Sunday, December 12, 2010

I’m as mad as Hell – and I’m not going to take it any more!

In the 1976 movie “Network”, Peter Finch’s character decided he had had enough of what was happening to the world, and encouraged everyone who shared his opinion to go to the nearest open window and yell  “I’m as mad as Hell – and I’m not going to take it any more!”

When it comes to the quality of marketing, particularly media advertising, targeting an age demographic of 55+, I have reached the tipping point Peter Finch found himself at.

For some time now I have wanted to present a balanced critique of media advertising intended exclusively, or largely, for mature-age consumers.  By “balanced” I mean some good, some bad.

This planned critique lacks only one component – examples of praise-worthy advertising to mature-age consumers.

Why is it that all the rules for successful advertising seem to be abandoned as soon as the target cohort is the age of the parents of the 20 and 30 year old creatives who populate most agencies?

What happens to the Number One rule – “ Make it aspirational ” – make the intended user of the product aspire to the “sexy, cool, fun” feelings that come with the brand and using the product.

My tipping point has been the latest TV ads for Funeral Plans – “Don’t burden your family with the cost of your funeral”.  Wow, that’s aspirational!  About as aspirational as the advertising the 55+ market is consistently subjected to which highlights every conceivable problem they may one day suffer from.

Who believes incontinence, hearing loss, lower back pain, arthritis or any other health, mobility or financial problems are aspirational?

Someone must, because that’s what dominates mature-age advertising.

And the situation is even worse when the target is mature-age women.

A recent Financial Times survey found 8 of the top 10 most powerful women in world business are in their 50’s. Of the other two, one declined to give her age, and the other is 76.

How is product typically presented to this savvy, cashed-up market of mature-age women?  On the body of an anorexic 16 to 18 year old!

Despite statistics that repeatedly prove the 50 to 64 age group has the highest average weekly household expenditure, and the highest average “excess income”, 90% of marketing spend is still directed at the under 50’s.

But please, when a marketer does allocate some expenditure to one of the age groups over 55, please keep the communication positive, uplifting and aspirational.

Despite what mature-age advertising would suggest, today’s Boomers and Seniors are not all sitting in God’s Waiting Room expecting some insurmountable problem to finally overpower them.

They certainly have the capacity, and the justification, to get to a window and start yelling. Dismiss this as just more “noise” about old people at your peril!

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Kaizen in Mature Age Marketing

Kaizen = continuous incremental improvement.

Much of business success is based on spotting a good concept being well executed , and improving on it  -- or targeting a more appropriate niche, or different geographic area.

Several years ago a Dutch initiative Bellendoejezo  ( http://www.bellendoejezo.com/ )  provided “phone coaching” to older phone users covering topics such as  predictive text, creating contact groups, enabling Bluetooth and exploring mobile internet.

The coaches in this operation were 12 to 16 year old students.

More recently a US based service has been initiated by actress Florence Henderson  (if you remember her as mum Carol in The Brady Bunch you are definitely in their target market ).  The Floh Club ( www.flohclub.com ) offers  membership plans to Seniors for telephone based computer support for a wide range of technology issues – problems with Facebook, Skype, instant messaging or ecommerce.

The Floh Club appears to be age-neutral in the selection of their support staff, which will result in the average age of the staff being well under that of their target market.

The latest operation to emerge is a great illustration of targeting the mature age niche, in both the market and the human resources to serve the market.

In fact Tree Rings ( www.treeringsllc.com )  positions itself as providing “Age-Sensitive Contact Center Services for Baby-Boomers – founded with a single goal of hiring baby-boomers – retirees and seniors – who want to work part-time or full-time providing telephone support  and other support services for companies who sell to and service retirees and senior market consumers.”

I have written many times on the benefits of “age-appropriate employees” when targeting mature age consumers. Bellendoejezo and Floh Club took the avoidable risk of an age-based disconnect between their customers and service providers.   Tree Rings have turned the potential disconnect into a significant “first to market” advantage.

The challenge for companies wanting to successfully target the mature age market, either exclusively or within a range of products and services aimed at a wide age demographic, is to observe the progression from Bellendoejezo to Floh Club to Tree Rings, and to implement their own improved strategy.

To contribute to this process, this blog will commence a series of case studies of  innovative mature age marketing.  Let the Kaizen begin.


Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Maturialism – What the?

Being committed to the study of marketing to mature age consumers and niche marketing, jointly and severally as legal jargon would state it, I was attracted to the latest world trend in marketing, as spotted and defined by trendwatching.com.

The trend is called MATURIALISM -- coined from “mature materialism”.

Here’s the link for all the details:- http://trendwatching.com/briefing/

While some examples in the Briefing drift towards the racier end of the “mature adult” definition, the Briefing should be a thought-provoking read for all marketers who include mature age consumers in their current or prospective target market.

The summary of this trend, and the opportunity it provides, is best stated by trendwatching.com :-

For grown-up brands that are in tune with consumer values, MATURIALISM creates juicy opportunities in the years ahead. Mature consumers expect communications and innovations to be candid, to have personality and passion, and to sometimes push the boundaries, i.e. they expect brands to become mature, too.


