Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Multicultural Ad Spending Declines in 2009, but Less than General Market



Spending on Spanish Language and African-American media declined 4.7% and 7.3%, respectively, in 2009, according to figures released today by The Nielsen Company. The declines are consistent with the trend in overall advertising, although the drops aren’t as deep. Last month, Nielsen reported that ad spending fell nine percent in 2009, despite significant increases in Cable TV.
Spanish Language Ad Spending
Nielsen found that Spanish Language advertising was down 4.7% in the U.S. last year. A total of $5.4 billion was spent on all Spanish Language media in 2009, down almost $270 million from the previous year. The slide was paced by significant declines in National Magazine and Local Newspaper advertising, which were down 38% and 25%, respectively.
The decreases in print media were offset by a 32% increase in Spanish Language Cable advertising. Nielsen found that 19 of the top 20 advertisers in the medium increased their ad spends year over year.
Spot TV was the top cash generator for Spanish Language media in 2009 with an estimated $1.4 billion in ad sales, down 10% compared to the previous year.
Spanish Language Media
Media Type2008-$ (000)2009-$ (000)% Change
Local Magazine988.20.0-100.0%
Local Newspaper103,144.677,059.5-25.3%
National Magazine182,096.7112,558.7-38.2%
Spanish Language Cable TV323,065.0426,959.432.2%
Spanish Language Network TV2,982,158.32,866,092.5-3.9%
Spot Radio567,233.9562,481.3-0.8%
Spot TV1,559,307.81,402,754.4-10.0%
Total5,717,994.55,447,905.7-4.7%
Source: The Nielsen Company

Mobile Marketing Popularity Rapidly Grows


Mobile marketing is steadily progressing toward much greater significance, according to [pdf] a new study from marketing technology provider Unica.
One-Third of Marketers are Mobile
When asked if their company currently uses or plans to use mobile marketing tactics, such as mobile messaging, applications and/or websites, 33% said their company currently uses these tactics. Another 24% said their company plans to use mobile tactics within the next 12 months, and 13% said they will use mobile tactics in more than the next 12 months.
unica-usage-mobile-marketing-mar-2010.jpg
Only 20% said their company has no plans to use mobile marketing tactics, and another 10% don’t know. This means the combined percentage of respondents whose companies definitely or possibly will not use mobile marketing tactics (30%) is smaller than the percentages of respondents who currently use them (33%) or will use them within the next 12 months or longer (a combined 37%).
Broken down by region, more European respondents said their company currently uses mobile marketing tactics (37%) than North American respondents (29%), reflecting Europe’s more advanced and entrenched mobile infrastructure.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

The New News Landscape: Rise of the Internet


Summary of Findings

In the digital era, news has become omnipresent. Americans access it in multiple formats on multiple platforms on myriad devices. The days of loyalty to a particular news organization on a particular piece of technology in a particular form are gone. The overwhelming majority of Americans (92%) use multiple platforms to get news on a typical day, including national TV, local TV, the internet, local newspapers, radio and national newspapers. Some 46% of Americans say they get news from four to six media platforms on a typical day. Just 7% get their news from a single media platform on a typical day.
The internet is at the center of the story of how people's relationship to news is changing. Six in ten Americans (59%) get news from a combination of online and offline sources on a typical day, and the internet is now the third most popular news platform, behind local television news and national television news.
The process Americans use to get news is based on foraging and opportunism. They seem to access news when the spirit moves them or they have a chance to check up on headlines. At the same time, gathering the news is not entirely an open-ended exploration for consumers, even online where there are limitless possibilities for exploring news. While online, most people say they use between two and five online news sources and 65% say they do not have a single favorite website for news. Some 21% say they routinely rely on just one site for their news and information.
In this new multi-platform media environment, people's relationship to news is becoming portable, personalized and participatory. These new metrics stand out:
  • Portable: 33% of cell phone owners now access news on their cell phones.
  • Personalized: 28% of internet users have customized their home page to include news from sources and on topics that particularly interest them.
  • Participatory: 37% of internet users have contributed to the creation of news, commented about it, or disseminated it via postings on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter.
To a great extent, people's experience of news, especially on the internet, is becoming a shared social experience as people swap links in emails, post news stories on their social networking site feeds, highlight news stories in their Tweets and haggle over the meaning of events in discussion threads. For instance, more than 8 in 10 online news consumers get or share links in emails.

Friday, March 12, 2010

U.S. Demographics are Changing… Are Your Marketing Plans Ready?

If you live in the U.S., you’re starting to hear more and more about the upcoming census. Even before we get data back from the country-wide headcount, we know that America’s demographic profile is undergoing major changes. By 2050, more than half of the U.S. population will be non-white (African-American, Asian, Hispanic). This dynamic growth represents not only significant cultural shifts, but also one of the more remarkable marketing opportunities in history. By that same 2050 milestone, the economic opportunity for brands in the multicultural CPG space is projected to exceed $500B.

multi-cultural-growth

Being able to keep pace with these increasingly diverse and demanding segments will require marketers to have a detailed view of what ethnic households buy as well as how they consumer media across TV, Internet and Mobile. When compared against the general population, minority households tend to over-index on some key shopping and media metrics.

