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CONTRIBUTING EXPERTS To BOOM: Marketing to the Ultimate Power Consumer — The Baby Boomer Woman

AARP
William Novelli, Chief Executive Officer

Active Women
Kathy Moyer Dragon, Founder

Appleseed’s
Claire Spofford, Senior Vice President Marketing and Retail

Athleta
Joe Teno, Chief Executive Officer

Be Jane, Inc.
Heidi Baker, Chief Jane Officer
Eden Jarrin, Chief Executive Officer

Best Western International
Dorothy Dowling, Senior Vice President of Marketing

BSH Home Appliances Corporation
Bosch, Siemens, Thermador, Gaggenau
Michael Bohn, Director of Brand Marketing

California Avocado Commission
Jan DeLyser, Vice President of Marketing

CARE
(Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere, Inc.)
Adam Hicks, Vice President, Marketing and Communications

Citigroup
Women and Company
Lisa Caputo, Chief Marketing, Advertising, and Community Relations Officer

Cuddledown Inc.
Christopher Bradley, Chief Executive Officer

DeLorme
Caleb Mason, Director of Corporate Marketing

Envirosell
Paco Underhill, Founder and Managing Director

EPM Communications
Ira Mayer, President

Ford Motor Company
Amy Marentic, Large Car and Crossover Product Marketing and Planning Manager

Garnet Hill
Joanne Sachse Mogren, Vice President of Merchandising/Apparel Division

H2O Wear
Rick Lovett, President

The Hunter-Miller Group
Pepper Miller, President

Intel
Melissa McVicker, Director, Global Communications Group

Isabel Valdés Consulting
Isabel Valdés, President

Junonia
Anne Kelly, President

J. Walter Thompson, Mature Market Group
Lori Bitter, Partner and Business Development Director

KeyBank National Association
Maria C. Coyne, Executive Vice President, Key4Women and SBA

Liz Claiborne Canada, Yzza, and Sigrid Olsen Canada
Anne-Marie Caron, Marketing Manager

L.L.Bean
Fran Philip, Chief Merchandising Officer

Logitech
Gina Clark, Director of Internet Communications Product Marketing

Marriott Vacation Club International
Edward Kinney, Director of Brand Advertising and Communication

Mary Kay, Inc.
Yvonne Saliba Pendleton, Director of Corporate Heritage and Corporate Communication

More Magazine
Peggy Northrop, Editor-In-Chief
Brenda Saget Darling, Publisher

Palm, Inc.
Rose Rodd, Director of Corporate Marketing

Piaggio USA
Vespa, Gilera, Derbi
Federico Musi, Vice President of Marketing

Seabourn Cruise Line
Deborah Natansohn, President and Chief Operating Officer

Time Inc.
Grant J. Schneider, Chief Marketing Officer, Corporate Sales and Marketing

The Vermont Country Store
Cindy Marshall, Director of Marketing

WellPoint
Kate Quinn, Vice President of Customer and Marketing Insights

 
 

 

Introducing the Ultimate Power Consumer: The Baby Boomer Woman

Excerpt from BOOM: Marketing to the Ultimate Power Consumer—The Baby Boomer Woman

3.28.06

by Mary Brown and Carol Orsborn, Ph. D.
AMACOM Books, Fall of 2006

We listened intently, as the marketing research director of the major cruise line described his demographic focus to us for the coming year. “We recognized that 80 percent of the time, it’s the woman who is making the major travel decisions for the family. As a result, we’ve decided to target women age 40 and under.”

“Targeting women is a smart move,” we said. “Women are going to control two-thirds of the consumer wealth in the U.S. over the coming decade. But is there any particular reason why you are targeting the age segment of the population that will see a zero percent increase over the next few years while during the same period of time, the number of people aged 45 to 64 will grow 30 percent?”

The room suddenly grew quiet. After a brief pause, he shrugged his shoulders and smiled, “Perhaps we should revisit this.”

Many marketers have come a long way since the days of automatically targeting the “demographic of choice,” historically considered to be males between the ages 18-34. Since the turn of the century, an increasing number of industries—and an even larger number of advertising, public relations, and marketing professionals—have come to recognize that there are demographic goldmines embedded in broad segments of the population just waiting to be tapped. In our increasingly demanding marketplaces, many view appealing to previously under-represented segments of the population as critical to gaining the edge over less enterprising competitors.

Marketing groups with specialized knowledge of the Hispanic, African-American, youth, or women segments, to name a few, have been rapidly springing up to meet the demands of the sophisticated marketer seeking expertise on issues of gender, age, ethnicity, and even religion. And like the research director of the cruise company, competitive marketers are more willing than ever to admit that in doing so, they often find themselves on largely unexplored terrain. For nearly everybody in the marketing field, this is an era of intense excitement, fueled as much by the adrenalin of trial and error as by the promise of the rewards. Many of those whose companies are willing to test the waters are already proving to be big winners. Others are going back to the drawing boards, learning from their mistakes.