Niche offerings of course have been successfully connecting with, and catering to audiences on their level for years. We've dubbed this TRIBEFACTURING in the past: adding attributes and features to existing products that make them more practical (or cooler or even naughtier) for specific user groups, while signaling to those users that the brand 'gets it’.


So now is the time for mainstream brands to move with the culture, to loosen up a bit, and yes, have some fun in the process




Do you have examples of marketing that confirm or dispute the existence of the trend to "mature materialism"?

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

RoI - How to justify Online Marketing to Australian mature age Consumers

As an active and vocal proponent of internet based marketing to Australian mature age consumers, I am often questioned on the financial benefits of an increased emphasis on online, versus offline, marketing activities.


What is the targeted Return on Investment (RoI) that will justify the proposed expenditure on our website, or writing blogs, or other social networking?

The inference in that question is that the recommended online expenditure will be additional to current spending for offline marketing and sales activities, but in reality that is rarely the case. Almost without exception, the expenditure allocated to online activities will be redirected from current offline spending, with demonstrable improvement in achieving marketing and sales KPI's.

One significant benefit of online activity is access to an array of "same-day statistics", such as Google Analytics, to evaluate results.

While the remainder of this post will cite scenarios relating to the developers and marketers of Retirement Village and Aged Care facilities ("purpose built aged housing" to quote Prof. Andrew Beer), the takeaway is equally appropriate for all businesses that target Australian mature age consumers.

The challenge to correctly predict the Return on Investment, even if the outlay is substituted for existing expenditure, depends on the balance of demand and supply in the operation, or specific facility, in question.

The RoI justification is simplest where supply exceeds demand; in other words where stock is available for sale, or where resales are taking an unacceptable time to achieve settlement. In this case the proposed expenditure on a website rejuvenation, including basic Search Engine Optimisation (SEO), will result in a financially viable increase in the quantity and quality of enquiries to feed your Sales Process.

Even assuming your closing ratios of enquiry : registration of interest : contract : settlement do not improve on the rates achieved from offline enquiry, and that is an improbable worst case, the incremental settlements generated by online activity will more than justify the investment required to establish and maintain a "traffic attracting" online presence.

From a quantity of enquiries viewpoint, it is significantly more cost-effective to increase the flow of enquiries via online activity than traditional offline marketing, and there is a quality of enquiry consideration, which can be equally beneficial.

This is achieved, firstly, because the online enquiry can be more tightly targeted than offline marketing, utilising what we know about the prospective residents we most want to attract - the area they currently live in, their financial status, their affinities and characteristics.

The next scenario in degree of difficulty to justify online marketing expenditure is where demand and supply are reasonably balanced.

The assumption in this case is, say, a well established Retirement Village with a small number of recently completed units available for initial sale, with ongoing resale turnaround timing at an acceptable level. To achieve this balance of demand and supply, we assume necessitates "industry average" expenditure in offline marketing such as press advertising, printed brochures and marketing collateral, and printed newsletters to your database.

Industry experience in this scenario confirms there is potential for a significant reduction in the "cost per enquiry" - in some cases from an average offline cost per enquiry in excess of $1000 to less than $100 online. This online cost assumes some expenditure for an external consultant and web designer to facilitate the website rejuvenation and to maximise "organic" search results, and limited expenditure on Pay-Per-Click online advertising.



If this post achieves nothing more than encouraging operators of Retirement Village and Aged Care facilities to collate and compare their cost per enquiry for each source of prospective residents (press ads, radio, newsletters, online directories, referrals etc), then it will be a success.

In addition to the potential to vastly reduce your cost per enquiry, there are other significant opportunities to reduce offline marketing costs. The printing and mailing of brochures, newsletters and other marketing collateral will reduce every time a prospective resident goes online to view, and possibly download, the information they are seeking.

The scenario in which it is most difficult to justify directing marketing dollars to online activities, is one where demand significantly exceeds supply, and there is virtually nothing spent on offline marketing.

The justification in this case is based on reducing the time investment of sales resources into prospecting activities, and the average time taken to execute the steps in your Sales Process.

The world's best salesperson cannot match the prospecting effectiveness of Google. The monthly average number of Google searches in Australia for terms including "Retirement Village" is currently around 70,000 and for "Aged Care" is 450,000.

To get your share of the search traffic in your geographic area, your business must have an effective online presence.

The internet has caused major change in most aspects of how today's business is carried out, and within the sales arena, none more significant than the change in the balance of knowledge between buyer and seller. Before the internet's emergence, buyers had very little choice other than approaching the providers of the products or services they were seeking, and gathering the information they needed to take their purchasing decision via face-to-face or telephone conversations with the sales representatives of the competing providers.

Today's buyers are able to evaluate the competing providers, and to gather most of the information they need, before disclosing their interest to anyone. This is achieved via the websites of the potential providers, and increasingly through online forums, blogs and interest groups, where commercial reputations are enhanced, or destroyed, on a daily basis.

Previously the initial contact point, the receptionist or sales representative, was in the "make or break" position of determining whether a sales enquiry would proceed to the next step. Today that initial contact point, with a rapidly reducing number of exceptions, is your internet presence.

