from the library
Table of Contents
Introduction 1 (14)
1 Housequake
15 (10)
2 Don't Phunk with My Hearth
25 (10)
3 Let Us Spray
35 (8)
4 Nice Work If You Can Get It
43 (10)
5 We Can Work It Out
53 (8)
6 To Love, Honor, and Maintain
61 (10)
7 Should I Stay or Should I Go?
71 (18)
8 The Female, Unplugged
89 (14)
9 Women and Sin
103 (14)
10 The Empress's New Clothes
117 (12)
11 C'mon a My Mall
129 (12)
12 Higher Ground
141 (14)
13 Drugstores
155 (10)
14 See Me, Touch Me, Feel Me, Heal Me
165 (14)
15 Almost Cut My Hair
179 (8)
16 Off the Wall
187 (10)
Author's Note 197 (8)
Bibliography/Suggested Reading 205 (2)
Acknowledgments 207 (1)
Index 208
Booklist Reviews
Despite continued pay inequities, in 2005 young women under 30 earned more than men for the first time in U.S. history, signaling greater influence in the consumer market. Underhill, founder of Envirosell, Inc., marketer to major retailers, draws on market research and personal observations to detail the ways that women are influencing design, marketing, and service in industries from car manufacturing to architecture to banking. What do women want? Cleanliness, control, safety, and consideration. Women are behind the growth in the health-food industry, new urbanist communities that offer the geographic closeness of cities and the safety of suburbia, and contemporary kitchens with open plans and appliances geared toward convenience. Underhill notes that trends continue to favor the influence of women with the reduction of the manufacturing sector that needs muscle, greater control over women's reproductive lives, and an education system that suits girls more than boys. Underhill offers good insights, though his tone seems a bit off sometimes, and female readers are likely to wonder how the same material might have yielded different insights from a woman writer. Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
It may still be a world "owned by men, designed by men, and managed by men," but sales guru Underhill (Why We Buy) argues that companies which fail to recognize women's purchasing power will miss out on the consumer bonanza of the future. In this lively study, the author traces how middle-class women's entrance into the workplace has reshaped everything from demand to design and reveals the future implications for consumer behavior as women of all classes outpace their male counterparts in college attendance. In a friendly, conversational style, Underhill discloses how the business landscape is being transformed to be safer, more accessible, and attuned to women's wants such as houses that are designed with bigger, more open kitchens that can serve as "the unofficial domestic control center of a contemporary home." Underhill's conception of the female consumer is outmoded at times (larger bathrooms in houses are supposed to serve as the "penultimate inner sanctum [for] today's frazzled female"), but he makes a compelling argument that a failure to cater to women consumers with products, services, environments, and customer experiences that meet their expectations is just "bad business." (July) Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.