CONSUMER BEHAVIOR AND MARKETING STRATEGY
by
J. Paul Peter & Jerry C. Olson
Fifth Edition
Irwin McGrawhill Companies
Copyright 1999
United States
Wooing
the Aging Baby Boomers
The 77 million so-called
baby boomers (Americans born between 1946 and 1964) have become middle-aged.
This large group will continue to have a disproportionate effect on the culture
and economy of the United States, probably even more than they did when they
were teenagers and young adults. For instance, by b1997 the 35 to 50 age group
increased by 26 percent over 1987 and earned an awesome $195 billion. This
group became the nation’s biggest spenders. In contrast, the number of
consumers in the 25 to 34 age group fell
by 9 percent and dropped $67 billion in purchasing power.
Many marketers have not
understood or appreciated middle-aged consumers. But they become too large a
market for most companies to large. Advertisers must learn how to appeal to
these older and more mature consumers. The old approaches of portraying baby
boomers as a young and energetic bunch of jeans-wearing, granola eating,
rock-music, listening kids won’t work anymore.
Perhaps part of the
reason Madison Avenue was late in responding to the aging trend is that many of
people making crative advertising decisions are themselves pushing 40 and are
not happy about it. The persuasive anxiety that many Americans have about growing
older is a major impediment to creating attractive, imaginative advertising for
the not so young. As one advertising executive put it, “Advertisers feel that
youth is sexy and glamorous, old age is humorous and middle age is dreary,”This
nation had to change and fast.
Peoples’ values and
goals tend to change as they age. “Younger people like competition, showing
off, looking good. Older boomers are starting to care about comfort,
convinience and financial security..”
Advertisers will have
to overcome their obsession with youth and create acceptable mature images that
fit the self-concepts, goals, and values of not so young consumers.
By the mid 1990s, many
companies were getting the idea. For instance, Clinique Laboratories (marketer
of cosmetics) stopped routinely retouching photos of its models to remove
wrinkles Quaker Oats replaced paunchy Wilford Brimley as brand spokerperson with
“George,” a 60 something, balding model working out in a muscle T-shirt, Saks Fifth Avenue began using attractive, silver haired models who were 50-plus, rather than the 20 year olds that used to fill its catalogs. Maturity grew in popularity as concepts such as wisdom and perspective became more important to aging baby boomers.
“George,” a 60 something, balding model working out in a muscle T-shirt, Saks Fifth Avenue began using attractive, silver haired models who were 50-plus, rather than the 20 year olds that used to fill its catalogs. Maturity grew in popularity as concepts such as wisdom and perspective became more important to aging baby boomers.
Levi Strauss is one
company that has followed the baby boomers for three decades. It must continue
to change with its market. To promote its popular Dockers line of causal slacks,
it showed a group of 40 ish men sitting around and jockingly reminiscing about
the good old days. The product was not mentioned until the conclusion.
According to a Levi’s
executive, “Real people don’t sit around and talk about the brand of clothing they’re
waering” The pants were already a hit, but sales accelerated after these ads
were already a hit, but sales accelerated after these ads were shown.
In the mid 1990s
marketing to the 35 to 50 year old consumer was a strong trend, as marketers
caught up to the changes in an American subculture.
Source:
Faye
Rice, “Wooing Aging Baby-Boomers, “ Fortune,
February 1, 1988, pp.67-77. Copyright Time Inc. All rights reserved . Susan
B. Garland, “Those Aging Boomers,” Business
Week, May 20, 1991, pp.106-12; Lisa Gubernick and Luisa Kroll, “Gray Hair
is Cool, “Forbes, May 6, 1996, p.
116.
This example
illustrates the marketing importance of a major subculture in the United States
(and many other countries, too) and how changing demographic characteristics
can be important to marketers. In this chapter we discuss two aspects of the
macro social environment subcultures and social class. In chapter 11 you
learned that culture, subculture, and social class, are three levels of the
macro social environment. The size of these social groups is a key distinction.
Culture usually is
analyzed at the level of a country or an entire society, subcultures, are
segments of the society. Social class can be considered a special subculture
defined in terms of social status. Subcultures and social classes are cultural
groups in that their members share common cultural meanings, however, both are
part of the larger society and thus are influenced by the overall culture.
Thus, we would not expect middle-class Americans. Social class and subcultures
are useful for segmenting markets, understanding the shared cultural meanings
of large groups of consumers and developing targeted marketing strategies.
We begin the chapter by
discussing the concept of subcultures. Next we describe several important
subcultures found in the United States (and elsewhere in the world) and draw
implications for marketing strategy. Then we discuss the concept of social
class by describing the social class structure of U.S. society.
Subcultures
Subcultures
are
distinctive groups of paople in a society that share common cultural meanings
for affective and cognitive responses (emotional reactions, beliefs, values and
goals), behaviors (customs, scripts, and rituals, behavioral norms) and
environmental factors (living conditions, geographic location, important
objects). Although most subcultures share some cultural meanings with overall
society and/or other subcultures, some of a subculture’s meanings must be
unique and distinctive Highlight 13.1 describes a distinctive subculture.
Highlight
13.1
A
Hidden Subculture
Although the gay
subculture has great demographics, some companies have been reluctant to target
the estimated 20 million homosexuals in the United States. Gay consumers tend
to be younger, more afluent and better educated than average American creating
a $382 billion market. A 1988 survey of readers of the eight leading gay
newspaper found that the average income in gay households was $ 55,400 compared
to the national average of $32,100. (A different survey found median incomes 0f
$42,000 for gay households and $39,000 for lesbian households.) Nearly 60
percent of these of homosexual readers were college graduates, compared to the
national average of 18 percent. Some 49 percent were in professional or
managerial jobs (compared to 16 percent of the general population), 27 percent were
frequent flyers (1.0 percent of the general population) and 66 percent went
overseas in 1987 (14 percent of the general population).
Despite their
attractive demographic characteristics, companies worry about marketing
directly to gays. Part of the problem is lack of information about this subculture.
Identifying members of the gay subculture can be difficult, and measuring the
market potential is a challenge. Marketing research can help companies learn
about the gay culture, and some companies have hired research firms staffed
with gay researchers to help interpret important aspects of the culture.
Another reason for
reluctant marketing is the fear of having a brand labeled “gray brand.”
Targeting gays involves risks for companies, including controversy and possible
backlash from homophobic consumers. However, some advertisers that target gays
have done well. For instance, Remy Martin, the only cognac that regularly
advertises in the gay press, is the number five brand nationally and number one
in the gay community.
A final problem is the
lack of media such as general interest magazines (that do not contain
classified personal ads) to effectively reach gays. One magazine begun in 1991.
Genre, won’t accept such ads and has picked up several
national advertisers including Atlantic Records and Prentice-Hall, a publisher.
Despite reservations, many
companies such as MCl, Miller beer, American Express and Perrier have begun
targeting gay consumers with ads in gay magazines. The furniture retailer IKEA
is thought to have aired the first mainstream TV ad (in 1994) to foature a gay
relationship. The commercial showed a 30 something couple taking about their
dining room table. The ad was similar to other ads in tha campaign; the
difference was that both people were men. IKEA said the ad was an attempt to
include gay consumers in their customer mix..
Even IBM placed ads in
the gay media in 1996 announcing that it was extending health benefits to long
term employees with gay or lesbian partners.
Source:
Cydee
Miller, “Gays Are Affluent but Often Overlooked Market, “Marketing News, December
24, 1990, p.2; Joan E. Rigdon, “Overcoming a Deep-Rooted Reluctance, More Firms
Advertise to Gay Community, “The Wall
Street Journal, July18, 1991, pp. B1, B8; Cyndee Miller, “Top Marketers
Take Bolder Approach inTargeting Gays, Marketing
News, July 4, 1994, pp.1, 2; and Michael Wilkie, “Big Advertisers Join Move
to Embrace Gay Market, “Advertising Age, August
4, 1997, pp.1,10.
Major demographic changes occuring in the United States and other countries make the analysis of subcultures more important then ever. For instance, the U.S. population is aging (in 2000, the median age will be 36, three years older than in 1990). Also many societies are becoming more culturally diverse partly through increased immigration of people from other cultures. About 20 percent of Americans were members of minority groups in the early 1980s: by 2010, this will climb to about 30 percent. The overall culture in the United States is influenced by these different subcultural groups, each with unique perspectives and cultural meanings. To understand this diversity, marketers identify subcultures and try to develop marketing strategies to adress their needs.
Major demographic changes occuring in the United States and other countries make the analysis of subcultures more important then ever. For instance, the U.S. population is aging (in 2000, the median age will be 36, three years older than in 1990). Also many societies are becoming more culturally diverse partly through increased immigration of people from other cultures. About 20 percent of Americans were members of minority groups in the early 1980s: by 2010, this will climb to about 30 percent. The overall culture in the United States is influenced by these different subcultural groups, each with unique perspectives and cultural meanings. To understand this diversity, marketers identify subcultures and try to develop marketing strategies to adress their needs.
