3 New Perceptions About Baby Boomers

Article about
 

3 New Perceptions About Baby Boomers


Mar 1, 2010 by Mark Maier

The fastest growing demographic (someone will turn 50 every 7 to 10 seconds, 12,000 each day, over 4 million each year in the next decade)  is also making the most changes in the marketing world and Engage: Boomers Writing A Brand New Book brings us some new insight into what we should be helping our clients understand and market...

"The Average Consumer Doesn't Exist

Unfortunately, few marketers have figured out how to best target the Boomer and older consumer. While one Boomer might be gearing up to start a business, another might be taking early retirement. Everyone is different. But how deeply do marketers really want to believe that? How many marketers want to deal with consumers under the rule that every one is unique? A conflict exists between the idea of personalizing company/customer relationships, and the desire to put every consumer in some category that allows marketers to predict their behavior.

Marketers Have to Stop Net Fishing and Start Fly Fishing

Behaviorists have discovered that no two people see anything exactly the same way. No view we have of anything can be fully congruent with anyone else's view because, like fingerprints, every brain is unique as are the five senses that connect us to the world outside our minds.

Not only do we each see the physical world at least slightly differently from everyone else, we don't precisely match anyone else in anything we believe. There will always be some aspect of a belief that bears the imprint of our distinct identity. So, at best, we can only achieve an approximate matching of our beliefs with anyone else's.

Conditional Positioning

Boomers and older consumers are more resistant to absolutism. The young mind tends to see things in terms of absolute states or conditions. In contrast, Boomers and older consumers tend to have greater appreciation for the finer definition that nuance and subtlety give to a matter. This bias results from a combination of experience and age-related changes in how the brain processes information. The predisposition of Boomers and older consumers to reject absolutism means that marketing communications intended for them should generally reflect a conditional tone, allowing each reader/viewer to interpret the message based upon their needs and desires. Less is more in these markets"


Related Categories

Read Comment this Email this0 Comments148 Views

Readers Comments
No comments have been submitted to this Article

Leave a comment
* Name
* Email ( will not be displayed )
Website URL if any ( http://www.mywebsite.com)
* Comments
Code

Security Check
 
 
* Required
When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment. If you subscribe to the LPG Maillist you will also be sent a link to confirm your email address, and to validated that you want to be part of our maillist. To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) and we will make it a live link for you. HTML and Javascript Tags are not allowed. Comments that are considered spam will be deleted, Please keep the comments and links relavent to this Article.

Share this article with others.
* Your Email
* Their Email
 
* Required
When you enter your email address and their email address, our server will send them a link to this article. If you check the subscribe box, you both will also be sent a link to confirm your email address, and to validated that you want to be part of our maillist.
Categories


LPG Staff