Posts Tagged ‘millennials’

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Why Causes Might Be the Best Way to Reach Millennials

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Millennials can be a tricky target for marketers. Despite the fact that, according to eMarketer, more than 82% of US internet users 18 to 34 use social networks at least monthly (and that percentage is likely near 100% in target markets), about 84% of millennials say they don’t notice ads on social sites, according to the Lubin School of Business.

So what are the best ways for marketers to penetrate the seemingly impenetrable millennial market? According to a recent survey by the Pivot Conference, the answer may be cause marketing. About two-thirds of the respondents to the Pivot poll agreed that green and socially conscious motivations were one of the top factors that differentiated millennials from other demographic and psychographic groups.

That perception falls in line with research the eMarketer Daily reported on from agency Cone. While interest in cause-related marketing grew among the general population between 2008 and 2010, social and environmental causes had a significantly greater influence on the purchase decisions of millennials than other generations. If marketers are looking for 18- to 34-year-olds’ “susceptibility” to branding, social and green issues are a good place to start, with 85% saying they would switch brands because of such marketing and 73% saying they would try a new brand. According to Cone, moms are also a prime target of cause-related campaigns.

Asked about what kinds of cause marketing brands could provide that would entice them, millennials were most interested in ways they could learn about issues (86%), buy products where a portion of the sale supports a good cause (85%) or donate money to a nonprofit identified by a brand (84%). With that in mind, brands that show a deep commitment to their chosen cause and facilitate learning and changes in a community are more likely than others to succeed. Do you agree?

Posted: October 5, 2010. Filed under: Advertising,Brands,Demographics  
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eMarketer Webinar: Tips for Reaching & Engaging the Elusive Millennial

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To listen and watch playback of the webinar, Tips for Reaching & Engaging the Elusive Millennial with eMarketer CEO Geoff Ramsey, click here. You can view the PowerPoint deck below.

View more presentations from eMarketer.

Join eMarketer CEO Geoff Ramsey to find out about:

  • The fluid ways these digital natives spend their media time
  • What they really think about advertising
  • Why their deep involvement with social media does not mean deep trust
    of social networks
  • What brands need to know about the research and purchase habits of these
    device agnostics
  • What are the marketing techniques that fail with millennials—and the
    ones that succeed

About Geoff Ramsey
Geoff Ramsey is one of the internet’s most exciting digital marketing visionaries. As CEO and co-founder of eMarketer, Geoff is on the cutting edge of new research statistics, trends and best practices, covering every aspect of marketing in the digital age. He is frequently quoted in The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, CNN, Bloomberg Businessweek and Advertising Age.

A highly regarded speaker with an engaging presentation style, Geoff speaks at major digital, media and corporate events around the globe, including the American Association of Advertising Agencies, Association of National Advertisers (ANA), Magazine Publishers of America (MPA) and the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB).

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Posted: October 1, 2010. Filed under: Consumers & E-Commerce,Demographics,eMarketer,ROI,Social Media Marketing,Webinars  
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Case Study: Evenflo Turns to Online Video Marketing to Engage Millennial Parents

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Evenflo, the marketer of child car seats, infant feeding products and other baby gear has done little, if any online marketing until this summer when it launched “The Savvy Parents Guide” campaign. The primarily digital communications platform seeks to position Evenflo as a savvy and empathetic partner in the frequently overwhelming business of parenting.

After all, trying to remove the baby from the car seat without dislodging the entire apparatus from the backseat can be rather daunting. Even Bethenny Frankel, reality show and real-life mom on Bravo’s “Bethenny Getting Married?” had trouble figuring it out.

In “The Savvy Parents Guide”, Evenflo thinks it’s found a fun and engaging approach to helping first-time parents along. The company targets millennial parents with a series of tongue-in-cheek webisodes that offer tips on child safety while also illustrating frequently hilarious parenting moments. For example, “How to Repair Your Husband’s Bruised Ego” shows a dad’s struggle to install a car seat (it sounds a lot like sex), then offers the “Savvy Parents” way to install Evenflo’s Momentum 65 convertible car seat.