Exhibit
13.1
Types
of Subcultures
Demographic
Characteristic
|
Examples of
Subcultures
|
Age
Religion
Race
Income
level
Nationality
Gender
Family
type
Occupation
Geographic
region
Community
|
Adolescents,
young adults, middle age, elderly
Jewish,
Catholic, Mormon, Buddhist, Muslim
Black,
Caucasian, Asian
Affluent,
middle income, poor destitute
French,
Malaysian, Australian, Canadian
Female,
Male
Single
Parent, Divorced/No Kids, Two Parents/Kids
Mechanic,
Accountant, Priest, Professor, Clerk
New
England, Southwest, Midwest
Rural,
Small Town, Suburban, City
|
Marketers have used a
variety of mostly demographic characteristics to identify subcultures. Exhibit
13.1 lists several demographic characteristics used to classify people into subgroups
and gives examples of subcultures. These subcultures are not mutually exclusive
a person can simultaneously be black, middle class, a male and a resident of
the northwestern United States with a moderate income. Marketers can combine
demographic distinctions to identify smaller and more narrowly defined
subcultures (affluent balck consumers living in the South).
Analyzing
Subcultures
As with cultural
analysis, subcultures can be analyzed at different levels. Subcultural analysis
is often done in stages. First, a broad subcultures is identified based on some
broad demographic characteristic (black Americans, elderly Japanese, middle-income
Italians). Then, depending on the marketing purpose, this broad group can be
further segmented into subcultures based on other demographic characteristics
(affluent middle income, or poor Americans; elderly Japanese who are healthy
versus those who are ill; middle-income Italians living in large cities or
small towns). If necessary the segmentation process could continue, creating
ever smaller and more precisely defined subcultures.
Careful research and
thoughtful analysis are necessary to develop a clear understanding of
subcultures. Consider, for instance, the confusion about the so called yuppies
(young urban professional). Originally a narrow subcultural group, yuppies
gradually came to mean rich, selfish youths and because of intense media attention
through 1980s, became virtually synonymous with the baby boomer generation.
However, the best estimates counted only about 4 million yuppies, a mere 5
percent of the baby boomers.
Subculture analysis can
follow the same approach as cultural analysis discussed in Chapter 12.
Typically, marketers examine the content of the subculture by describing the
cultural meanings shared by members of the subculture (especially their values
and lifestyles). It is much less common for marketers to examine the cultural processes
by which cultural meanings are moved from the external world of the subculture
to products and services and on the people in the subculture.
In analyzing a
subculture, marketers seek to identify the typical characteristics, meanings,
and behavioral tendencies shared by people in those groups. Despite sharing
some qualities, however most subcultures are quite diverse. The media tend to
characterize members of a subculture in the same way (blacks are poor ghetto
residents; elderly people are doddering and ill), but this can be a major
mistake in developing marketing strategies. Members of a black or erderly
subculture are likely to be quite different. For example, marketers have
identified a subgroup of “young” elderly people called “Opals,” who think and
act younger than their years, have money to spend and healthy enough to do so.
In sum, it is difficult to identify a typical person in a subculture.
The task for marketers is
to determine what level of analysis is appropriate for the problem (how fine
should the distinctions be?) and develop marketing strategies for that level.
Consider Maybelline’s strategy in developing the cosmetic line Shades of You for women with dark skin. The company
recognized that women of color (mostly blacks and darker skinned Hispanics)
have different skin tones and thus need different cosmetics. For instance,
blacks have about 35 different skin colors compared to about 18 for whites.
Maybelline spent considerable effort and money developing the proper formulas
for 12 shades of liquid makeup and 8 blushes. Sold in drugstores and
supermarkets at the lower end of the price scale, the product was almost
immediately a hit with dark-skinned women.
Geographic
Subcultures
Americans like to think
of their country as a melting pot, but the mass American market is a myth for
many product categories. In different parts of the country the physical
environment (topography, climate, natural resources) and social environment
(economics, population demograohics, lifestyles) are quite different, and these
factors affect the culture and buying behavior. In reality the United States is
a polycultural nation, a mosaic of submarkets and subcultures. In some ways,
Boston and Houston are as different as Hamburg (Germany) and Milan (Italy).
Marketers may find it
easier to accept Europe and Latin America is separate regions than to recognize
Arizona, Texas, and Lousiana as different markets. For example, product
ownership varies widely across the nation. Consumers in California own a much higher
percentage of foreign cars than their counterparts in the Midwest or South.
Very few brands enjoy uniform sales across the country. Many national brands
get 40 to 80 percent of their sales in a core region, but they are specialty
brands (with lower market shares) in other areas of the country. In the mid
1990s, for instance, Ford pickups were the favorite in a number of northwestern
states, whereas Chevy pickups dominated in many southern states. Wonder Bread
sells best in New York (for reasons unknown), whereas snack nuts sell best in
Portland, Maine. Seattle leads in sales of healthy foods such as Cheerios and
is also tops in Hershey’s chocolate bars. Coping with this diversity requires
attention to regional subcultures.
Exhibit
13.2
The
Eight Nations of the United States
There are many ways of
analyzing the United States in terms of geographic subcultures. In one creative
approach, Joel Garrean divided the North American continent into nine
geographic areas that be labeled the “nine nations” of North America U.S.
marketers concentrate on the eight areas shown in Exhibit 13.2 Garrean argued
that a variety of environmental factors including economic, social, cultural,
political, topographical and natural resource factors combine to form these
nine areas. The exhibit also summarize the “personalities” of these areas.
Despite criticisms,
this framework may be useful for some products and services in developing
specific marketing strategies to appeal to consumers in each area. For example,
preferences for and consumption of various beverages vary dramatically in
different geographic areas of the Unired States and analysis of cultural
differences in these regions may help determine which beverages can be marketed
most effectively.
Borderland
Regions
As we emphasized in
Chapter 12, cultural and subcultural differences do not always coincide with
national (or other artificial) boundaries. Consider the so called borderlands
along the 2,000 mile border between Mexico and the United States. About 5.2
million people (35 percent Hispanic) live in 25 borderland counties in
California, New Mexico, Arizona and Texas that have grown about 30 percent
since 1980. Another 3 million people live on the Mexico side. The borderlands
constitute a geographic subculture with significant marketing potential.
Consider the area
called Los Dos Laredos (the two
Laredos) Laredo, Texas, and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. Although separated by the Rio
Grande River, residents on both sides give little thought to the border as they
freely cross the bridges to shop, work, and enjoy themselves. A bank official
puts it this way: “We are not the United States and we’re not Mexico. We’re
different, we think we gather the best of both cultures. “According to one
citizen. “We’re more like Minneapolis and Saint Paul than the U.S. and Mexico,
because we are the same people.”
The borderlands are an
important regional market even though the overall demographics are downscale
(people have lower than average incomes). The U.S. side is swelled by thousands
of Mexican citizens who cross the border to work and spend their pesos.
Although some shopping areas are bordertown tacky, Laredo’s new retailing
centers contain chain stores like Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club, and HEB of California.
Successful marketing strategies recognize the Hispanic culture as the major
influence in the borderlands. For instance, many of the signs and store names
are in Spanish, prices are often given in both pesos and dollars and most
stores accept either currency. Because Hispanic families tend to be large,
grocery stores tend to stock big sizes, including 50 pound sacks of rice.
Age
Subcultures
Age groups can also be
analyzed as subcultures because they often have distinctive values and
behaviors. However, marketers must be continue about segmenting consumers based
on their actual age. Many adult American consumers think of them selves as to
10 to 15 years younger than they really are. Thus, their behaviors, affect and
cognitions are more related to their psychological age than their chronological
age. Consider this statement from an 89 year old woman:”I might be 89 years
old, but I feel good. I feel like I could fly the coop. I do I feel younger,
like I’m going to live a long time.” This suggests marketers should analyze
subjective or “cognitiveage” (the age one thinks of oneself as being) rather
than chronological or actual age. Many different age subcultures can be
identified and analyzed, but we will discuss only three here: teens, baby
boomers and the mature market.
The
Teen Market
The American teenage
population has been gaining affluence and fluctuating in size. In the mid 1980s
there were about 26 million people in the United States aged 13 to 19. This
number decreased to about 25 million in the mid 1990s and will increase to
about 27 million by the year 2000. Teens are important not only because they
have a major influence on household purchases, but also because of their own
discretionary purchasing power. Teenagers spent over $95 billion in 1992.
Highlight
13.2
Is
the Liquor Industry Advertising to Teens?
If you pick up a copy
of Spin magazine (or Rolling Stone, or
Vibe, or Detalls), you will find many ads for liquor or beer, aven though
substantial numbers of the readers of these magazines are under 21 years of age
(50 percent of Spin readers; 44
percent of Allure readers). Moreover,
the styles of many of these ads seem designed to appeal to teenagers. Many ads
use cartoon like figures and sport a sort sophomoric, teen lingoan ad for Jose
Cuervo urges consumers to “surf that lizard!” Many of the ads seem to be
takeoffs of the controversial Joe Camel character used in cigarette advertising
until 1997, when it was retired.
