DEI (diversity, equity, & inclusion)

Multicultural Conversations on Handling the Hard Stuff (Event Summary)

  • SALON SERIES

Navigating the Messy Middle: Multicultural Conversations on Handling the Hard Stuff – Particularly During a Crisis  This virtual Salon, hosted by the ARF Cultural Effectiveness Council was moderated by Janelle James, Qualitative Research Director, Kantar. Janelle was joined by Kendra Clarke, Vice President of Data Science and Product Development, sparks & honey, and Ola Mobolade, Founder at COCO and Co-author of “Marketing to the New Majority”. Editor’s Note: The full summary is available to members only.

Member Only Access

Building Brand Loyalty Through Language Techniques (Event Summary)

  • WEDNESDAY WEBCAST

This is second installment of the ARF Cultural Effectiveness Council’s webcast series: Building Brand Loyalty with Today’s 21st Century Audience. This episode focused on language, specifically how marketers can use language to reach diverse audiences. Demographic changes in the US over the past couple decades or more have been significant and marketers need to understand them, if they want to be successful. Editor’s Note: The full report is available to members only.

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Target Multicultural TV Viewers by Program Genres

  • J. P. James (Salem State University) and Tyrha Lindsey-Warren (Baylor University)
  • JOURNAL OF ADVERTISING RESEARCH

Myths abound about planning and buying TV to reach multicultural audiences. The study seeks to dispel them, as it calls for targeting these increasingly valuable audiences by program genres instead of by the networks associated with ethnic groups and insists that the industry needs a new measurement standard in this area.

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Warning: Flawed Data May Be Sabotaging Your Targeting Efforts

  • Alice K. Sylvester and Jim Spaeth
  • JOURNAL OF ADVERTISING RESEARCH

Flaws in data sampling accuracy and coverage can foil brands’ targeting efforts and ultimately their ROI, which bodes badly for advanced TV advertising. The culprits: crippling media fragmentation, and a dearth of research on missing and misidentifying consumers when using commercially available target segments for digital campaigns.

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Marketing to Hispanics

Marketers have become increasingly aware of how important it is to understand the characteristics and dynamics of the Hispanic market - the fastest growing segment of the U.S. population. But what are the Hispanic segment's media behavior and ad receptivity?

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How Retargeting Drove Toyota’s Success Among Hispanic Auto Buyers

  • Mia Phillips – National Manager Multicultural & Brand Strategy, Toyota Motor Sales, USA, Inc.

A lack of in-language automotive sites and online clutter posed challenges to Toyota’s need to reach likely truck buyers in the growing Hispanic community. The automaker used an innovative retargeting approach combined with an understanding of their target’s interests and special creative executions to gain traction among their target and drive success.

ARF Event January 18, 2017 – Leading with Multicultural

The ARF held an event on Multicultural in Advertising in Los Angeles on January 18, 2017 at Nestle’s offices. Here are some key insights and takeaways from some of the speakers:

  • We collect inputs at the DMA level, which allows for modeling of multicultural efforts and comparison of performance. Overall, the Hispanic efforts have done as well as general market efforts. – Robert Reyes, Nestle
  • A Total Market Approach should start with an agnostic assessment of total market from a business opportunity standpoint, mine the data through different lenses, then determine who to hone in on. Ana Crandell, OMD Latino
  • 57 million Hispanics in USA and growing; 85% of that population are online. Thus, the importance of in-language content. Mia Phillips, Toyota
  • Multicultural shoppers consume mobile content at a higher rate than the general population, so mobile-friendly content is key. Fernanda Alcantara, Facebook
  • Hispanics have always been on the leading edge of adopting new platforms and technologies. Adriana Waterston, Horowitz
  • Diversity in the workforce is needed; all marketing staff should to be well-informed on multicultural marketing. Gilbert Davita, Davita Multicultural Insights

You can access the slides and videos from this event, by clicking here and using your myARF login and password.