The webisodes are anchored by a microsite that includes bloggers highlighting their unique approaches to parenting, parenting tips, time-saving hints and resources, tweets, product information and an opt-in newsletter. The campaign is supported with paid advertising on parenting websites, as well as editorial links and coverage on forums, blogs and communities. The dive into webisodes is rather bold considering the brand hasn’t done branded entertainment, let alone online video before. But millennials are online and they’re consuming plenty of video.

In fact, 25- to 34-year-old US online users consumer the most video of any age group with bits of incremental growth through 2014. After millennials, the 35- to 44-year-old age cohort are the next big consumers of online video.

Evenflo’s decision to leverage video content and tie it to specific star products like its car seat makes sense–75% of millennials tap into video and 71% buy stuff online, according to a study by Microsoft Advertising conducted by Survey Sampling and Russell Research. Sure, Evenflo wants to sell more product but it’s also showing it can entertain and relate to the many trials-by-fire of millennial parents.

I spoke recently with Chris Craig, Evenflo’s chief marketing officer, about the company’s efforts to reach and cultivate relationships with millennial parents using online video, a first for the company. Here’s a snippet from the full interview available on eMarketer Total Access.

eMarketer: What are you trying to achieve with “The Savvy Parents Guide campaign”?

Chris Craig:

Evenflo is seeking to engage our consumer, and we chose video as the primary means of engagement. A key insight for us is that parents take the role of parenting very seriously and sometimes we forget about the fun and pleasure that’s involved in raising kids. The insight for us was you do all this work, read all these books, ask for all this advice and then you’re a parent and it’s never anything like you expected.

The campaign is a communications platform that we hope will help consumers understand Evenflo. We’ve been in the baby products business for 90 years and have a terrific amount of expertise in the category. We want to help new parents.

Evenflo doesn’t have all the answers, but we know where to find them. “The Savvy Parents Guide” is also an advertising platform that can come alive in a variety of product categories. The webisodes attempt to inject humor into the challenging situations you find yourself in as a parent. The goal for us is to stimulate conversation. Webisodes are perfect for an online and social-media-driven campaign. They are conversation starters online and off.

eMarketer: The target audience for this campaign is millennial parents. How do you define that demographic?

Craig:

Our overall audience is 22 to 35 and millennials are a smaller slice of that—about 22 to 30 or so. For Evenflo, the defining psychographic or demographic is this is an online generation. They’re very comfortable digitally. Our objective is to find millennial parents where they want to be found, where they expect to be found and engage them the way they expect to be engaged.

eMarketer: What kind of digital media and marketing has Evenflo done?

Craig:

Evenflo experimented with banner advertising about two years ago, but otherwise has not done much digital advertising.


eMarketer:
Are the webisodes destined for television?

Craig:

No, this campaign is an online campaign. This is branded entertainment. Using online and print, millennial parents are remarkably targetable. Outside of online and print, it becomes much more difficult for us to justify the spend. We’ve done mostly trade-based media until now.


eMarketer:
Have you purchased media to promote the webisodes?

Craig:

We’re doing paid media for the first phase of the campaign to get the word out about the webisodes. Our ad buy is on parenting- and mom-oriented sites. We have purchased specific areas on several online hubs, including iVillage, Nickelodeon and Disney Parenting, as well as WebMD, Babble, Parents and CafeMom. Our ads will appear in approximately 500 blogs as well.

In subsequent phases, we’ll use earned media and work closely with independent bloggers. We have a blogger ambassador who has the savvy, knowing voice of Evenflo.

The full version of this interview is available here, to eMarketer Total Access clients only. Every day they have access to new interviews with digital marketing leaders and trendsetting entrepreneurs.

Click here to learn more about how becoming an eMarketer Total Access client can strengthen your business.

Posted: August 19, 2010. Filed under: Advertising,Case Studies,Interviews,Online Video,Social Media  
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