Certain liquor products
seem designed to appeal to teenagers, as well as young adults. Consider some of
the new alcohol products introduced to the U.S. market in 1997. Several were
lemonade-flavored drinks containing about 4 percent alcohol. These drinks have
about the same punch as beer, but the alcohol flavor is masked so well that
they can be chugged like soda. These so called alcopop drinks are big in Australia
and Britain. Two Dogs Lemon Brew was created in 1993 by Australian Duncan
MacGilivray, who was trying to find a use for a truckload of lemons. Another
concoction is Hooper’s Hooch, made by the British company, Bass PLC. In the
United States, both Miller and Anheuser-Busch have tested their versions, but
had not yet introduced them as of 1997.
Similar product
development efforts to appeal to young people are occuring in other countries.
For example, Family Frost, an East German company, introduced an alcoholic,
beer flavored popsicle in 1996. Earlier attempts to do the same thing had their
days in the limelight, but have since faded. Wine coolers were once a bit in
the 1980s, whereas Zima, a clear malt beverage that was recently popular, has
lost its fizz.
The sweet lemonadelike
brews are priced about the same as beer and seem to be directed at younger
people (teens?) who are more used to consuming soda than hearty beers.
Criticism of these beerlike products and their advertising was swift. For
instance, in1996, California lawmakers introduced an unsuccessful bill to ban
all alcohol ads containing cartoons.
Do you think the beer
companies behaved ethically in manufacturing and promoting these flavored,
beerlike products?
Sources:
David
Leonhardt, “How Big Liquor Takes Aim at Teens, “Business Week, May 19, 1997, p. 92; David Leonhardt and Heidi
Dawley, “A Little Booze for the Kiddles, “Business
Week, September 23, 1996, p. 158.
Several studies have
found that teenagers do a large portion of grocery shopping for the family. Estimates
are that from 49 to 61 percent of teenage girls and 26 to 33 percent of teenage
boys frequently perform this task. In addition, about 60 percent of teens help
make the supermarket shopping list, and 40 percent select some of the brands to
be purchased. It is no wonder that brand name food marketers advertise in
magazines such as Seventeen.
Brand loyalty has also
been found to form early among teenage shoppers. In a survey of women ages 20
to 34, at least 30 percent said they made a brand decisions as a teenager and
continued to use the brand to the present. Sixty four percent said they looked
for specific brands when they were teenagers. Thus, a final reason this market
is so important for many products and services is the potential is to develop
brand loyalty that may last a lifetime. However, marketing certain products to
teens, such as ciggaretes or alcoholic beverages, is highly controversial as
Highlight 13.2 describes.
Baby boomers are those
people born between 1946 and 1964. There are about 68 million people in this
group about a third of the U.S. population. This group is in its mid 30s to
early 50s and its prime earning and spending years. The baby boomer market is the
largest and most affluent in history and will have a major economic impact for
the next 45 years (see the opening example). In 1982 dollars, the 35 to 44 age
group spent $870 billion in 1995, well over twice as much as that age group
spent in 1980. Within the next decade or so, baby boomers will account for
about half of all discretionary spending.
Although the baby
boomer subculture is extremely diverse, some general characteristics have been
identified. The group is characterized as having a blend of “me-generation” and
old fashioned family values and as strongly influencing the values of other
groups. A study by the Cadwell Davis Partners ad agency found that many people
who aren’t baby boomers feel as if they are. Baby boomers emphasize health and
exercise and have reduced their consumption of cigaretes, coffee and strong
alcoholic beverages. Forty-six percent of this market has completed college and
two thirds of baby boomer wives work, compared with about half the wives in the
rest of the population. In terms of products, this group emphasizes quality and
is far less concerned with bargain hunting than their parents were.
Baby boomers have a
strong impact on markets for housing, cars, food, clothing and cosmetics and
financial services. For instance, nearly one fourth of boomers are single,
creating strong markets for vacations and convenience packaged goods. In addition,
although they are having fewer children per household, the sheer size of the
boomer group led to an increase in births in the early 1990s a “baby boom echo.” Boomers who are new parents are
especially attractive to marketers. Given the large incomes and small family
sizes of this group, spending per child is likely to be the largest in history.
Markets for children’s products have expanded accordingly. Toy sales, for
example, are expected to increase more than twice as fast as the population of
children for whom they are intended. Other markets, such as child care services
and computer software for tots, may double in the next few years.
The baby boomer market,
then is the most lucrative and challanging marketers have ever seen. Many firms
have designed new products and redesigned
and repositioned old ones for this market. Wheaties used to appeal to
kids as ”the breakfast of champions”; now its promoted to adults with such
slogans as “what the big boys eat.” Commercials for Snickers candy bars show
adults rather than children eating this candy for a snack. Crest and other
brands have introduced toothpaste formulas to fight plaque, an adult problem.
Levi Strauss has redesigned its jeans to give a little extra room in the seat
to accommodate “booming boomer bodies” (see Highlight 13.3). Even Clearasil,
traditionally an antiacne medication for teenagers, has developed Clearasil
Adult Care to appeal to the growing number of baby boomer adults with skin
problems.
Highlight
13.3
Jeans
Keep Up with the Baby Boomers
The baby boom
generation created the boom market for jeans manufacturers. When the boomers
were teens in the 1960s, jeans became the universal emblem of youth and
rebeilion (as is still the case around the world), and jeans sales increased
dramatically.
As the boomers aged,
manufacturers such as Levi Strauss have adapted their marketing strategies to
keep pace with the changing demographics. Although Levi’s key market is still
14-24 years old men, this age group is shrinking, while the huge group of baby
boomers is reaching middle age. Thus Levi’s and other manufacturers have
developed products to appeal to the boomers and to fit their changing bodies.
The so called jeans
generation still likes jeans (partly as a symbol of youth), but the style and
fit they seek has changed. As waist sizes have increased more 36s and fewer 32s
Levi Strauss has introduced new products such as the highly successful Dockers
line, made to fit the middle aged man’s body. According to John Wyek, director
of strategic research at Levi Strauss, “The point is to make products that are
relevant. And making relevan products for the ‘me’ generation has been easy. We
have 70,000 different products – different styles, colors, silhousettes, sizes
and fabrics so that our customers have the choice they’ve become accustomed to.”
Levi Strauss is keeping its eye on other changes in subcultures. For instance,
the number of Hispanics in the 14 to 24 age group will increase 40 percent in
the 1990s. Levi’s has created a Spanish language campaign targeted at
Hispanics, who account for 12 percent of Levi’s annual sales. Levi Strauss
produced an ad campaign for 501 button fly jeans (directed by Spike Lee),
targeted at the core market of 14-24 year old men, that ran on MTV and late
night television programs. Yet another ad campaign was targeted at women. Print
ads designed to emphasize the comfort and fit the Levi 500 and 900 product line
showed silhouettes of women in many shapes and sizes.
Over the years, Levi’s
has done well with boomers, but the company did not keep up with teenagers.
This lack of focus on the younger consumer resulted in a precipitous drop in
market share from 33 percent in 1990 to about 19 percent in 1997. The company
completely missed the wide leg jeans fad of 1997-98, and had to play catch up
with other companies such as Tommy Hilfiger and Ralph Lauren at the high end
and Sears and Penney’s at the low end. Its research indicated that teens “loved”
the Levi’s brand but didn’t think it was “cool” any more (“Levi’s are more
appropriate for our parents”). In 1998, Levi’s dramatically increased marketing
expenditures for teenagers, especially for promoting the Silver Tab line, with
a baggier fit designated by kids ad the hippest Levi’s clothes.
The trick for Levi
Strauss is to market its products to all these diverse groups in a way that
does not erode the overall value or equity of the Levi brand the theme of “Levi-ness.”
The goal is for each group to fell that “Levi’s are for me.”
Sources:
Cyndee
Miller, “Jeans Marketers Look for Good Fit with Older Men and Women, Marketing News, September 16, 1991,
pp.1, 6; Bickly Townsend, “Beyond the Boom: An Interview with John Wyek, “American Demographics, June 1989, pp.
40-41; and Linda Himelstein”Levi’s Is Hiking Up Its Pants, “Business Week, December 1, 1997, pp.70-75.
The
Mature Market
As America ages
(similar trends occur in other indrustrialized countries such as Japan and most
European countries such as Japan and Most European nations), marketers have
recognized the economic importance of the mature market, defined as consumers
over the age of 55. Because the mature market is quite diverse, marketers often
consider smaller subcultural groups based on narrower agr ranges, such as older
(55-64), elderly (65-74), aged (75-84) and very old (85 and over). The mature
market is one of the most rapidly growing subcultures in American society. In
2000 there will be 35 million consumers over 65, up from 30 million in 1987.
