Alvin Achenbaum


Alvin Achenbaum was an advertising executive and marketing management consultant of the late 20th century. He was founder and president of the Achenbaum Institute of Marketing.

Early life and education

Achenbaum was born in 1925 in Bronx County, New York, the son of a dressmaker. He attended Taft High School and went on to earn a bachelor's degree in Business Economics from the University of California, Los Angeles and a master's degree in Business Economics from Columbia University. After school, he served as a Corporal in the Army Air Corps during World War II.

Career

From 1951 to 1974, Achenbaum held senior executive positions at four major advertising agencies in New York City: McCann Erickson, J. Walter Thompson, Grey Advertising, and Ted Bates, where he served as vice chairman, overseeing all professional services.

Marketing management consultant

Achenbaum served as chairman at a series of marketing management consultancies for 40 years, including Canter, Achenbaum and Associates, which he co-founded with longtime colleague Stanley Canter in 1974, and Achenbaum, Bogda Associates, which he formed with Pete Bogda in 1993. Some of these firms' clients included Procter and Gamble, GE, Nestle, Kraft, Honda, and the United States Department of Defense.
Achenbaum regularly spoke out about emerging trends and the future of advertising and marketing, challenging many of the accepted business practices of the day. He wrote weekly columns for Ad Age and Marketing Week in the 1980s. He generated considerable controversy by challenging the nature of the relationship between advertising agencies and their clients. His consulting work contributed to major changes in both the advertising agency selection process and the development of negotiated agency compensation agreements.
In addition to his work as a practitioner, Achenbaum was an adjunct professor of marketing at the . He also guest lectured at numerous universities, including New York University, Columbia University, and McGill. He was a member of the editorial board of many key professional organizations, including the Market Research Council and the American Marketing Association. Achenbaum is also the author of Lessons Learned: A Practitioner's Guide to Successful Marketing.

Achenbaum Institute of Marketing

In 2005, Achenbaum retired from management consulting and turned his efforts toward preparing aspiring marketing professionals and scholars. He founded the Achenbaum Institute of Marketing. In 2012, the Institute donated Achenbaum's professional papers to The John W. Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising & Marketing History at Duke University Libraries. The Hartman Center praised the collection as "one of the rare collections which covers the breadth of a person’s career, while also documenting the internal workings of a number of agencies and consulting firms."
The papers comprise over 80,000 items and contain approximately 100 linear feet of material, documenting over fifty years of Achenbaum's professional life.
In 2013, the Achenbaum Institute of Marketing established the Alvin A. Achenbaum Travel Grant Program, which sponsors travel for scholars of marketing, research and advertising to study at the Hartman Center. In 2013, the Institute published Lessons Learned: A Practitioner’s Guide to Successful Marketing, an instructional guide for students and marketers based on the business lessons Achenbaum learned during his long career.
In 1987, Achenbaum was elected to the Market Research Hall of Fame. In 2000, he was named one of the most influential advertising people of the 20th century by Advertising Age.

Personal life

Achenbaum has been married twice. In 1984, he married Barbara, a schoolteacher at Masters School in Dobbs Ferry, New York; they had three children, Jon Achenbaum, Lisa Achenbaum Kounitz and Martha Achenbaum Bratt. His second wife was Montreal-born Leila Auerbach Goldberg Lebendig who had four children from a previous marriage. He died on January 26, 2016; services were held at Riverside Memorial Chapel. He was buried at New Montefiore Cemetery in West Babylon, Suffolk County, New York.