Insights from Some of the Industry’s Mad Men & Women via AdAge

Wendy Clark, CEO, DDB North America: “We have to value how people work as much as what they do. As an industry for too long we have tolerated really bad behavior to protect someone’s talent. They’re very talented, but don’t play well with others. If you’re trying to move with the speed of the marketplace, and in an efficient manner, there is no way you can’t have collaboration. Collaboration is at the root of trying to move quickly and efficiently. How we do things is as important as what we do.”

Lori Senecal, Global CEO, CP+B: “Creating a succession or series of high-impact moments that live up to a brand’s promise ends up being more engaging for consumers and gets around that clutter issue.”

Chuck Porter, Chairman, CP+B: “The last couple of years the talent we’re seeing is really great and better maybe than it was before. There seems, at least to me, to be a renewed interest in the marketing business and really smart kids are finding it interesting.”

Keith Reinhard, Chairman Emeritus, DDB: “I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard ‘unprecedented change’ over the years. But when we think about those changes, and surely there are many, I think it’s good to think about what doesn’t change. The timeless things. Fundamental things in our industry still apply. Human nature is timeless. To be admired, to belong, to take care of our own are all timeless. And that means what else is timeless is great creativity and ideas.”

Access full article from AdAge

Editor’s Note: A snapshot of the multicultural nature of the USA today. US Minority Groups Grow to 38% Of The Population – Via Center of Media Research (MediaPost)

Asian-Americans were the fastest-growing minority group in the US last year, with a growth rate of 3.4% reaching 21 million (6.5% of the population) as of July 2015.

The Hispanic population grew by 2.2% and total 56.6 million, representing 17.6% of the population.

African-Americans comprise (46.3 million) 14.4% of the US.

The non-Hispanic white population was essentially unchanged, and totaled 198 million.

The relative youth of the minority population means that just over half of American children under 5 belong to a multicultural group.

Access full article from MediaPost

Head and Heart: Making Sense of Multicultural Mindsets

Monique L. Nelson – Chairman & CEO, UWG

Jeff Yang – SVP, Consulting Services, The Futures Company

Introduced by: Colleen Fahey Rush – EVP & CRO, Viacom Media Networks; ARF Board Member

The panel discussed a Marine Corps recruitment campaign targeting second generation Asian-Americans. The campaign was developed by UWG.  

Culture is a factor in decision-making.

Both rational and emotional reasons for becoming a Marine were analyzed. Emotion and rationality were considered as part of researching key areas that shape multicultural mindsets.

Explore the interplay between rational (tangible benefits) and emotional (intangible benefits) mindsets in the multicultural consumer.

They showed a recruitment video for the Marines called “A Warrior’s Education.”

The creative spoke to second-generation Asian Americans who experience a feeling of cultural displacement with their families and in American culture. These individuals stand within two worlds, and have a flexible sense of identity.

These two mindsets are not necessarily exclusive. They can run concurrently.

The decision to become a Marine is extremely engaged. Depending on culture, there are different tendencies operating. These individuals can use code-switching to fit in the majority environments, but also to stand out in these environments. They need to be able to adapt and function in sharply different cultural realities.

In the same way, multicultural consumers alternate in behavior but also in mindset. They tend to “think in color” in emotionally charged contexts.

  • Younger consumers tend to be more engaged, while older consumers are more habitual.
  • Hispanic, African-American, Asian-Americans are more engaged while non-Hispanic whites are more likely to be habitual.

Emotion and rationality are always at play in decision-making, all the time.

Marketing to multicultural consumers acknowledges the fluidity of their identity. They will have a rational consideration but the emotional connection is what makes their final decision.

In “A Warrior’s Education,” you see authentic storytelling about 1st Lt. David Pham, a Marine from a similar background. The videos were watched exclusively on Facebook and supported on marines.com.

The first video outlined the concept of self-discipline. The second video shows the importance of “respect” and love in leadership. The creative leverages content for the head and heart and is tailored to this particular group.

Appeal to the dual connection that involves their thinking processes and emotional drive.

Find the common ground between groups, take a universal approach, and find the “sweet spot” to make your appeal even stronger. Family is one of the cultural touchstones for Asian Americans that was leveraged the videos. These spots scored high for rationality and emotionality.

See all 5 Cups articles.