Nearly 80 percent of the current U.S. population is expected to live until
their late 70s. At present about one in four Americans is older than 50; by
2020 about one-third will be. Between now and 2020 the number of people aged 50
or older will increase by 74 percent (as baby boomers continue to age), whereas
the number under age 50 will increase by only 1 percent. In 2020 there could be
as many as 58 million elderly (over 65) or as few as 48 million, according to
the U.S. Census Burean. The exact number of older Americans expected in 2020 is
hard to predict; it all depends on the mortality rate, especially gains made
against specific diseaseas such as a heart ailments, cancer and stroke.
The next century will
see huge increases in demand for products and services for older consumer,
including adult day care, home health care, prescriptions and over the counter
drugs, medical care of all types and foods low in cholesterol, sugar, salt,
restaurants, recreational vehicles and hotels and motels. Recognizing that
extended families will be larger, theme parks such as Six Flags Great America
have created packages for grandparents, parents and grankids as a group. Older
people will be better educated than previous generations, which will create
increased demand for educational programs, books and news.
Traditionally,
marketers have ignored the mature market, perhaps because it was assumed to
have low purchasing power. However in addition to its sheer size, the economic
character of this market deserves careful consideration. Although many of the
members of this group no longer work, they often have considerable
discretionary income. Unlike younger groups, members of mature markets are ussually
free of most of the financial burdens associated with child rearing, mortgages
and furnishing a household.
Given these
differences, per capita discretionary income is higher for the mature group
than for any other age group about 50 percent of the nation’s total. In 1980,
for example, for those aged 55 to 59, per capita discretionary income was
$3,500; for those aged 60 to 64, per capita discretionary income was $3,700; for
those aged 65 and over it was the highest of all $4,100. These figures compare
quite favorably with the approximately $2,000 in discretionary income available
to people aged 30 to 39.
It is also important to
recognize how the mature market is changing. In 1985 only 9 percent of the
elderly bad a college degree and only 44 percent had graduated from high
school. By 1995 the share of older people with college educations rose to more
than 12 percent, and at least one fourth had some college. Thus, the mature
market is becoming more educated and likely will have even greater incomes.
Increases in income will also come about because many of those in tomorrow’s
mature market will benefit from pension and retirement plans.
Finally, because many
people in the mature market subculture are retired, they have more time to
enjoy entertainment and leisure activities. Although this market has
historically spent more money on food for home consumption than away from home
consumption, restaurants now cater to them with senior citizen discounts, early
bird dinners, and menus designed for the tastes and requirements of older
people.
The elderly represent a
significant market for skin care products, vitamins and minerals, health and
beauty aids and medications that ease pain and promote the performance of
everyday activities. In addition, they are a significant market for
condominiums in the Sambelt states, time share arrangements, travel and
vacations, cultural activities and luxury items given as gift to their children
and grandchildren. Overall, then the mature market subculture represents an
excellent marketing opportunity that will become even better in the future.
Developing marketing
strategies that appeal to consumers in the mature market is more difficult than
it looks. Few companies are experts at it. Many marketers have inaccurate
perceptions of this large and diverse group, including persistent images of
frail, stubborn and indigent people who, if not confimed to bed, are tottering
around on canes. Yet only 5 percent of Americans over 65 are institutionalized.
People are staying healthy and active much later into their lives than ever
before.
Some ads are beginning
to use themes and models that older consumers can identify with. No longer
depicted as weak and doddery, older people are shown doing the things they do
in real life; working, playying tennis, falling in love and buying cars. McDonalds,
for instance, was a forerunner in this style with its “Golden Years” spots that
showed an elderly man and woman meeting for lunch at McDonald’s and an elderly
man on his first day of work at McDonald’s.
Ethnic
Subcultures
In the past two decades
the ethnic makeup in the United States has changed dramatically. In 1980 one of
every five Americans was a member of a minority group. In 1990 one in four
Americans claimed to have either Hispanic, Asian, African or Native American ancestry.
The increases were unequal across ethnic subcultures because of different
immigration patterns and birth rates. For instance, the Asian subculture grew
80 percent during the 1980s, compared to increases of 4.4 percent in the white
population, 14 percent for blacks and 39 percent for Hispanics. Increases in
these minority subcultures are expected to continue so that by 2010 about
one-third of American children will be black, Hispanic, or Asian.
Marketers must
recognize that ethnic diversity is not distributed equally across the United
States. The most ethnically diverse regions in the country are in the Southwest
and the South; the least diverse are in the Midewest, where the proportion of
whites may exceed 90 percent. The most ethnically diverse country in the nation
is San Francisco with approximately equal proportions of whites, blacks,
Hispanics and Asians. New York City and Los Angeles are highly diverse cities.
Following we discuss the three major ethnic subcultures in the United States
black, Hispanic and Asian.
Highlight
13.4
Cluster
31 Black Enterprise
Cluster 31, or Black
Enterprise, is a subcultural group created through statistical analysis by
Claritas Corporation.Claritas PRIZM system groups all of the U.S. ZIP codes and
cencus tracts into 40 clusters or segmensts based on various demographic
characteristics. It ranks the clusters by size and affluence and gives each one
a catchy name. Black Enterprise is made up of relatively affluent black
consumers. It ranks eleventh in affluance and comes closest to describing a
black middle class.
In 1988, there were
about 420,000 household in cluster 31 neighborhoods around the country. They
were more likely to be college educated and hold white-collar jobs. They were
more likely than average to sall, drink scotch, buy classical music, smoke
menthol cigarettes, belong to a book club and travel by rail. These black
consumers were very unlikely to buy country music, a pickup truck, or camping
equipment or to go swimming frequently. Cluster 31 adults spend heavily on
clothes, read magazines at above average rates, and watch less television than
average. In many cases, these affluent blacks make choices similar to affluent
white consumers, buying station wagons, using Visa cards once a month, and making three or more stock transactions
per year.
Source:
Brad
Edmondson, “Black Enterprise,” American
Demographics, November 1989, pp.26-27.
The
Black Subculture
The black or
African-American subculture is the largest minority group in the United States,
with some 34 million people and about 7
millioon families (about 13 percent of the total population), a market worth
about $469 billion annually. African Americans are a highly diverse group.
Although many black Americans are poor, two thirds are not. More than 13
percent of black families had incomes exceeding $50,000 in 1988, up from 8
percent in 1980. However, the number of very poor black families (incomes under
$5,000) also grew during this period, from 10 to 12 percent. Although the 17
million relatively poor blacks concentred in densely populated urban centers
are more visible in the media, 8 million blacks live in suburban neighborhoods.
Economic conditions for
blacks vary considerably in different metropolitan areas. For example, about
one fourth of blacks in Washington, D.C., are affluent, compared to only 1 in
25 in Miami. In San Francisco 1 in 10 blacks is affluent and more than half are
middle class. Middle class blacks may have more in common with middle class
whites and Asians than lower class blacks. The diversity in the
African-American subculture suggests marketers should further segment the black
market based on factors such as income, social class, or geographic region.
Highlight 13.4 presents an example of such a subsculture.
Increasingly, marketers
are targeting African-Americans with special products and marketing strategies.
For example, Tyco, Hasbro, and Mattel are all marketing ethnically correct
dolls designed for the black market (10 percent of U.S. children under 10 are
black). Mattel’s dolls, Shani (Swahili for “marvelous”) and her two friends,
Asha and Nicelle, have different skin tones, hairstyles and facial features
that reflect the diversity of black women. Some marketing strategies directed
at the black subculture have been highly controversial. In 1990, for instance,
following intense public pressure, the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company withdrew
plans to test-market a new cigarette, “Uptown,” that was targeted at black smokers.
In 1991 the G. Heileman Brewing Company succumbed to public pressure and
canceled plans to market a high alcohol malt beer, “PowerMaster,” to low
income, inner city black consumers.
The
Hispanic Subculture
According to recent
statistics, approximately 29 million Hispanic live in the United States (about
11 percent of the total population). Hispanics are people with Spanish speaking
ancestry from such nations as Mexico (by far the largest group in the United
States), Puerto Rico, Cuba, and various countries in Central and South America.
When combined into a single Hispanic subculture, these people account for about
$348 billion in purchasing power.
Hispanics are
distributed unequally across the United States, with most living in the border
states of Texas, California, Arizona, and New Mexico (each state has a Hispanic
population exceeding 500,000). The top six Hispanic U.S. cities are New York
(mostly Puerto Ricans and Dominicans); Miami (Cubans); Los Angeles, Houston,
and San Antonio (Mexicans); and Chicago (a mix of all). In these regions the
Hispanic subculture has a significant effect on the overall culture.
The Hispanic subculture
is diverse, and reaching Hispanic consumers effeciently anf effectively can be
difficult. Some Hispanics are third or fourth generation U.S. citizens and are
well assimilated into American culture, they can be reached by traditional U.S.
media (TV, radio and magazines). Other Hispanics retain much of their original
culture and may speak mostly or only Spanish. To oversimply, marketers can
identify three broad segments (subgroups) in the Hispanic subculture only
Spanish speaking bilingual, but favoring Spanish; and bilingual, but favoring
English.
