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Secrets of Advertising to Gen Y Consumers. Aiden LivingstonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Secrets of Advertising to Gen Y Consumers - Aiden  Livingston


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Sensational or Sensationalized

      The practice of trying to sell the glamorized image of a product is called sensationalized marketing. This has been the standard way advertisers have tried to communicate their products to consumers throughout Gen Y’s life. The advertisers try to sell the sexiness of a product, or how much better your life will be with the product.

      When it comes to trying to reach Gen Y, over-the-top marketing claims will have the opposite of the desired effect.

      I always have to laugh when I see commercials for Valtrex, which is a prescription medication for genital herpes. The TV commercials show people kayaking, going for hikes in scenic wilderness surroundings, or riding a double-seated bicycle down a beach boardwalk. I would joke with my friends and say, “If only we could all be so lucky as to be living with genital herpes; I mean when was the last time we took a double-seated bike out for a spin down the boardwalk?”

      Another classic offender is late night infomercials. The infomercials often take the most mundane of items and then proceed to explain how this piece of kitchenware will change my life. Even before they make their outrageous claims I consider all the items I currently have in my kitchen, none of which have ever even managed to impact my life in any significant way, much less change it completely.

      It is hard for me to say for sure if any of the older generations ever really appreciated these kinds of sensationalized ads that offend logic and spit in the face of common sense. I do know that when it comes to trying to reach Gen Y, over-the-top marketing claims will have the opposite of the desired effect.

      2. Brainy and Boastful

      The fundamental flaw in the sensationalized method of marketing is it fails to address the fact that Gen Y prides themselves on being smart and informed consumers. Any purchasing decision is preceded by enough research and analysis to make even Thomas Edison blush. We read reviews, ask questions on online forums, we consult our friends, even cross-reference prices and features on manufacturers’ websites. In fact, it is interesting to see when one of my Gen Y friends, myself included, finally resolve to make a purchase. We are so inordinately proud of what a good job we did that we end up taking an undeserved sense of pride in the product.

      Recently my Gen Y friend, Sara, bought a new mountain bike. Directly after ordering the bike from a local store, she came home and showed all of us online which bike she was getting. Sara then went into a rather long and boring dissertation on why this was the right bike for her needs. “You see, the bike has extra shocks, because you know how I like to go biking in the mountains, and it has a special memory foam seat because you know how sensitive my tailbone has been since that snowboarding accident … ” and so on ad nauseam. If you were to listen to her excessively enthusiastic diatribe, you would swear she had designed the bike herself, or at the very least was deeply involved in the manufacturing process. In reality, Sara did nothing but make the decision to buy the bike, but her enthusiasm for her purchase articulates a distinct difference in the Gen Y mind-set that most advertisers fail to address.

      3. Gen Y Doesn’t Mind Doing the Research

      Gen Y doesn’t find the process of researching products tedious or exhausting, in fact, I think we can’t help but be this way. I have made snap decisions before when I was at a shop and I felt pressured to buy a product immediately by either a one-day sale, or perhaps it was the last in stock. However, the first thing I do when I get home is begin my normal research process, even after I have already made my purchase, just to make sure it was a good decision. More to the point, I want to make sure it was the “best” decision. For example, I recently bought a digital camera to replace the one that had been stolen on my travels. I had not yet done any research but I was in the mall and the siren’s call of the display Guitar Hero video game was beckoning me in to Best Buy. After a rousing round of “Free Bird,” I decided to take a gander at thecameras.

      Now I had been quite happy with my previous camera and had it not been for a sticky-fingered thief, I would have been more than content to use it for another year or so. However, since I was going to have to make a new purchase, why not try to find something even better, and a super slim Casio seemed to be the perfect candidate. As luck would have it, the camera was on sale and it was the last one in the manly black finish. Were I not to buy it now I could be stuck with the red model, which bordered too closely to pink for my taste. I was stuck between a rock and a hard place. I could purchase this camera that seemingly filled all my purposes, or I could go home and research it to make sure it was the best choice and potentially go back to the store later only to be stuck with the camera color that would test the security of my masculinity. The prospect of being stuck with a fuchsia-colored camera proved too terrifying to risk, so I bought the last black one.

      The first thing I did when I got home was consult the online reviews and guides. I was gutted by what I discovered. Although the camera fit all my needs, and the highly reduced price made it a compelling deal, it was not, in fact, the “best” camera I could have bought. Perhaps most insulting was that it was not quite as good as the camera it was replacing. I still find myself looking at pictures that were taken by my old camera with a certain longing that one usually reserves for lost loves. Even though the camera adequately filled all my purposes, which are pretty minimal, I still had buyer’s remorse because I could have bought an even better camera had I taken the time to research ahead of time like I normally would.

      Gen Y consumers view information gathering and analyzing as an essential part of the purchasing process.

      4. Information at Our Fingertips

      Gen Y consumers view information gathering and analyzing as an essential part of the purchasing process. This is why sensationalized marketing techniques are so ineffective with this generation of consumers. We want to get all the available facts and decipher the information in order to make an informed decision. This is ultimately the result of growing up in an era when so much information is so readily available. We have always had the “information superhighway” at our fingertips, so this ingrained the habit, or rather craving for information in Gen Y.

      By comparison, my mother hates having to do the research about a new purchase and is more than happy to shrug responsibility on to me. Many Baby Boomers would rather have the decision made for them; they find the limitless options inherent to modern day purchasing exhausting. They remember growing up in a world that wasn’t so complicated, where when they needed a product they went to the local store and bought the item that most closely met their needs. Market saturation wasn’t an issue in those days, and the long lists of features and personalization options were limited by manufacturers’ technologies.

      Even to this day you can see the difference when it comes to purchasing a laptop. I will see my friends’ parents get hung up on every detail. Whether deciding what processor speed, amount of RAM, or most insignificantly the color of the laptop, Baby Boomers seem pained by having so many choices. Even the fundamental decision of Mac or PC leaves a lot of Baby Boomers scratching their heads, which to me seems ridiculous because I would go back to writing with pen and paper before I go back to a PC!

      5. Growing up in a World Full of Choices

      Baby Boomers like an authoritative figure helping them to make a decision. This would explain why sensationalized marketing was an effective practice for this generation. They liked having a commercial tell them definitively what was the best purchase choice for them. They didn’t have to explain why this was the best choice, and the argument didn’t necessarily have to make sense. Baby Boomers just liked to be reassured before making a decision, to be pointed in the right direction. It’s not that Baby Boomers are dumb or unable to research a purchase the same way Gen Y does, they simply grew up in a time when it wasn’t as necessary. Their purchasing habits were formed in a different economic climate. In the 1960s and the 1970s much of the manufacturing was still done within the United States. The markets weren’t flooded with hundreds of foreign manufacturers seeking to niche themselves within a marketplace.

      During the 1990s to the present, markets have become


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