Note: I wrote this post some time ago back in 2011. The original post has since disappeared, so I thought I’d republish it here, along with a string of interesting comments on the original post.
While writing Social Marketology, my new book on social media marketing, I get fixated on a particular fact and spend countless hours researching. One fact that has consumed more of my time than any other is the idea that a guy named Elias St. Elmo Lewis invented an oft-cited marketing concept of AIDA (acronym for “attention, interest, desire, action”). AIDA is often part and parcel of something called the customer funnel, sales funnel, and marketing funnel. Derrick White, in his 2000 book “Close More Sales,” wrote “AIDA is probably the oldest acronym in marketing. It is the best and will never change.”
Who Really Created AIDA?
Yes, and this is an interesting point: the fact that St. Elmo Lewis created the concept is cited in dozens of marketing books and hundreds upon hundreds of websites. Problem: I can’t find any original source to validate this.
In Advertising, Selling, and Credits by Ralph Starr Butler, 1911, The four steps are the subject of a whole chapter, and says “Mr. A. F. Sheldon was probably the first to point out the presence of these four steps in every sale” Mr. A.F. Sheldon was the founder of the Sheldon School of Scientific Salesmanship.
It turns out I haven’t been the first person to spend too much time on this concept. Author Ian Moore, in Does Your Marketing Sell (2005), added an item in the appendix titled, “The origins of AIDA.” He demonstrates how Strong wasn’t using the acronym, but cited Lewis. And then Strong was then cited by none other than the famous business author Philip Kotler as the author of the AIDA concept.
But Strong had written “The development of the famous slogan – ‘attention, interest, desire, action, and satisfaction’ – illustrates this. In 1898 E. St. Elmo Lewis used the slogan, ‘Attract attention, maintain interest, create deire,’ in a course he was giving on advertising in Philadelphia. He writes he obtained the idea from reading the psychology of William James. Later on he added the formula, ‘get action.’ About 1907, A.F. Sheldon made the further addition of ‘permanent satisfaction’ as essential to the slogan.”
Now, first off, many of the citations of Lewis state that he came up with AIDA in 1898 while working at the National Cash Register Company – an organization that really was probably one of the most advanced companies in sales process. Only Lewis didn’t work there until 1902, and only seemed to have remained there until 1904. Prior to that, he was a publisher of various artsy periodicals back in Philadelphia.
Lewis was a brilliant thinker, and wrote a few books, countless articles, and gave talks at Rotary Clubs, Chambers, and other organizations all over the Northeast. Thanks to Google Books, I’ve been able to dig into many of them, and I’ve yet to come across a mention of the old “attention, interest, desire” triad. He was an appreciator of the Efficiency Movement, and did work to bring the philosophy of scientific management to salesmanship and advertising. I haven’t found anything, though, to suggest that Lewis was the originator of the concept.
So, who did?
The earliest version of marketing AIDA I’ve found is this:

Attention. Interest. Desire. Conviction. A diagram showing that every sale is offset by attention, interest, desire, and conviction. From Frank Hutchinson Dukesmith, editor of 1904 Salesmanship
Over and over in this magazine from 1904, they mention these steps. “A sale of any kind has four essential parts: Attention, Interest, Desire, and Conviction. Take these in their proper order. Do not mistake polite attention for interest and do not assume when a desire for possession is aroused that conviction has been reached. In loss of sales it is as disastrous as to not close the sale when conviction is reached.”

Frank Hutchinson Dukesmith authored the pieces above. His other claim to fame was that he also edited “The Air Brake Magazine,” dedicated to railroad air brakes. He also authored a book, “The air brake, its use and abuse: a book of instruction on the automatic air brake.” And as you might know, air brakes were how George Westinghouse made his fortune! Dukesmith held many patents for his inventions to the technology of air brakes.
Perhaps Dukesmith took a course being taught by St. Elmo Lewis. Or perhaps St. Elmo Lewis read Dukesmith’s article (he also wrote a book Salesmanship analyzed;: Being an analytical treatise on the science of salesmanship demonstrated by diagramatic charts). At any rate, his patents for air brakes must not have been lucrative, as by 1910, Dukesmith had created the “Dukesmith School of Salesmanship” in Meadville, PA.