Using Spanish in ads
can be an effective way to reach all three groups. Recently developed Spanish
language media (special TV channels, newspapers and magazines) make it easier
than ever to reach to the Hispanic market. For instance, de Hoy, targeted at Hispanic women who speak English as a second
language and have children at home. Several large companies have placed ads in
Spanish in the magazine, including Procter & Gamble, American Airlines,
Kraft. AT&T, and Kinney Shoes. Successful advertising campaigns tend to use
large and coloirful ads that combine the American dream with the traditional
values of the Hispanic extended family.
In 1987 U.S. companies
spent about $500 million on marketing strategies directed at the Hispanic
market. Yet the largest Hispanic advertiser, Philip Morris, allocated only
$13.3 million to Hispanic advertising less than 1 percent of its total ad budget.
Many companies would like to develop marketing strategies targeted at the
Hispanic market, but getting good information about Hispanics needs, values,
and beliefs is difficult. Companies must decide whether to develop one general
marketing strategy for all Hispanics or adapt the strategy for each segment of
the Hispanic subculture. Coors, for instance, opts for the adaptive, tailor
made approach, showing ads with a rodeo theme in Houston but not in Miami. Goya
Foods developed different products for Miami (Cubans prefer black beans) and
New York (Puerto Ricans like red beans).
Marketing to domestic
subcultures requires a careful analysis of consumers affect, cognitions, and
behaviors. For example, a telephone company tried to target the Hispanic market
by employing Puerto Rican actors. In the ad, the wife said to her husband, “Run
downstairs and phone Mary. Tell her well be a little late. ”However, this
commercial ignored Hispanic values and behaviors. For one thing, Hispanic wives
seldom order their husbands around; for another, few Hispanics would found it
necessary to phone if they are going to be late, because being late is
expected. Similarly, Coors ads featuring the slogan “Taste the high country”
were not effective with Mexican-Americans, who could not identify with mountain
life. The Spanish language Coors ads were modified to suggest that mountains
were a good source of beer, but one did not need to live in the mountains to
enjoy it. The new slogan in its English translation became “Take the beer from
the high country and bring it to your high country wherever it may be.
Asian
Subculture
Although only about 3
percent of the population in 1997, Asian-Americans are the most rapidly
increasing ethnic group in the United States. The population of people with
Asian ancestry increased 80 percent in yhe 1980s (largely because of increaesed
imigration), growi8ng from 3.8 million 1980 to about 7 million in 1989 to about
10 million in 1997, and have a purchasing power of about $110 billion.
Asian-Americans are concentrated in a few areas of the country where they have
an important influence on the pverall culture. Most Asians (56 percent) live in
the West, particularly in California (13 percent of Californians will be Asian
in cities (three quarters of the 3 million Californian Asians will be Asian in
the year 2000). Asian-Americans are highly urbanized, with 93 percent living in
cities (three-quarters of the 3 million Californian Asians live in the Los
Angeles basin or the San Francisco Bay area).
The Asian subculture in
these regions requires special marketing attention for many companies. Grocery
stores in Koreatown in Los Angeles stock large bags of rice near the checkout
counter where stores in middle America put the charcoal. Understanding how
Asian-American consumers make purchase decisions is critical to the success of
many products. One study found that country of origin and length of time in
this country are critical factors in how how consumers make purchase decisions.
For instance, Vietnamese Americans are more likely to adhere to the cultural
model in which the man makes the decision for any large purchase, whereas women
in Japanese households tend to have more influence on their husbands.
Asian-Americans are a
prime market because they are more affluent than any other racial or ethnic
group. In 1997 the median income of an Asian American house hold was $43,200
compared to $38,800 for whites, $24,900 for Hispanics and $23,900 for
African-Americans. Asian income levels are high for two reasons: (1) The
education level is high (35 percent of adults have completed four or more years
of college, compared to 22 percent of white Americans), and (2) more
Asian-Americans live in married couple households with two wage earners.
It is tempting to think
of Asian Americans (and other minority subcultures) as a single, homogenous
market, but this subculture is highly diverse. Some Asians are well integrated
in American culture, whereas others live in Asian communities and maintain much
of their original culture, including their languages. Because Asian people come
from several distinctive cultural background Japan, China, Southeast Asia, and
the Pacific Islands many marketers further segment the Asian community into
subcultures based on language or nationality. MCI, for instance, developed such
effective print ads targeted at recent immigrants from Hong Kong and Taiwan
that the company had to hire additional Chinese speaking operators to handle
the influx of calls. Implementing such targeted marketing strategies is
possible in communities where specialized media (newspapers, magazines, radio)
can reach Asian subcultures.
Gender
as a Subculture
Despite the modern
tendency to downplay differences between men and women, there is ample evidence
men and women differ in important respects (not only physically). For instance,
women may process information differently from men and seem to be more “generous,
more nurturing, and less dominating than men. For some marketing purposes,
gender differences may be significant enough to consider the marketing
purposes, gender differences may be significant enough to consider the two
sexes as separate subcultures. For instance, research has found that women treat possession differently than men
do. Ownership and possession of products is seen by some men as a way to
dominate and exert power over others, discriminate themselves from others
(status differentiation), and even engage in subtle forms of agression over
others. Women, in contrast, tend to value possessions that can enhance personal
and social relationships. Compared to most men, most women seem to value caring
to controlling, sharing to selfishness and cooperating to dominating. Many
marketers may find it useful to develop different marketing strategies for the
male and female subcultures.
In the late 1990s, more
marketers began to see women as a distinctive subculture and key market
segment. Women control approximately 60 percent of U.S wealth and influence
more than 80 percent of all purchases. Moreover, some 25 percent of working,
women bring home bigger paycheck than their husbands. This led Tom Peters,
well-known business author, to declare, “Women are opportunity No. 1. In some
market changes over the past quarter century have been dramatic. For example,
women constituted only about 1 percent of all business travelers in 1970, but
they accounted for roughly 50 percent in 1997. Recently, executives were
surprised to find that 60 percent of customers at a do it yourself
building supplies chain were women and
about two thirds of PC purchases for the home were made by women. Today, woman
either make or greatly influence most purchasing decisions and companies that
do not recognize this are headed for trouble. In response, the Westin hotel
chain has developed strong marketing relationships with women by including
irons and full length mirrors in the rooms and by having a respectful attitude
in the restaurants (ask the women to taste the wine), among other things.
Income
as a Subculture
It is possible to
consider level of income as a subculture, because people at different income
levels tend to have different values, behaviors and lifestyles. Typically,
however income is used further segment a subculture defined on some other
characteristic (age, ethnic group, region). Many myths and misconceptions about
income distribution in the United States can confuse marketers. For instance,
if you think the lower income households are dominated by minorities, you are
wrong most poor Americans are white. Affluence doesn’t necessarily increase
with age either.
Marketers often divide
American households into three income categories downscale (under $25,000 income per year), upscale (over $50,000 per year), and middle income ($25,000 to 50,000 per year). Demographic
characteristics of these income groups illustrate one reason to stay in college
and graduate: There is a very strong relationship between college education and
income level. Nearly half the upscale adults have completed four years of
college, but only 10 percent of downscale adults have done so. Nearly half (46
percent) of American households are downscale. Although the upscale subculture
constitutes an excellent market for high quality luxury goods, only one in five
households falls into this category. The mass market is downscale, which
partially accounts for the large success discount retailers such as Wal-Mart.
American marketers have found that the downscale market can be very profitable. Highlight 13.5
presents another strategic approach to income segments.
Acculturation
Processes
A process of
acculturation begins when a person from one culture moves to a different
culture or subculture to live and work.
Acculturation refers to how people in one culture or subculture
understand and adapt to the meanings (values, belief, behaviors, rituals,
lifestyles) of another culture or subculture. Consumer acculturation refers to
how people acquire the ability and cultural knowledge to be skilled consumers
in different cultures or subcultures.
Highlight
13.5
Income
as a Subculture: Two-Tier Marketing
Did you know that there
are two different types of Winnie the Pooh (the cute stuffed bear friend of
Christophar Robin in the classic books by A. A. Milne)? The Walt Disney
Company, which owns the rights to Milne’s characters, carefully markets Pooh to
two different income segments. The original line drawn figure of Pooh that appears on fine china, pewter
spoons, and pricay kids stationery is sold in upscale specialty shops and fine
department stores such as Nordstorms. Another Pooh, a plump, cartoonlike bear
wearing a red T-shirt, adorns plastic key chains and bedsheets and appears in
animated videos. These products are sold in Wal-Mart stores and discount
drugstores. Only in Disney’s own stores do the two Poohs appear together.
Disney is not an
aberration; many other marketers are adopting a similar “two tiered” strategy.