The potential saving in this scenario relates to the time required to execute the steps of your sales process. The prospective resident starts the Sales Process with a significant knowledge advantage relative to their equivalents of 5, or even 2 years ago.

There is a huge caveat is this fact.

The need to reverse the seller orientation in the early steps of your Sales Process, in favour of genuine buyer orientation, has never been more important, or more urgent.

But that's for another post to pursue.

My final point is one I hope will be my most provocative.

If you believe the emphasis on online marketing activities is appropriate for other industries, but not yet relevant for the buyer demographic in the Retirement Village and Aged Care markets, you are perpetuating a very expensive strategic error, from which your enlightened peers are enjoying a compelling competitive advantage.

Marketing to Boomers? Here's the latest "screen" scene -- TV is "Booming"!

The US$ 3.5 million year long Video Consumer Mapping Study, conducted by the Nielsen-funded Council for Research Excellence, has dispelled several popular notions about video media use by US consumers, which should be of great interest to all local marketers wanting to communicate with Australian Boomers and beyond.

The Study, in which participants were directly observed by researchers using handheld smart keyboards, recorded – in 10 second increments – consumer exposure to visual content presented on four categories of screens: traditional television (including live TV, DVD/VCR and DRV playback); computer (including Web use, email, instant messaging and stored or streaming video); mobile devices such as a Blackberry or iPhone (including Web use , text messaging and mobile video); and “all other screens” (including display screens in out-of-home environments, in-cinema movies and even GPS navigation units).

The Key Findings, which experience suggests are either true of Australia today, or will be very soon, are

· Traditional “live” TV remains the proverbial 800 pound gorilla in the video media arena.

· Despite the often heard “Kids of today spend too much time in front of TV or their computer” or “new video media appeals only to the 20 and 30 somethings”, the Study revealed “Young Boomer” consumers in the 45 – 54 age group average the most daily screen time – just over nine and a half hours – spread over live TV, computer software, email and general Web use.

· Participants aged 65+ had the highest average daily minutes watching live TV (420.5) of all age groups, followed by people aged 55 – 64 at 346.1 minutes.

· The 65+ group spent an average of 46.5 minutes daily on their computer, primarily Web use, using software and email.

· Participants aged 55 – 64 spent 116.5 minutes on their computer and 14.2 minutes on mobile video.

· Even in major metropolitan areas where commute times can be long and drive-time radio remains popular, after TV, computer use has replaced radio as the No.2 media activity. Radio is now No.3 and print media fourth.

· TV users are exposed to, on average, 72 minutes per day of TV ads and promos – again dispelling a commonly held belief that modern consumers are channel-hopping or otherwise avoiding most of the advertising in the programming they view.



In summary :-
Any Australian organization looking to improve their marketing communications with the most lucrative consumer groups – the Boomers and beyond – would be wise to carefully consider the implications of this US Study.

It is a clear picture of the Australian media landscape , if not now, in the very near future.

If you want an interpretation of the lessons from this Study , specifically applied to your organisation’s current market communications, please make contact via http://www.seniorcoach.biz/ or leave a Comment below.

Why Mature Age Consumers?

When infamous felon Willie "The Actor" Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he replied by stating the obvious - "because that's where the money is!".


That reply is equally obvious, and accurate, whenever a business owner or manager asks why their business should target mature age Australians -

"because that's where the money is!".

The statistics are undeniable and unending, but here are some of the more compelling:

- Starting in 2010, when the first Baby Boomers turn 65, the average monthly increase in the number of Australians over 65, will be more than 20,000 -for the next 40 years.

- The monthly increase in over 65's equates to the population of a major regional city - every month for 40 years.

- Over those 40 years, the increase in Australians over 65 is more than today's population of New South Wales.

- By 2040, there will be more than 7 million Australians 65+, a ratio of 1 in 4 versus 1 in 8 today.

- By 2050, one third of our population will be over 65.

Today's business opportunities targeting mature age Australians - the market we define as "Boomers and beyond"-- are far greater than the raw numbers suggest. While these Boomers and beyond are numerically 25% of Australia's population, they control 50% of total consumer buying power, and own 75% of the country's financial assets.

For Australian businesses with export aspirations, Asia's population over 60 is currently 385 million. Europe has 153 million.

In the recently published "PKF Business & Population Monitor", Access Economics asked the question - "How many firms have factored into their business plans the realisation that almost half of the increase in retail sales in the next decade will be to customers aged 60 and over?". Has your firm?

Particularly when working with SME business owners, I frequently revert to one of my favourite quotes - "You don't have to outspend your competitors, if you can outthink and outcreate them".

A recent experience is a perfect example of the thinking behind this quote:-

The operator of a Yoga studio has really cracked the mature age market, by repackaging her yoga sessions as "Fall Prevention Strategies for Seniors."

There's the challenge for Australian business proprietors -- how to rethink and recreate your products and services to increase their appeal to those monied mature age consumers.

What differentiates a blog from other communications activities is the opportunity for two way interaction.

Please let others share your thoughts.

Or for more of mine, try here at http://www.seniorcoach.biz/