Volkswagen's "Think Small" campaign, from powerhouse ad agency Doyle Dane Bernbach, revolutionized how corporations speak to consumers and gave voice to the public's growing dissatisfaction with the mass consumerism of the 1950s.
Where other car manufacturers blithely boasted of spoiler fins and other luxury features, Volkswagen focused on the utility of its smaller, more durable cars in a series of simple ads that openly acknowledged their purpose as a sales tool.
And while competitors made grandiose, unbelievable claims about how their products would transform customers' lives, Volkswagen's voice was personal and self-deprecating, calling one car a "lemon" because its glove compartment was blemished.
Soon after, advertisers began moving away from over-hyped sales pitches in favor of more playful campaigns that acknowledged consumer skepticism of advertising and presented consumption as a means of expressing individuality rather than fitting in.