|
Where Can I
Download FREE Music?
| |
Selling To Baby Boomers | Baby
Boomer Marketing
|
How to Sell to Baby Boomers
|
Selling
To BabyBoomers
Baby Boomer Marketing
Ride The
Gray Train To Increased Profits
By Harry Hoover
Something is roaring into the business community's depot that has been
building momentum for years. I call it the Gray Train. On December 31,
2004, the last Baby Boomer turned 40, pushing that train to full
throttle. Marketers are missing the obvious and not-so obvious
opportunities to grow their businesses with this appealing audience.
Self-indulgent Baby Boomers want what they want, now. They have
business expertise, have received all sorts of training from their
corporate employer and now that education allows them to open up their
own businesses. Or, they have done so well, they no longer have to work.
They can pursue their passion. |
 |
| A few, smart
marketers have been positioning themselves to take advantage of
this segment that - with few exceptions - has disposable income,
time and the inclination to use both to get what they want, when they
want it. |
|
|
Baby Boomers
are members of a generation - 78
million strong - born between 1946 and 1964. Boomers control half
of all discretionary income and spend $2 trillion every year on
consumer-related services. Half of Boomers will pass 50 in 2005, as
10,000 more see their cake ablaze with 50 candles every day. Despite the
size of this demographic segment, it has been reported that only about
10 percent of advertising dollars are spent on Boomers.
Not only are most marketers ignoring the obvious about this segment,
they are clueless about what Boomers really want: experiences,
particularly those that bring with them knowledge or a chance to connect
with family.
Here are a number of other themes the marketer should take advantage of
in targeting the Baby Boomer:
- Boomers are first and
foremost self-interested. They want what they want, and they want it
now
- Despite this "want it now"
mentality, Boomers are increasingly concerned about having
enough money to continue their current lifestyle in retirement
- Although self-involved, they also
are very family-oriented and have a charitable side that has not been
fully tapped
- When Boomers retire - and
that retirement will be radically different from their parents'
retirement - they will want to bring their lives with them, not
start new ones
- Baby Boomers don't think about their
ages, so marketers should focus on the benefit of the product or
service and not on the user's age
For marketers, the bottom line is this:
Baby Boomers constitute a ripe demographic that has been ignored
too long. TV network programmers and Hollywood movie companies, among
other marketers may want to take a fresh look at this 78-million-strong
generation. My advice: get on the Gray Train and profit. |
|
|
|
|
|
If
you'd like more on this topic, get
my Purple Paper on the subject at:
http://www.hoover-ink.com/BabyBoom.pdf
Harry Hoover is managing
principal of
Hoover ink PR. He has 26
years of experience in
crafting and delivering
bottom line messages that
ensure success for serious
businesses like Brent Dees
Financial Planning, Focus
Four, Levolor, New World
Mortgage, North Carolina
Tourism, TeamHeidi, Ty Boyd
Executive Learning Systems,
VELUX, Verbatim and Wicked
Choppers.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Harry_Hoover
|
|
|
|
|
|
Selling To Baby Boomers | Baby
Boomer Marketing
76 million Baby Boomers
are heading for retirement.
Microsoft's New LIVE Search Engine |
How To Write a
Resume |