A Prize Worth the Risk

The prize has to be worth the risk, and in the case of Baby Boomer women, the numbers promise that it is. Baby Boomers make up, at approximately 78 million, the largest generational demographic in history—and the majority of Baby Boomers today are women, a proportion that will increase substantially over the coming decades. Beyond their sheer numbers, Boomer households spend more every year on consumer goods and services than their younger cohorts. Additionally, with more established careers than younger generations, Boomer women are at the peak of their earning potential, with many planning to work well into their 60’s, 70’s, and beyond. Not only will they continue to earn income, but within the next decade, many Boomer women will be managing inheritance windfalls from their parents and husbands.

Happily, the cruise company hired us to consult with them on how to market successfully to women of the Baby Boomer generation. Just as importantly, out of this and many other encounters, we recognized the need for a practical, myth-busting book on the subject for marketers in a broad spectrum of industries. As we began sharing our vision, we also recognized the pent-up demand for a forum for those amongst us who are pioneering this new terrain, learning as we go. The result is the book you hold in your hands.

From the beginning, we felt it was important to give voice not just to our own insights and expertise. This moment in marketing history is not about any one individual’s pronouncements, no matter how wise and perceptive she or he may be. Rather, we recognize that we are poised on the verge of no less than a marketing revolution: the traditional wisdom about population segments worth targeting turned virtually on its head. Women 40+, heretofore largely invisible in marketing circles, are becoming increasingly recognized as the powerhouse consumer.

Insider’s Intelligence

Even more compelling than the numbers is the intelligence on what has and hasn’t worked for the cutting-edge companies who have hands-on experience with Boomer women consumers. As marketers, we have been privileged to have a front-row seat, witnessing triumphs and misses—and most importantly, hearing the stories of these demographic pioneers.

Over the years, Imago Creative has partnered with clients in a wide range of industries, from fashion and food, to furniture and finance. Seeing the need for an area expert, Founder and President, Mary Brown, evolved Imago into the only strategic marketing firm in the U.S. specializing exclusively in helping companies build brand relationships with women 40+. We are additionally immersed in this emerging market by having developed ImagoCreative.com, and through our e-newsletter “Femail Focus,” a leading online clearinghouse for marketing intelligence about women 40+. Our database and archival research gives us access to the best-of-class marketing efforts from a broad range of industries, with statistical support to back them up.

In addition to giving voice to our smart and courageous gathering of marketing experts, we recognized the need for progressive proprietary research to fill in the missing pieces of intelligence. As a research associate with UCLA, Senior Partner at Imago Creative, and a 25-year public relations veteran, Dr. Carol Orsborn comes to this book with a unique academic and psycho-social perspective on marketing to the Baby Boomer woman.

Visionary Marketers

Together, we began identifying individuals, companies, and industries both in and beyond our own client base who have launched, or are in the process of launching marketing initiatives targeted to women of the Baby Boomer generation. The response to our invitation to join this book as a contributing author has been tremendous, reflecting peaking interest among marketers and the public in this promising and largely under-served demographic. Each of our contributing authors was asked to respond to their choice of any one or combination of the following three questions:

  1. Do you see an economic market opportunity in the sizable female Baby Boomer demographic for your industry? Do you think the marketplace as a whole has fully tapped this demographic’s potential?
  2. Have you seen (or been involved with) a particular ad campaign and/or marketing effort that has effectively communicated with Baby Boomer women? What tools or approaches do you think are or would be effective?
  3. If you are a member of this generation, what personal requests/hopes/advice do you have concerning how you would like to see this group addressed? What kind of positive impact could this have on you, the business community, the world?

Missionary Zeal

As you will soon be discovering in the pages to come, their answers to these questions—and more—are illuminating, to say the least. There is, indeed, the sense of discovery as individual marketers working independently from one another have been brought together in the context of this book to help connect-the-dots. The intelligence and wisdom they provide is as generous as it is welcome, as the opening of this new marketing frontier takes on a nearly missionary-zeal. “This is an exciting time to be a marketer,” says Melissa McVicker, Director, Global Communications Group from Intel. “Our industry is just now beginning to look at Baby Boomer women as the burgeoning market segment it is. Some of us are doing a better job figuring it out than others. But ultimately, what it is about, is enriching this previously under-represented consumer’s life through innovative technology.” The same sentiment was echoed by contributing authors in fields ranging from travel, automotive and financial services to healthcare, food, and apparel.

Throughout the book, you will be hearing from market leaders from a broad range of industries, who share what they’ve learned about how to connect effectively with this new power consumer. Incorporating proprietary cutting-edge research, the book provides practical guidance and motivational tools for marketers who want to build powerful brand relationships with women of the Baby Boomer generation.

What You’ll Learn

In the pages ahead, you will have access to all the intelligence you need to:

  • Develop a roadmap to increase your market share of today’s most lucrative consumer.
  • Minimize the risks and maximize the potential of marketing to this challenging but promising demographic.
  • Know what industry leaders (and in many cases, the competition) are thinking/doing about marketing to Baby Boomer women.
  • Put your hands on the statistics and power points in order to sell others in your company on putting resources against this up-and-coming market segment.
  • Make strategic decisions about the messages and communications channels you choose to use with her.

Given the range and depth of voices, perspectives, and research represented in these pages, this book promises not only to sound the starting bell for this emerging consumer powerhouse, but to be a definitive guide on the subject, with advice provided by some of the smartest minds in the business today. So buckle your seatbelts. After all, She’s in the driver’s seat!

 

 

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