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Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
LESSON22
AGE AND GENDER
SUBCULTURE
CHAPTER
4: ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES
Understanding:
·
Age
subculture
·
Gender
subculture
9.
Age Subculture
Important
shifts occur in individual's
demand for specific types of
products and services as he or
she goes from
being
a dependent child to a senior
citizen. A major age sub
grouping of the population may be
thought of as a
separate
subculture e.g. teens influence
purchases in approx all
product categories. They select the
stores in which
they
spend their own money. By
appealing to preteens, marketers
build brand loyalty at an early
stage. The
medium
of choice for advertising for them is
television
Teens
are preoccupied with their
appearance. They are more
open to new ideas and new
products and they are
avid
television viewers. One view is that
teens have segmented
themselves into seven groups
based on
psychographics.
The groups are
named:
1)
Jarheads (athletes)
2)
Nerds or geeks (computer wizards)
3)
Prepsters or bushies
(conservatives)
4)
Surfer dudes (casual
dressers/attitude
5)
Heavy metal
rockers/punks
6)
Study gerkins, and
7)
Bohos (poetry and black
dress)
Popular
Age Subcultures in
USA
American
Teenage Groups
Generation
Y
Between
1977 and 1994
13-20
years
Generation
X
Between
1965 and 1979
25
40 years
The
Baby Boomers
Between
1946 and 64
40-60
years
1.
Generation Y Market
Defining
characteristics of Generation Y market
are:
They
are 13-20 years old
and have grown up in a media
saturated environment. They are
aware of the marketing
hype.
They immediately understand that when a shopping
centre locates popular teen
stores at opposite ends of
the
mall they are being encouraged to walk the
mall. Generation Y-ers split
their time between TV viewing
and
Internet
and are less likely to
read newspapers. They often
do not trust the stores their
parent's shopping.
2.
Generation X Market
Generation
X market is composed of the individuals
who are born between
1965 and 1977 (25-40
years). They are
distrustful
of marketing and look for a
balance between work and
leisure. These adults are
close to their
parents
and
may return to live at home.
They are not drawn to
traditional forms of advertising (see it as
"hyping"). Zen X-
ers
express their need to stay
in control by purchasing communications
equipment such as beepers, fax
machines,
e-mail,
and mobile phones. They prefer
products based on their
practicality.
72
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
3.
Baby Boomers
Baby
boomers are the individuals
born between 1946 and
1964 (approximately 78 million). There
total income is
over
$1 trillion, increasing at a rate of 10%
per year (versus 5% for the
rest of the population). They have a
high
level
of education and have more discretionary
income than other groups
and they buy more and
save less. Baby
Boomers
are health conscious. They are
becoming less materialistic in
outlook and their product
and service
selections
reflect their concern for the
environment and quality of
life. They use credit cards
extensively and the
higher
income groups buy expensive
exercise equipment and other
personal/luxury goods. Boomers
keep up with
fashions.
Seniors
Citizens
Senior
Citizens are older people
who have played their
innings and are mostly living a retired
life. Their
households
are
small and their need
for new purchases is
limited. They enjoy convenience in the
marketplace and
appreciate
their
leisure time. They spend
more on others. They tend to
perceive themselves as younger than
their years (e.g.
65
year olds perceive
themselves as age 50).
Although they have a tendency to be brand
loyal, they tend to try new
products
or brands if given good reasons to do
so. The senior market
can further be segmented on the
basis of
age,
activity level, health, and mobility
(65-74 and 75+ groups;
active/healthy vs. poor health or
disabled)
10.
Gender Subculture
All
societies tend to assign
certain roles to women and
others to men. The masculine
role for example is that
of
aggressiveness
and competitiveness, whereas the
feminine role is that of
neatness, tactfulness, gentleness,
and
talkativeness
Gender
Difference Study
A
study was conducted to
understand the gender differences in
reactions to similar prints. It was
found that
women
show superior affect and purchase
intent towards ads that
are verbal, harmonious, complex and
category
oriented.
Men
show superior affect towards ads
that are comparative, simple
and attribute
oriented.
It was
concluded that it
may
be best to advertise differently to
men and women.
Consumer
products and Gender
Roles
Products
are either exclusively or strongly
associated with the members of
one sex. For example
shaving
equipment,
cigars, pants, ties and
work clothing are for
men. Bracelets, hairsprays,
hair dryers, sweet
smelling
perfumes
are considered feminine
product.s
Men
are Hunters; Women are
Nurturers
(Internet
Surfing Trends across the Genders)
The
appeal for internet seems to
be different for both men
and women. Women go online
to seek out reference
materials,
online books, medical information,
cooking ideas, government information
and chat sites. Men
tend to
focus
on exploring and discovering,
identifying free software
and investments opportunities.
Women are less
likely
to
purchase on the internet (32% for
men VS 19% for women).
Lesser purchase rate on the
internet is because of
heightened
concerns about online
security and privacy.
Women
as Depicted in the Media
Media
and advertising create an expectation of
beauty for women that they
can never meet which is
why most
women
demand the definition of beauty to
change. Responding to this call
from women an international brand
of
soap
challenged the traditional sense of
beauty and "Real" women
were portrayed in the company's ads
with grey
hair,
wrinkles and flawed skin. 65% of women
35-40 years of age felt
good. 50% found ads to be old
fashioned.
Segmenting
the Women Work
Wise
According
to the work status, women
may be segmented into
following categories
·
Stay
at home housewives
·
Plan
to work housewives
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Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
·
Just
a job working women
·
Career
oriented working
women
·
Just
a job working woman seems to
be motivated to work primarily by a
sense that family requires
the
additional
income
·
Career
oriented working women who
tend to be in professional or managerial
position are driven by
the
need
to achieve and succeed in
their chosen careers
The
percentage of career oriented
working women is on the rise
world wide. A study
conducted in USA
found
that
25% of all working women
bring home paycheck that is
larger than their
husband's.
Working
women spend less time shopping
than non-working women. They
accomplish this time economy by
shopping
less often and by being brand
and store loyal. Working
women are also likely to
shop on early
evenings
or
on weekends. Magazines are
delivering a larger women's
audience than Television.
Every year more
retailers
target
women.
Differences
in Acquisition and Consumption
Behaviors
Women
more likely to engage in
thorough examination of a message and
make extended decisions
based on
product
attributes. Males are selective
information processors. Males
are more sensitive to
personally relevant
information.
Women pay more attention to
personally relevant information as well
as information relevant to
others.
Women are more likely to
engage in compensatory eating
making up for deficiencies such as
lack of
social
contact or depression by
eating.
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