This is because the middle class that once seemed to include almost everyone is
not growing in numbers or in purchasing power. In contrast, the two extremes of
the income distribution are growing. Over the past 20 years, real incomes of
the wealthiest fifth of the population increased by 21 percent, whereas wages
for the lower 60 percent have stagnated or even dropped. These changes make it
attractive for a company to adopt either an upscale or downscale approach to
marketing, although a few companies, like Disney, can target both income
segments. Lester Thurow, an economist at M.I.T., put it this way, “The $4
restaurant meal is doing all right and the $50 meal is doing all right. The $20
meal is in trouble.”
In the past, many of
America’s biggest brands focused on the middle market. For example, Levi’s and
Ivory soap seemed to reflect the idea that a reasonably good product, properly
packaged and promoted, could be sold to almost anyone. But this approach no
longer seems to work in many categories. Take income trends discussed above
mean that fewer people can afford a new car (especially since the median price
of a car increased by 22 percent in constant dolars just during the 1990s). In 1997,
the wealthiest 20 npercent of the population accounted for over half of all new
car sales, up from 40 percent in 1980. This helps explain why the market for
low mileage used cars was booming in the mid 1990s. Many folks wanted to buy a
nice, high quality product, but couldn’t afford the cost of buying new. Nearly
new was affordable.
Source:
Two-Tier
Marketing, “from the March 17, 1997 issues of Business Week by special permission copyright by The McGraw-Hill
Companies.
Acculturation processes
are important in the modern world. Many societies face the problem of
assimilating large numbers of immigrants from rather different cultural
backgrounds into the host culture. For instance, in the United States, the
Hispanic and Asian subcultures grew rapidly during the 1980s.
Acculturation is also
important for people who move to different regions within the same country and
must adapt to different subcultural meanings. In the United States, one of six
Americans moves each year. However, two thirds of these moved within the same
country (the median distance moved is only 6 miles), and the subcultural
changes in most of these moves are
probably not great. In contrast,about 10 percent of Americans move to a
different region the country (most of these people are college graduates), and
they are likely to face some acculturation problems as they learn a new
regional subculture. Finally, acculturation is important for marketing managers
who must try to understand the cultural meanings of consumers in different
societies and subcultures than their own.
The degree to which
immigrants, movers, and marketers became acculturated into a new culture or
subculture depends on their level of cultural interpretation the ammount and
types of social interactions they have with people in the host culture. Social
contact with people in other subcultures can occur through direct, personal
experiences at work, while shopping, or in living arrangements.
Social experiences also
may be indirect or vicarious, as in observing other people from a distance or
on television. Some Americans might lack a cultural understanding of people in
other societies and subcultures because much of their social contact with such
people has been shallow and indirect. Many Americans learn about other cultures
and subcultures largely through vicarious observation of subcultural portrayals
in the mass media (movies, television programs, books, news media). When people
have the opportunity for deeper cultural interpenetration (through work
experiences or living in proximity to other types of people), they tend to
become more throughly acculturated.
When people come into
contact with a new culture or subculture, they may go through four stages of
acculturation corresponding to four levels of cultural interpenetration. In the
honeymoon stage people are fascinated
by the exotic foreign culture or subculture. Because cultural interpenetration
is shallow and superficial, little acculturation occurs. Tourists traveling to
various regious of the United States may experience this stage.
If cultural interpenetration
increases, people may enter a rejection
stage, where they recognize that many of their old behaviors and meanings
may be inadequate for acting in the new subculture. Some people may develop
hostile attitudes toward the new subculture and reject its key values and
meanings. Cultural conflicts are maximal in this stage.
If cultural penetration
continues and deepens, people may reach the tolerance
stage. As people learn more cultural meanings and behaviors, they may begin
to appreciate the new subculture, and cultural conflict will decrease. Finally,
in the integration stage, adjustment to the subculture is adequate, although
acculturation need not be complete or total. At this stage people are able to
function satisfactorily in the new culture or subculture, which is viewed as an
alternative way of life and is valued for its good qualities.
Consider the
acculturation problems faced by immigrants who come to the United States with
their own cultural meanings and values and must adapt to the different cultural
meanings of America society. One study of immigrants from India found that
transitional objects such as Indian clothing, jewelry, special furniture,
movies, photographs and music were highly valued as reminders of their home
culture. Educated immigrants might tend to become more acculturated because
their high education levels lead to greater cultural interpentration. Many
Hispanics tend to maintain their cultural values and traditions, and full
acculturation may take three or four generations. But even long-term resident
Hispanic-Americans, Asian-Americans, four generation. But even long-term
resident Hispanic-Americans, Asian-Americans, or African-Americanas may never
completely incorporate all of the values, meanings, and behaviors of American
culture.
An important aspect of
the acculturation process is proficiency in the language of the new culture.
Ability to speak English obviously influences the level of cultural
interpenetration that an immigrant can achieve in the United States. For
instance, Hispanic immigrants who live and work in Spanish speaking
neighborhoods, surounded by similar people, may penetrate little into American
society and may become only partially acculturated. Immigrants with more
education are more likely to speak English and can obtain better jobs, which in
turn, allows for greater cultural penetration and enables them to become more
completely acculturated. Interestingly, immigrants who join families already
living in the United States tend to be more passive and penetrate less deely
into American culture than the more innovative family members who were the
first to come to the United States.
Social
Class
An expert in social
class research has made the following observations:
There are no two ways
about it: Social class is a difficult idea. Sociologists, in whose discipline
the concept emerged, are not of one mind about its value and validity. Consumer
researchers, to whose field its use has spread, display confusion about when
and how to apply it. The American public is noticeably uncomfortable with the
realities about life that it reflects. All who try to measure it have trouble.
Studying it rigorously and imaginatively can be monstrously expensive. Yet, all
these difficulties nothwithstanding, the proposition still holds: Social class
is worth troubeling over for the insight it offers on marketplace behavior of
the nation’s consumers.
We agree with these
observation concerning both the problems and the value of social class
analysis. For our purposes in this text, social class refers to a national
status hierarchy by which groups and individuals are distinguished in terms of
esteem and prestige. Coleman recommends that four social class groups be used
for consumer analysis in the United States upper;
middle, working, and lower class. Exhibit 13.3 describes these groups and
identifies some marketing implications for each.
Identification with
each social class is influenced most strongly by one’s level of education
occupation (including income as a measure of work success). But social class is
also affected by social skills, status aspirations, community participation, family
history, cultural level, recreational habits, physical appearance and social
acceptance by a particular class. Thus, social class is a composite of many
personal and social attributes rather than a single characteristic such as
income or education. The social classes can be considered as large subcultures
because their members share many cultural meanings and behaviors.
Although the members of
each social class share distinct values and behavior patterns to some degree,
each of the four major groups can be further differentiated. Although there are
a number of similarities in values and behaviors within groups in a given
class, there can be vast differences in family situations and income levels
among subgroups.
For instance, families
in each social class can be further classified as relatively over privilaged,
average, or underprivilaged. Overprivilaged
families in each social class are those with incomes usually 25 percent to
30 percent above the median for the class, who therefore have money left over
to seek forms of a better life preferred by the class. However, because these
families continue to share values, behaviors and associations with other
members of the class, they typically do not move to a higher social class. The average families are those in the middle
income range who can afford the kind of house, car, apparel, food, furniture
and appliances expected by their social class peers. Finally, the underprivilaged families have incomes
that fall at least 15 percent below the class midpoint and therefore must
scrimp and sacrifice to be able to purchase the proper products for that class.
Exhibit
13.3
Social
Class Groups for Consumer Analysis
Upper
Americans (14 percent of population). This group
consists of the upper-upper, lower-upper and upper middle classes. They have
common goals and are differentiated mainly by income. This group has many
different lifestyles, which might be labeled postpreppy, conventional,
intellectual, and political among others. The class remains the segment of our
society in which quality marchandise is most prized, special attention is paid
to prestige brands, and the self image
ideal is “spending with good taste.” Self-expression is more prized than in
previous generations and neighborhood remains important. Depending on income
and priorities, theater; books; investement in art; European travel; household
help; club memberships for tennis, golf and swimming and prestige schooling for
children remain high consumption priorities.
Middle
class (32 percent of population). These consumers
definitely want to “do right thing” and buy “what’s popular” in print media.
Increased earnings result in better living, which means a “nicer neighborhood
on the better side of town with good schools.” It also means spending more on “worthwhile
experiences” for children, including winter ski trips, college educations, and
shopping for better brands of clothes at more expensive stores. Appearance of
home is important because guests may visit and pass judgment. This group
emulates upper Americans, which distinguishes it from the working class. It
also enjoys trips to Las Vegas and Physical activity. Deferred gratification
may still be an ideal, but it is not so often practiced.