Topline Multicultural Buying Insights

When compared to the general population, on average…

Hispanic Shoppers

  • Tend to spend more on categories for babies and children — (Hispanic households represent 11.8% of CPG total spending, but 16.6% of disposable diaper sales.)
  • Tend to spend more in traditional mass merchandise and warehouse clubs
  • Tend to spend more on food consumed at home

African American Shoppers

  • Tend to spend more on health and beauty products, like fragrance (African Americans represent 11.0% of CPG total spending, but 20.3% of dollars spent in beauty supply stores.)
  • Tend to spend more in drug and dollar stores
  • Tend to spend more on ingredients used to cook from scratch
  • Tend to buy fewer items on deals or with coupons
  • Tend to spend more on food consumed at home

Asian American Shoppers

  • Tend to spend more in club stores (Asian Americans represent 3.0% of CPG total spending, but 5.5% of dollars spent in warehouse clubs.)
  • Tend to spend more on categories for babies and children
  • Are more likely to eat outside of the home

Topline Multicultural Media Insights

Hispanic Media Consumers

  • Strong following of Telenovelas
  • On average, watch more broadcast and satellite TV
  • Display higher usage of mobile internet

African American Media Consumers

  • Have the highest TV usage of any demographic at nearly 80 hours a week per household
  • Have a higher percentage of multi-set households
  • Display higher usage of mobile internet

Asian American Media Consumers

  • More likely to have newer technology (DVD, HD, Digital Cable)
  • Tend to watch less TV


While each group has many layers of cultural, economic and social diversity within, these broader trends are worth noting, and planning for, if marketers are to meet the needs of their fastest growing consumer base.



U.S. Demographics are Changing… Are Your Marketing Plans Ready? | Nielsen Wire

Monday, March 8, 2010

Meet the Boomers

As a follow up on a recent Research Brief about Millenials, here's an appropriate analysis of the Boomers, an earlief generation, according to Dr. Bob Deutsch of marketing firm Brain Sells. The Baby Boom generation is classified as people born between 1946 and 1964, meaning the oldest Baby Boomers turn 65 in 2011. Boomers are still vital and evolving even as they approach retirement age, concludes the report.

In the US alone, more than 3.5 million babies were born in 1946. Our conception of Seniors, what Boomers soon will be, is highly stereotyped, says the report. Baby Boomers can be labeled Pragmatic Idealists. As a demographic they are a glass-half-full group. They feel they can make things the way they want them to be, or at least engage with the forces at work to tilt the odds 51% in their favor. Even in our constrained economy, Baby Boomers still seek, and assume, growth, all the while acknowledging new limitations in resources.

Deutsch says understanding the following three basic life structures is critical to capturing the Boomer market:

  • The developmental history of Boomers casts them as characters that possess a self-expansive nature primarily devoid of cynicism. The Baby Boom generation embodies a vitality that makes them survivors, even if they can't always be thrivers.
  • As Boomers age, home range will become more important, and getting settled in new spaces, such as a smaller, closer-to-town abode or a move to a warmer climate, will require adaptation to new interpersonal and larger social arrangements. In addition, Boomers will develop requirements for new types of mundane services, particularly in the domains of finance, healthcare, and personal care.
  • As people age their nostalgic yearnings grow, says Deutsch, making them more receptive to advertisers and marketers use of what researchers call a "longing for positive memories of the past." Moreover, nostalgia can make Boomers feel that not so much time has passed between then and now, making them feel young again. Nostalgia should be considered as one marketing aesthetic to attract Boomers.

According to thereport, In interviews Boomers say things like:

  • "We now have more responsibility... "
  • "Anger, in the long run, just hurts you."
  • "Maybe ‘now' is an opportunity... to re-evaluate who you are and where you are going."

In sharp contrast, Gen-Xer's are losing hope in the ties that bind hard work to success, says Deutsch. They see their future as "closing." This mentality foreshortens their vision of themselves, others, and the world. Their orientation, about almost everything, is defensive:

  • "Money makes the world go around. Now I have less money. Now I have less hope." "I feel better when I see someone worse off than me."
  • "I gotta fight for everything, and I don't have a lot."
  • "What's the point?"

Key Boomer attitudes and perceptions that are important for marketers, says Deutsch:

  • Boomers are at a time in life when they really don't want to compromise their authenticity.
  • For Boomers, process is at least as important as the end result. They want "the ride"
  • Boomers like to inspire others. Help them feel helpful
  • Boomers have been around long enough to know there are few absolutes, little is black or white
  • Accentuate personal style over rote action or blind ritual
  • Boomers are oriented to the human dimension, that's the only real thing. They can see the humor in most situations
  • What Boomers really dislike is felling put upon by arbitrary power, feeling trapped, conned, boxed-in, and being thought of as one of the masses
  • Boomers are both creative and conservative ("A beautiful garden is wild and tended")
  • Boomers go for what gives voice to things they are thinking and feeling, but haven't fully worked out yet
  • Boomers respond to what stands out by its presence, not its loudness. What shows them it really listens and, therefore, understands

And, according to trendwatching.com in its recent list of Top 10 Consumer Trends for 2010 reported by Marketing Charts, several general societal trends closely match with Boomer trends. These include a need for companies to be transparent and honest about their efforts to conduct environmentally sustainable business practices and genuinely collaborate with their customers rather than try to dictate to them. In addition, consumers are increasingly using social networks as part of everyday life and respond well to products and services which have a charitable component.

Meet the Boomers