Flack Ace Peter Himler's take on Fidelity Investment's investment in Sir Paul as spokesperson for their company is a must read.
Also, Mr. Himler has recently tossed some video into his blog. Click the clips on the left ("Why I Blog" and "Getting Behind the Headlines").
As I've said before, there's no better spokesperson for PR than PH.
Beginning in 2003, my business blog for Creative Services, Copywriting, Consulting, and Speaking. You'll find all sorts of information about the current trends in advertising and marketing to this unwieldy, diverse demographic.
16 September 2005
13 September 2005
Selling Online to the Older Shopper
Writing for ecommerce-guide.com, James McGuire focuses his latest piece on Selling to the Older Shopper.
What does the article say about Baby Boomers? A whole bunch, including this unsurprising but ignored fact:
What does the article say about Baby Boomers? A whole bunch, including this unsurprising but ignored fact:
Today's seniors are reluctant to buy online from a site they haven't heard of; if they don't know a business offline it won't get their dollars online. But with the age 50-64 group, there's a mentality of wanting to try new things and being adventurous. The fact that an online vendor is newly launched is no deterrent for them.
Have browser, will travel.
08 September 2005
Marketing and Age and Everything in 324 Words
Well, I wish they were my words - but I'm too much of a slobbering gusher. So here's Dick Stroud's simple, concise Theory of Everything (The UK version, at least). He wraps it up pretty well.
Also download Dick's two new articles in PDF:
The Charmed Generation Becomes Generation Broke
Digital Marketing for The Charmed Generation
Make sure you (at the very least) check out the second one. Dick's web site design and navigation commandments should be carved in ethereal stone.
For another Theory of Everything from New Zealand, read this article.
Also download Dick's two new articles in PDF:
The Charmed Generation Becomes Generation Broke
Digital Marketing for The Charmed Generation
Make sure you (at the very least) check out the second one. Dick's web site design and navigation commandments should be carved in ethereal stone.
For another Theory of Everything from New Zealand, read this article.
03 September 2005
It's okay to be gray.
As everyone knows, thanks to so many astute media pundits and marketing/advertising gurus, Baby Boomers think they're still teenagers and are horrified when they look in the mirror and see some hoary stranger in their forties or fifties. (And in a few months, many of these malicious apparitions will take the form of normal human beings in their sixties.)
Botox! Hair coloring! These are the answers to that creepy, disingenuous image staring back at them.
….. But according to an article by Jack Neff in Ad Age (subscription required), "AGING POPULATION BRUSHES OFF COLORING," the hair coloring and salon industries are in the doldrums — all thanks to Baby Boomers eschewing these phony ways of attempting to look younger:
Botox! Hair coloring! These are the answers to that creepy, disingenuous image staring back at them.
….. But according to an article by Jack Neff in Ad Age (subscription required), "AGING POPULATION BRUSHES OFF COLORING," the hair coloring and salon industries are in the doldrums — all thanks to Baby Boomers eschewing these phony ways of attempting to look younger:
"The graying of america is at the root of the problem for the $1 billion-plus mass-market hair-coloring business. The category has cooled from double-digit growth the past two decades to more than 4% declines the past two years..."Here's another article by Colette Bancroft of the St. Petersburg Times. An excerpt:
Diana Lewis Jewell is the author of Going Gray, Looking Great! The Modern Woman's Guide to Unfading Glory (Fireside, 2004) and a former marketing director of Vogue.Also check out the adjunct article with quotes from a bunch of old, creaky, silver-haired geezers.
"Look at this generation, our generation," says Jewell, who is in her 50s. "We always wanted to be ourselves."
The number of gray heads is growing, she says, because of "that boomer individualistic attitude: It's okay to be gray."
In her book she cites a poll commissioned by the AARP that shows 53 percent of boomer women and 6 percent of men in that age group color their hair.
"That means 47 percent of women and 94 percent of men don't."
29 August 2005
The Very Secretive Forth & Towne
If you're in the advertising/marketing industry (or in the retail clothing industry, I'm guessing) you're probably sick of hearing about Forth & Towne - a new set of thirty-odd stores opening up around the country.
The story behind it: parent company The Gap has decided to take on Chico's and a few other clothing retailers, offering affordable, fashion-conscious apparel for women Baby Boomers.
So you don't have to wade through the media coverage, here are the two best articles I've found about the hubbub:
Generation Gap
(Chicago Sun-Times, Cheryl V. Jackson)
Filling the Gap: (Associated Press, Anne D'Innocenzio)
From Ms. Jackson's article:
There are so many ladies I know around my age who've stopped going to malls, stopped physically shopping for clothing (they pour over catalogs and/or order online) because there isn't much out there for them.
But don't let them know about Forth & Towne. Just hope that they pop in.
The story behind it: parent company The Gap has decided to take on Chico's and a few other clothing retailers, offering affordable, fashion-conscious apparel for women Baby Boomers.
So you don't have to wade through the media coverage, here are the two best articles I've found about the hubbub:
Generation Gap
(Chicago Sun-Times, Cheryl V. Jackson)
Filling the Gap: (Associated Press, Anne D'Innocenzio)
From Ms. Jackson's article:
For now, Forth & Towne isn't advertising. It's just throwing open the doors Wednesday and waiting to see who pops in.Oh ...... great idea! Just ignore the largest, richest demographic — a generation very much accustomed to being advertised to (and not particularly happy that they're off the radar nowadays) — and one that has always responded well to intelligent, informative advertising.
There are so many ladies I know around my age who've stopped going to malls, stopped physically shopping for clothing (they pour over catalogs and/or order online) because there isn't much out there for them.
But don't let them know about Forth & Towne. Just hope that they pop in.
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