Working
class (38 percent of population). Working class Americans
are “family folk” depending heavily on relatives for economic and emotional
support, such as tips on job opportunities, advice on purchases, and help in
times trouble. The emphasis on family ties is only one sign of how much more
limited and different working class horizons are socially, psychologically, and
geographically compared to those of the middle class. In almost every respect,
a parohial view characterizes this blue collar world. This group has changed
little in values and behaviors despite rising incomes in some cases. For them, “keeping
up with the times” focuses on the mechanical and recreational, and thus, ease
of labor and leisure is what they continue to pursue.
Lower
Americans (16 percent of population). The men and women of
lower America are no exception to the rule that diversities and uniformities in
values and consumption goals are to be found at each social level. Some members
of this world, as has been publicized, are prone to every form of instant
gratification known to humankind when the money is avalaible. But others are
dedicated to resisting worldly temptations as they struggle toward what some
believe will be a “heavenly reward” for their earthly sacrifices.
Sources:
Excerpted
with permission from Richard P. Coleman, “The Continuing Significance of Social
Class to Marketing, “Journal of Consumer
Research, December 1983, pp.265-80.
Social class and
relative standing within a class are important sources of consumers beliefs,
values and behaviors. Most of the people an individual interacts with on a day
to day basis are likely to be members of that person’s social class. Family,
peer groups, and friends at work, school and in the neighborhood are all likely
to be of the same social class. These people teach the individual appropriate
values for the class as well as behavior ions that are acceptable to it. This
process can occur either through direct instruction (“You don’t have a chance
anymore unless you go to college”) or vicariously (an individual sees
neighborhood friends going to college, graduating and purchasing new cars).
At a conceptual level,
social classes are useful for investigating the process by which consumers
develop their characteristic beliefs, values and behavior patterns. For
example, the upper class may welll be socially secure and not find it necessary
or desirable to purchase the most expensive brands to impress other people.
Middle class people, on the other hand, often engage in such conspicuous
consumption. As Highlight 13.6 shows, even homeless people (perhaps the lowest
social class in American society) engage in consumption behavior.
Highlight
13.6
The
Lowest Social Class?
The
Homeless in America
For a variety reasons,
homeless men and women crowded many American cities during the 1980s and 1990s.
Estimates in 1987 of the homeless population ranged from over 3 million to a
more likely 600,000. Without a home and seldom with a job, the homeless are at
the bottom of the social class hierarchy. However despite their very low
socioeconomic status, homeless people are consumers. They exert considerable
physical and cognitive effort performing various consumption behaviors finding
a place to sleep, getting food to eat, acquiring simple possessions (warm
clothing), keeping their meager possession safe. In a real sense, these
consumption activities constitute a full time job.
One intensive study of
the homeless learned much about this distinctive subculture or social class.
For instance, most homeless individuals do have a few posssessions are
scavenged from trash cans or abandoned cars and builldings, and some are
purchased (hot meals are especially valued). Often individuals will exchange
possessions using barter. Some homeless persons will earn a small income doing
odd jobs or, most frequently, by recycling (selling empty bottles or scrap
metals). Others may work sporadically as day laborers or by washing car windows
at intersections.
Maslow’s Need Hierarchy
identifies the basic needs of homeless people food, water, shelter and
security.
By definition, all
homeless people lack a house or apartment, but some do have housing of their
own. These can range from vacant buildings or abandoned automobiles to
makeshift (self-constructed) shelters on vacant lots built fom abandoned
building materials to partially protected areas such as bridges and tunnels
that can provide useful shelter.
The consumer product
most often purchased by homeless people is food. But food can also be obtained
from charitable shelters, by finding “road kill” meat and by scaveging food
from dumpters. Some homeless persons become skilled at scavenging food, for
instance, by checking the dumpters of fast food restaurants soon after closing.
Clothing is
particularly important in the winter, and homeless people will try to
accumulate layers of clothing to provide protection from the cold. Multiple
layers of clothing also provide protection from attack (beatings and rape).
Clothing is often scavenged, although charity distribution centers can be a
good source.
Another need is
personal hygiene and health care. Satisfying these needs is difficult for
homeless people, partly because of their restricted access to water. Homeless
people find it difficult to wash themselves and btheir clothes. Shelters are
useful for these purposes. Of course, virtually no homeless individuals have
any health insurance. Thus, they are likely to seek medical attention from
emergency rooms or free clinics. One homeless person deliberately gets arrested
when he is depressed or sick to get medical attention in jail.
Finally, tools of
various sorts are important possessions for many homeless people. Shopping
carts are useful to carry their possessions (to keep them from being stolen).
Tools that aid in scavening parts from cars or buildings are valued
(screwdrivers, flashlights, tire irons).
Source:
Ronald
Paul Hill and Mark Stamey, “The Homeless in America: An examination of
Possessions and Consumption Behaviors,”Journal
of Consumer Research, December 1990, pp. 303-21.
Social
Class versus Income
The social class
concept aids in the understanding of consumer values and behavior; it is also
useful for market segmentation and prediction of consumer behavior. However,
there has long been a controversey as to whether social class or income is the
better variable for use in consumer analysis. Advocates of each position master
a number of arguments for the superiority of their favorite variable and point
out a variety of methodological and coneptual problems with the other one.
Recently, consumer
researchers have recognized that each variable has it advantages and
disadvantages; and the choice between using social class, income, or a
combination of the two depends on the product and the situation. For example,
Shaninger offers the following tentative generalizations:
1.Social class is more relevant than
income for areas of consumer behavior that do not involve high dollar
expenditures but do reflect underlying differences in lifestyle, values, or
home maker roles not captured by income (e.g., using imported or domestic
wines). Social class is superior for both method and place of purchase of
highly visible, symbolic and expensive objects such as living room furniture.
2.Income is generally appropriate for
understanding purchase of major kitchen laundry appliances and products that
require substantial expenditures but are not status symbols within the class.
3.The combination of social class and
income is generally superior for product classes that are highly visible, serve
as symbol of social class or status within class and require either moderate or
substantial expenditures (such as clothing, automobiles and television sets).
In sum, determining
whether social class, income, a combination of these, or other variables are
most useful in a particular situation requires a careful analysis of the
relationship between the product and the consumer. In other words, consumer
affect and cognitions, behaviors and the environment must be analyzed to
develop appropriate marketing strategies.
Wooing
the Aging Baby Boomers
The baby boomer example
describes an important change occuring in the subcultural social environment of
America. Similar large scale changes are occuring in the social environments of
many other cultures. The example also identifies some economic reasons
marketers must pay attention to this change in consumers.
Wooing
the Aging Baby Boomers
The baby boomer example
describes an important change occuring in the subcultural social environment of
America. Similar large scale changes are occuring in the social environments of
many other cultures. The example also identifies some economic reasons
marketers must pay attention to this change in consumers.
Consumers in different
age categories (such as 35 to 50 boomer group versus 50 to 65) are likely to
have somewhat different values, cultural meanings, and behavior patternns.
Partly this is because people in these age categories grew up in different
decades with different cultural experiences. However it should be recognized
that these broad subcultural segments can be quite diverse. Therefore,
marketers may have to use other variables to identify narrower and more precise
segments. For example, the age categories could be farther broken down into
ethnic, geographic, religious, or community subgroups. It is quite likely, for
instance that the cultural values and behavioral norms of middle aged blacks
and Hispanics are somewhat different from those of middle aged whites.
Marketers could also look at different social classes within baby boomer group.
Here, again we would expect to see major differences in the product
perceptions, values and behavior patterns of upper, middle and lower class baby
boomers.
Marketers who have had
problem selling to mature consumers (people aged 45 to 60) and the so called
Generation X (people aged 20 to 37), now will be dealing with a new crop of
teenagers we might call them Generation Y. These “new” teens share some values
and perceptions with the cynical Generation X that preceded them, but they will
be different. For one thing, there will be a lot more of them. The teen market,
about 25 million in the mid 1990s, is expected to grow at twice the rate of the
general population. By 2010, there will be an estimated 30.8 million teenagers,
nearly a million more than the biggest year of the baby boom in the 1960s.
The new teens will be
different in many ways. For one thing, many of them are plugged into the
information highway where accessing bulletin boards and surling the Internet
are common. Thus teens are likely to be prime targets for high tech marketing
communications. Also, teens are much more comfortable with diversity than their
predecessors (by 2010, nearly one in three teens will belong to a minority).
Many teens are savvy shoppers, partly because they have been shopping for years
to help out in single parent and dual income families. Thus, the new teens are
more seasoned consumers than previous generations.
Summary
This chapter discussed
two macro social influences on consumers behaviors, cognitions, and affective
responses subculture and social class. These social factors influence how
people think, feel, and behave relative to their physical, social and marketing
environments. We discussed subcultural influences in terms of geographic area,
age, ethnic groups and other factors. Social class influences were discussed in
terms of their roles both in explaining consumer behavior and as a strategic
tool.
Key
Terms and Concepts
Acculturation 314 ethnic
subcultures 309
Age subcultures 304 four
stages of acculturation 316
Baby boomers 305 geographic
subcultures 303
Consumer acculturation 314 social
class 317
Cultural
interpenetration 315 subcultures 299
Review
and Discussion Questions
1. Discuss how subcultures (and social
class) influence how consumers learn cultural meanings (values, behaviors,
lifestyles). Give a specific example.
