Micael Dahlén

Micael Dahlén

Micael Dahlén, 2010
Born (1973-06-18) June 18, 1973
Stockholm
Occupation Professor at Stockholm School of Economics, author, speaker
Employer Stockholm School of Economics
Known for Professor at Stockholm School of Economics, author
Website www.micaeldahlen.com

Micael Dahlén (born 18 June 1973) is an author, public speaker and Professor of marketing and consumer behavior at the Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden. His award-winning research within marketing, creativity and consumer behavior has been published in four books and numerous journal articles.[1] Dahlén’s books have reached a global audience, rights being sold to countries such as the U.S, U.K, Germany, South Korea, Russia and Brazil.[2] In 2013 Dahlén stated in an interview that he was writing a novel.[3]

Academic career

Dahlén earned his Ph.D in 2001 from the Economic Research Institute at Stockholm School of Economics. Dahléns Ph.D thesis, “Marketing on the Web: empirical studies of advertising and promotion effectiveness”, challenged the traditional logic of Web advertising and suggested that Internet marketing could be much more effective if designed and evaluated differently.[4] As a researcher, Dahlén rose rapidly to take up a leading position in the field of consumer behavior, creativity and marketing. Only 34 years old he was made Professor. In the same year, 2008, Journal of Advertising ranked Dahlén as number 10 in the world among researchers within the field of advertising.[5] Dahlén has also established the full-semester specialization course called Marketing Communication XL at Stockholm School of Economics.[6]

Writing

Dahlén has written six books on diverse topics such as marketing, happiness, serial-killers and social media which have been translated into a number of languages.

Creativity Unlimited: Thinking Inside the Box for Business Innovations

Dahlén’s first public success was the book “Creativity Unlimited: Thinking Inside the Box for Business Innovations”, in which he book suggested that we do not need to ‘think outside the box’ in our quest for creativity, rather we should rethink the way we look ‘inside the box’.[7] The book was praised for “demystifying the process of creativity”.[8]

Nextopia

In the book “Nextopia” Dahlén states that we live in an expectation society, a society where we are constantly striving towards our next job, the next big thing, the next date. We are striving towards a Nextopia that holds the promise that our greatest pleasures and adventures lie ahead. With a set of ideas and theories about sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll as natural expressions of human nature, Dahlén explains how this change in society and human mind impacts companies’ and their ways of working, as well as how it impacts us as individuals.[9]

Monster

In his latest book “Monster” Dahlén chose a topic differing from his previous work: Serial-killers and the human fascination for evil. Dahlén travelled across the globe to interview famous murderers, such as Charles Manson and the Japanese cannibal Issei Sagawa. The goal was to answer the question of how killing another person can make someone an international superstar, admired by millions?[10] Dahlén also conducted several studies of his own on, i.e. how people perceive murderers and how many murders,[11] fictional or real, that a person is exposed to on an average day.[12] Dahlén also coined the term “Mansonomics” to describe how people, not only the murderers themselves, profit from these horrible acts.[13]

Bibliography

References

  1. "Author Profile: Micael Dahlén". Wiley.
  2. "Bibliography: Micael Dahlén". Micael Dahléns official website.
  3. "We'll no longer separate our private lives from our working lives". Fujitsu News.
  4. "Marketing on the Web: empirical studies of advertising and promotion effectiveness". Stockholm School of Economics.
  5. "Handelshögskolan i Stockholm ledande inom reklamforskning i Europa". IFL, Stockholm School of Economics.
  6. "What is XL?". MCXL.
  7. "Book description". Wiley.
  8. Trapp, Roger (November 4, 2008). "Book review: Creative thinking begins inside the box". London: The Independent.
  9. "What is Nextopia?". Nextopia.info.
  10. "Micael Dahlén Talks about his new book". Spectrum Books, video interview.
  11. "The Homicidol Effect: Investigating Murder as a Fitness Signal.". Micael Dahlén & Magnus Söderlund, The Journal of Social Psychology, Volume 152, Issue 2, 2012.
  12. "The "killer" ad: an assessment of advertising violence". Micael Dahlén & Magnus Söderlund, European Journal of Marketing.
  13. "Fascinerad av monster". ETC Magazine.

External links

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