Another passage:
It is not to be supposed that every sale will be landed in one, two, three order, for many will be lost, but an understanding of the science of salesmanship, with correct practice in the art of selling, will tend to cut down the number of lost sales. The science of medicine does not eliminate disease. But it diminishes its ravages.

In the specialty field where, as shown, the divisions are more clearly marked, the salesman himself has more opportunity to arrange and prepare himself in advance. Nevertheless, the same principles apply to every sale, and even a newsboy on the street must obtain attention, arouse interest, and create desire before he makes the sale of a paper.

To still further illustrate this same principle of four parts to the sale we may regard the putting together of the four iron vessels (here pictured), as representing the sale or transaction. We assume that it would be impossible for the salesman to carry away the four pots separately and that to make them movable he must place them compactly together. There is but one way in which the pots can be properly put together, and that is by placing inside the largest the next smaller, and so on, whereby all are compactly arranged and can be easily carried away. The pots must be put one within the other in proper order, by taking at each operation the one next smaller; otherwise, one of the two intermediate sizes is left out, for they cannot be all put together except in regular order. You cannot complete your sale by leaving out the factor of interest5, nor can you produce conviction and close the sale until the customer has arrived at the stage of desire to possess the goods.
Frank Hutchinson Dukesmith and Marketing AIDA
Frank Hutchinson Dukesmith has pretty much been forgotten by history, and yet, it appears he was the author of one of the most enduring concepts, still taught today in business schools around the world. He was certainly the first to publish the concept, while St. Elmo Lewis’ claim is second-hand, and came 20 years after Dukesmith published. You might wonder why anyone should care – yet if simple errors like this can become re-cited thousands of times over, it emphasizes the notion that writers have an obligation to recheck facts, and find original source material whenever possible.
By the way, the first published use of the AIDA acronym is from 1921, in Printers Ink, “How to Write a Sales-Making Letter” by C.P. Russell:
An easy way to remember this formula is to call in the “law of association,” which is the old reliable among memory aids. It is to be noted that, reading downward, the first letters of these words spell the opera “Aida.” When you start a letter, then, say “Aida” to yourself and you won’t go far wrong, at least as far as the form of your letter is concerned.
The idea of a “customer funnel,” “marketing funnel,” or “sales funnel” in association with the AIDA concept was first proposed in Pharmaceutical Selling, “detailing,” and sales training by Arthur F. Peterson, Heathcote-Woodbridge, 1959.
I think I can lay this to bed now, and get back to the book!
11 Comments
19DecemberShopSugartownSo…it wasn’t Donald Draper?REPLY
27DecemberRicDragon@ShopSugartown No; Do always stopped at attracting Interest 🙂 Can’t wait for the next season! One great thing about Madmen is the amount of marketing history that they are able to stick into the show – the whole psychographics thing, for instance.REPLY
27DecemberFuglemanAbsolutely fascinating.I too have been on this absurd AIDA journey but failed to find Mr Dukesmith. I got stuck with E K Strong’s assertion that Lewis had used the slogan ‘Attract attention, Maintain Interest, Create desire’ in a course he was giving in advertising’ just as you say. But Strong also states that Lewis ‘WRITES that he obtained the idea from reading the psychology of William James’. Sadly, like you, I have never found anything written by Lewis to support this. [Note: from what I’ve seen, Strong doesn’t say that Lewis worked at NCR at this time, but over the years maybe others have.]The diagrams and other materials that you show from Dukesmith are really interesting. Could you help a little further with either a more detailed reference to the publications in which you found them, or better still, tell us where and how we could track them down.Great work. Thanks for sharing…REPLY