2. Check
on the Nike Web page devoted to women’s sports and sports equipment at http://www.nike.com/girls/.
Discuss how Nike seems to understand women as a subculture and how that
approach has directed its marketing strategies. Contrast your analysis of Nike
with another competitor such as Reebok http://www.reebok.com/.
3. What
ethical factors should a marketer consider in developing marketing strategies
targeted at particular subcultures or social classes? (What is your reaction to
selling fortified wine to homeless people, cigarettes to Hispanics, or diet
plans to overweight people?)
4. Are
college students a subculture? Why or why not? How could a marketer use
knowledge about this group to develop marketing strategy?
5. Identify
the age subcultures among members of your own family (or neighborhood). How do
these cultural differences affect the consumption behaviors of these people for
foods, personal care products, and clothing?
6. Define
the concept of social class. What are
the major social class groups in the United States (or your home country)? What
are the major social class groups in the immediate community where you live?
How did you recognize these social class groupings?
7. Select
two products classes (perhaps foods, beverages, clothing, automobiles,
furniture). How might each of the social classes you have identified in
Question 6 respond to marketing strategies for these products?
8. Think
of a subculture not discussed in the text and briefly describe it. Discuss
marketing implications for this subculture. What product categories would be
most relevant for this cultural group?
9. Discuss
the acculturation process by describing
what might happen if you came into contact with a different subculture (say,
you moved to a different area of the country or city).
10. Discuss
the concept of cultural interpenetration in terms of the acculturation of
immigrant populations in your country. What marketing opportunities do you see
in this situation?
Marketing
Strategy in Action
Hyatt
and Marriott Build Retirement Housing for the Elderly
As the number of older
American increases, business are beginning to pay more attention to the
diversity in this subculture. Many companies are trying to identify the needs
of the elderly and develop products to meet those needs. For instance, both
Mariott Corporation and Hyatt Hotels are developing retirement community products
for the elderly market. Retirement communities combine retirement apartments,
various services and nursing care. They offer personal living quarters in
apartments, various services and nursing care. They offer personal living
quarters in apartments or varying sizes, a wide range activities and
entertainment, housekeeping services, food service options (a dining room for
some meals and one’s own kitchen) and variying levels of on site health care,
including full nursing home services for some people.
The market for
retirement communities is immense: more than 30 million Americans will be 65
older by the year 2000. However, it is a fallacy to imagine that everyone over
65 is a potential customer for a retirement community. The prime customers are
in their late 70s or early 80s. Also, it is wrong to think that many elderly
are feable and in need a nursing home (only 5 percent of Americans over 65 are
institutionalized). Contrary to populer belief, not all elderly live alone,
many elderly are married (estimated 8.3 million in 2000). The mature market is
quite diverse; only the over 85 subgroup is somewhat homogeneous. Therefore,
marketers must analyze the elderly subculture carefully.
Elderly people differ
considerably in how they want to live in retirement. Some want to live in a
single family home, whereas others want apartments or condominiums. Some want
community, social interactions and recreational amenities and others prefer solitude
and independence.
Both Hyath and Mariott
conducted detailed research using focus groups and telephone and written
surveys to understand these needs. One research study identified three
subcultures in the elderly subcultures the “go go’s” (65 to 75, who travel,
play golf and so on), the “slow-go’s” (75 to 85, still active but slowing
down), and the “no-go’s” (85 and older, somewhat active but staying closer to
home). The prime target customer for retirement communities is the slow go
group. The go go’s will be potential customers in another 10 years and the no
go’s are potential customers for the more extensive levels of nursing care.
In the past, marketing
of retirement community products was simplistic some fancy four color brochures
and corporate print ads placed in magazines and newspapers. Early research
generally focused on simple demographic analyses of age, income and
competition. Thus, many marketers did not really understand the elderly market
and how they perceive their own needs.
There is a big
affective and cognitive problem in marketing retirement communities. Typically,
a consumers first response is “im not ready yet.” Most elderly consumers want
to stay in their own homes and remain independent until that becomes
impossible. Getting consumers to buy into a retirement community requires that
they think about the unthinkable (their own mortality and falling health). This
is not easy for most people. In fact, many elderly, especially among the
affluent subgroup, perceive them selves as younger and more fit than they
actually are.
Marriott opened its
first high rise retirement developments (350 to 400 apartments) in 1988. Its
Jefferson retirement community, which opened in 1992, offers a pool, maid
service, and a health club, in addition to 24 hour meals, emergercy call
buttons in each bathroom and bedroom, a floor with skilled nursing care and
another floor for those elderly who don’t require nursing care but need other types
of daily help (in dressing themselves, for example).
A well known industry
consultant suggested that direct mail is the most effective approach for
marketing retirement communities. Every month a company might send something to
potential customers such as postcard invitations to some event, a letter
describing some service, newsletters about the people in the retirement community
or even dessert recipes.
Mariott successfully
used a direct mail promotion to generate interest in its Jefferson retirement
community before it was built. It mailed brochures and information to 45,000
affluent elderly residents of the Washington, D.C., area. For a $1,000 deposit,
people could reserve a $100,000 to$260,000 apartment in the not yet built
luxury complex. The mailing generated a phenomenal 4 percent response rate (2
or 3 percent is considered good).
Over the next several
years Mariott plans to spend more than $1 billion constructing some 150
retirement communities like the Jefferson around the country. In each, most of
the apartment units are designed for independent living, but residents have the
option of receiving nursing care and other types of specialized services.
Mariott also intends to build another 100 developments that offer only two
living options assisted and nursing care.
Hyatt developed its
retirement community, Classic Residences by Hyatt, in 1990. Classic Residences
are upscale apartment complexes that offer a similar set of services for people
of retirement age. Hyatt’s initial research also showed that elderly people had
a strong initial negative reaction to retirement comunities. Even people living
in metropolitan areas who were exposed to a great deal of marketing information
about these products thought of
retirement communities as a euphemism for the dreaded “nursing home.” Thus,
Hyatt’s marketing promotions emphasize “active lifestyle” rather than “taking
care of you forever.”
Hyatt also found that
many elderly people thought retirement communities were extremely expensive or
they had to sign away their life savings to get into a retirement community. So
Hyatt salespeople compared the costs of living in one’s own home to living in
the retirement community. Most people did not realize how much they were
spending to live in their own house, and this knowledge had some influence on
their beliefs of “Im not ready yet.” Mariott, finding the same thing, is
experimenting with different pricing strategies, including charging a lower
initial payment with higher monthly rent/fees so elderly customers don’t have
to use so much of their accumulated savings.
Finally, both Hyatt and
Mariott have developed other marketing strategies. In their sales presentations
they include seminars about retirement planning, health issues, and
motivational topics. Open houses often include entertainment to attract customers.
If necessary, incentives are offered to encourage prospects to take that final
step, including free rent for a few months, paid moving expenses, free interior
decorating advice, or expense paid vacations.
In sum, developing
successful retirement community products and marketing strategies is largely a
matter of listening to the prospects and understanding their needs and
interests. Many elderly consumers know what they want, and they respond to the
same types of marketing strategies used to sell other services.
Source: Sally Chapralls, “Retirement Community Marketers End Their Retirement,” Marketing News, July 8, 1991, p.2; Jame Gollub and Harold Javitz, “Six ways to Age,” American Demographics, June 1989, pp. 23-37; and Janet Novack, “Tea, Sympathy and Direct Mail, “Forbes, September 18, 1989, pp.210-11.
Discussion
Questions
1.
Discuss the submarkets (subcultures)
within elderly subculture that are relevant for retirement communities. Discuss
how social class can be combined with age subcultures to more precisely define
the market segments for retirement communities. What marketing strategies would
be necessary to target these different segments of eldewrly market?
2.
Identify the key target segments for
Mariott’s new health care oriented retirement communities (they offer only
variying levels of health care). For the most attractive segment, identify and
analyze the behaviors, affective responses, and cognitions most important in
shopping for purchasing and living in such a retirement community.
3.
Discuss the marketing strategies that
Marriott could use to market its new health care oriented retirement units to
the key market segments. What different promotional strategies would appeal to
these subcultural groups?
4.
The customer product relationship may be
useful way think about marketing retirement communities. What aspects of this
relationship should Marriott and Hyatt consider, and why? Contrast the
marketing strategies Marriott and Hyatt could use to develop the customer
product relationship before the purchase with the strategies they might institute
after the sale to enhance and maintain this relationship.Source: Sally Chapralls, “Retirement Community Marketers End Their Retirement,” Marketing News, July 8, 1991, p.2; Jame Gollub and Harold Javitz, “Six ways to Age,” American Demographics, June 1989, pp. 23-37; and Janet Novack, “Tea, Sympathy and Direct Mail, “Forbes, September 18, 1989, pp.210-11.
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