The 'youthquake' that began in the 1960s has never ended for the advertising industry. The 18-to-49 year old demographic remains the sweet spot for ad targeting. The theory was that people in younger segments of that age bracket are forming allegiances they will stick with through their highest earning years (the upper end of the bracket) so that is the most efficient way to for advertisers to get to them.
Except that a)things change and b)sometimes taking a fresh look at old assumptions leads one to different conclusions (for instance, anyone remember the concept of 'stickiness' from the late 90s?). What has happened is that the global economy has changed so one important pillar of that concept has begun to crumble: it is no longer assured that younger generations will be more materially successful than their parents. Secondly, the demographic 'pig in the python' boomer generation has continued to spend into what used to be thought of as the retirement years, upending traditional assumptions about consumer behavior. They watch more television than others (who are fixated on the net) and they spend more. A lot more.
The issue is not so much that anyone generation is 'better,' it is that stuff happens. Technology and globalization have had a huge impact on the way we live. Building that into your world view is just common sense. JL
Ira Kalb comments in BNet:
"For so many years, Nielsen and others have programmed people’s brains into thinking that the sweet spot of advertising is the 18 to 49 demographic. Within that group, the even sweeter spot supposedly was the coveted 18 to 34 cohort that fetched the highest advertising dollars.
According to Amy Chozick in the Wall Street Journal, “…viewers over 55 haven’t factored into ad rates, which have made them without value to the networks.” David Wolfe, noted author on marketing to older customers, says that Madison Avenue is still locked into “Chronic Youth Syndrome.” In his talk by the same name, Neal Gabler calls this “The Tyranny of the 18 to 49.”
Advertisers pay more for younger audiences, but should they?
With 60% of its audience over the age of 55, the hit CBS show The Good Wife (11.51 million viewers) is able to charge advertisers a CPM of only $25. (Disclosure: BNET is owned by CBS). Even though it has a smaller audience (10.5 million viewers), the popular Fox show Glee charges advertisers $47 to reach a thousand viewers (almost double that of the Good Wife). Why? It has one of the youngest audiences in prime time. American Idol has an audience more than twice the size of Glee (21 million viewers). Even so, because its audience skews older (averaging 44 years of age), it has a CPM of $46.75 - slightly lower than Glee.
Boomers watch more television
Ironically, this fixation on younger audiences is a historic anachronism dating back to the time when Baby Boomers were 18 to 34. If marketers look at the current data, Baby Boomers, those born between 1946 and 1964, should be the coveted audience segment. They grew up with TV and tend to watch more than other segments - 170 hours a month, or 5 to 6 hours a day (compared with 4 hours and 49 minutes for all viewers). The 18 to 34 demographic is more focused on the Internet, and watches less TV. Moreover, Baby Boomers have the largest buying power of any demographic group. Unlike previous generations that dialed down their spending when they reached 55, Baby Boomers spend a lot. They spent $2.9 trillion in 2010 and are expected to spend $4.6 trillion by 2015. Previously, nobody thought of challenging Nielsen - the company that has had a virtual monopoly on audience metrics upon which TV advertising has been sold over the past 35 years.
Nielsen ratings: worthless
David Poltrack, a highly-respected CBS Chief Research Officer (with a last name that couldn’t be better for his position), recently told the members of the Advertising Research Foundation at their annual convention that there is no link between the age or sex of the audience targeted and the sales generated by an ad campaign. In other words, beyond total audience size, Nielsen ratings are virtually worthless. For advertisers that have spent hundreds of billions of dollars on advertising based on Nielsen ratings over the past 35 years (since 1976), this is really bad news.
Potentially, the good news is that CBS has been working with Nielsen to develop a new model upon which advertising will be sold. This model identifies six target audience segments unrelated to age and sex demographics.
TV companions
Media trendsetters
Sports enthusiasts
Program passionates
Surfers and streamers
TV moderators
How marketers have benefited from targeting older audience
Marketers that have refocused their marketing on older segments have already realized dividends. Here are just a few examples.
In the 1990’s, New Balance targeted Baby Boomers and became the fastest growing shoe company in the United States.
When Vespa Motor Scooters returned to the US after a 15-year absence, the company thought that their target audience would be 20-year-olds. What they discovered is that their most enthusiastic customers were over 50. Moreover, the older buyers bought higher-end, more-profitable models with more options and accessories. As a result, now they are also targeting the older demographic. Unilever targeted older women using aging “real-people” in their Dove soap commercials. In the months following the launch, their sales growth exceeded expectations and beat the growth of the entire soap category.
How you can benefit
Now that advertisers are looking at data in real time, it is clear that the coveted demographic segment that marketers chased over the past 35 years is a myth. It may have been true at one time, but it is not now. How can marketers take advantage of this new information? Marketers should do the following:
Learn about the tools and metrics available to identify and track your target audience (what I call the “lock”).
Build a marketing information system to incorporate the most appropriate metrics to monitor, collect, analyze, report, and take action on information from this audience. This does not have to be done all at once, and can be built in stages.
Look beyond the traditional segments defined by organizations, such as Nielsen, to determine the segments that are most likely to buy your products.
When new metrics are developed by Nielsen, CBS, or whoever, don’t accept them at face value.
If you find inaccuracies in the metrics they use to formulate their advertising rates, use that information to negotiate a better deal with the media in which you want to insert your message.
Build into your marketing information system ways to measure how well it is working so you can tweak the system to continually produce better results.
Understand that the big numbers in the US are trending older because of Baby Boomers. This will continue until the segment dies out.
Generation Y or Echo Boomers also have sizable numbers. Don’t ignore them or any segment for that matter
0 comments:
Post a Comment