surveillance of, respectively, restaurant servers and college instructors.
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  • Reviews
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  • Features
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Lexington Books
Pages: 154 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-9221-5 • Hardback • February 2019 • $104.00 • (£80.00)
978-1-4985-9223-9 • Paperback • July 2021 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-9222-2 • eBook • February 2019 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
Subjects: Business & Economics / Business Communication / General, Language Arts & Disciplines / Communication Studies, Social Science / Media Studies
Joshua Sperber is assistant professor of political science and history at Averett University.
Introduction: We’re All Managers Now (and We’re Doing It for Free)

Chapter 1: How the Consumer Was Invented (and Is Being Reinvented): A Brief History of the Consumer

Chapter 2: Yelp: Working for Pleasure (and to Make Others Rich)

Chapter 3: Rate My Professors: A’s (and Debt) for Everyone!

Chapter 4: Conclusion
The consumer has been alternatively depicted as the sovereign of the market, the unwitting dupe of advertisers, and the heroic boycotter whose activism helped create democracy. In this splendid and original study, Joshua Sperber gives us the consumer as the disciplinary agent of modern capitalism. Combining eye-opening empirical investigations of Yelp and Rate My Professor with a sophisticated Marxist account of the gig economy, Sperber shows how the consumer is increasingly serving a managerial function in the economy. Whether through surveillance of workers, detailed internet surveys, and online ratings and reviews, the consumer is doing for free what managers were once paid to do. With a prose that is as powerful as it is plain, Sperber documents how critical the consumer is to production: not as a market of taste outside the production process, but as a disciplinary force within the production process.
— Corey Robin, Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center


Joshua Sperber’s Consumer Management in the Internet Age offers an insightful analysis of the ways that the Internet, specifically the websites Yelp and RateMyProfessors.com, conscripts diners and students into the project of employee management. Written in lively and engaging prose, Sperber draws historically deep and useful critiques of capitalism into this volatile and protean social terrain in order to show how the traditionally hierarchical relationship between management and labor seems to have been destabilized but is, in fact, being reproduced.
— Joe Rollins, The Graduate Center, CUNY


Joshua Sperber has made an important contribution in this research monograph to our understanding of prosumers by making it clear that their power (on Yelp and Rate My Professor) has grown online; they become not only consumers and producers, but also managers.
— George Ritzer, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of Maryland, Author of The McDonaldization of Society


5/5/19, Salon: Read the feature "Yelp is turning customers into managers" by "Consumer Management in the Internet Age" author Joshua Sperber. Link: https://www.salon.com/2019/05/05/yelp-is-turning-customers-into-managers/

Consumer Management in the Internet Age

How Customers Became Managers in the Modern Workplace

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Consumer Management in the Internet Age: How Customers Became Managers in the Modern Workplace analyzes online consumer management, a practice in which customers monitor, report on, and—sometimes unwittingly—discipline workers through writing and posting online reviews. Based on case studies of the websites Yelp and Rate My Professors (RMP), Joshua Sperber analyzes how online reviewing, a popular contemporary hobby, tells us much about the collapse of the barriers separating work and leisure as well as our need for collective purpose and community wherever we can find it. This book explores the economic implications of online reviews, as reviews provide both valuable free content for websites and surveillance of, respectively, restaurant servers and college instructors.
Details
Details
  • Lexington Books
    Pages: 154 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9
    978-1-4985-9221-5 • Hardback • February 2019 • $104.00 • (£80.00)
    978-1-4985-9223-9 • Paperback • July 2021 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
    978-1-4985-9222-2 • eBook • February 2019 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
    Subjects: Business & Economics / Business Communication / General, Language Arts & Disciplines / Communication Studies, Social Science / Media Studies
Author
Author
  • Joshua Sperber is assistant professor of political science and history at Averett University.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Introduction: We’re All Managers Now (and We’re Doing It for Free)

    Chapter 1: How the Consumer Was Invented (and Is Being Reinvented): A Brief History of the Consumer

    Chapter 2: Yelp: Working for Pleasure (and to Make Others Rich)

    Chapter 3: Rate My Professors: A’s (and Debt) for Everyone!

    Chapter 4: Conclusion
Reviews
Reviews
  • The consumer has been alternatively depicted as the sovereign of the market, the unwitting dupe of advertisers, and the heroic boycotter whose activism helped create democracy. In this splendid and original study, Joshua Sperber gives us the consumer as the disciplinary agent of modern capitalism. Combining eye-opening empirical investigations of Yelp and Rate My Professor with a sophisticated Marxist account of the gig economy, Sperber shows how the consumer is increasingly serving a managerial function in the economy. Whether through surveillance of workers, detailed internet surveys, and online ratings and reviews, the consumer is doing for free what managers were once paid to do. With a prose that is as powerful as it is plain, Sperber documents how critical the consumer is to production: not as a market of taste outside the production process, but as a disciplinary force within the production process.
    — Corey Robin, Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center


    Joshua Sperber’s Consumer Management in the Internet Age offers an insightful analysis of the ways that the Internet, specifically the websites Yelp and RateMyProfessors.com, conscripts diners and students into the project of employee management. Written in lively and engaging prose, Sperber draws historically deep and useful critiques of capitalism into this volatile and protean social terrain in order to show how the traditionally hierarchical relationship between management and labor seems to have been destabilized but is, in fact, being reproduced.
    — Joe Rollins, The Graduate Center, CUNY


    Joshua Sperber has made an important contribution in this research monograph to our understanding of prosumers by making it clear that their power (on Yelp and Rate My Professor) has grown online; they become not only consumers and producers, but also managers.
    — George Ritzer, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of Maryland, Author of The McDonaldization of Society


Features
Features
  • 5/5/19, Salon: Read the feature "Yelp is turning customers into managers" by "Consumer Management in the Internet Age" author Joshua Sperber. Link: https://www.salon.com/2019/05/05/yelp-is-turning-customers-into-managers/

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