27DecemberRicDragon@Fugleman Yes! The publication was Salesmanship, from 1904, and is available in full from Google Books. It’s kind of amazing the information I’ve found through Google Books – time after time I’ve found earlier references to words than even mentioned in the OED. Someone added a reference to the Wikipedia article on AIDA that has a 1903 citation by Lewis, “The mission of an advertisement is to attract a reader, so that he will look at the advertisement and start to read it; then to interest him, so that he will continue to read it; then to convince him, so that when he has read it he will believe it. If an advertisement contains these three qualities of success, it is a successful advertisement.”REPLY
09JanuaryFuglemanHello again Ric,Just wanted to ask where you got the reference to Peterson as the originator of an AIDA-based sales funnel? I would have thought that the origins of this model would have gone back further in time. And have you also managed to turn-up the origins of the sales pipeline?Very many thanks once again.REPLY
10JanuaryRicDragon@Fugleman I think what I did was a lot of intensive searching in Google Books – which has been a treasure trove of research. By using certain phrases and limiting the time period, I could nail down when a concept first appeared on the scene. For instance, if you search on the phrase “sales pipeline” from 1900 to 1950, only one citation appears. Unfortunately, the actual text for this book isn’t shown, so you’d have to use a library perhaps…(Sales management, Volume 55, Publisher:Dartnell Corp, 1945)BTW: Dartnell was founded by J. C. Aspley – who had been a contributor to Printers’ Ink – in 1917, as a sales research organization. Would love to dig into that!REPLY
10JanuaryRicDragon@Fugleman btw; that should read, “only one citation for ‘sales pipeline’”.REPLY
10JanuaryFuglemanThanks Ric,I’ve bumped into Dartnell and Mr Apsley a few times in my many hours of idle ‘research’ and have a few copies of various books and pamphlets of theirs. Sadly, as you suggest, it looks as if the hard copy of Sales Management from 1945 isn’t available online. From what I’ve seen, it can be found in the University of Michigan. As I’m based in the UK, that might be a trip too far…As for Mr Peterson’s book, I actually have a copy of that one, but it was published in 1949, not 1959 as Google Books says [a typo I suppose]. Nice little drawing of a funnel, though.And one last shot at AIDA. Our friend, Elias St Elmo Lewis wrote a column for The Western Druggist in February 1899 where he said [on Page 66] that: “An advertisement should conform to three general rules in its preparation: 1st to catch the eye of the reader; 2nd, to inform him; 3rd, to make a customer of him”. Lewis goes on to attribute this to Robert Ogden of Wanamaker [the Department Store]. It’s not quite Awareness, Interest, Desire, but pretty close.Anyhow, on further checking, Ogden gave [at least] a couple of talks on advertising in 1898 – one in March at the Merchants’ Association [on ‘Advertising As A Business Force’] and another in April at The Sphinx Club [on ‘Art in Advertising’]. Unfortunately, all I have is a couple of cuttings from the NYT telling me this – as far as I can tell, there are no transcripts.So, did Lewis hear Ogden in 1898, or did he speak at the same meetings? If so, maybe E K Strong was right about 1898. If not, then who the heck knows. But somehow this still gnaws away at me – I would actually like to go in my time machine to hear someone utter these words on a specific date and time to know the exact birthday of AID or AIDA. Stupid.Now, where’s that day job of mine got to…REPLY
04JanuaryDavid Hutton@FuglemanClearly you guys have researched the AIDA model to a phenomenal level, I am writing a masters paper and wish to reference the origin of the model, from reading through your conversation this is not obvious when this was or who is responsible, my question to you both is, who and when is responsible for the AIDA model? Many thanks.REPLY
06JanuaryRic Dragon (@RicDragon)Hi David; Well.. as we discussed, it isn’t clear… there are those early mentions that are close; but then there is the formalization of the concept in later writing. It’s vague and unclear 🙂 Good luck with the paper – would love to read it when you’re done.REPLY
10MayGeert Gissing / DenmarkThank you! Fantastic piece of Work you have done. Love reading that kind of old books my self.
Something could have been lost there, due to fast-thinking mediocre sale-Guys?
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