Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Are Hispanic Shopaholics?

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According to the latest US Census Bureau statistics, the Hispanic population brings $356 billion spending power to the marketplace.

By the year 2011, experts predict that the number will swell to as many as 42 million, and by 2050, more than 87 million Hispanic people will be engaged in purchasing, consuming,and disposing of goods, and service in the US.

Ever since advisers and marketers have created a niche for the Hispanic consumer in the US, we are more responsive to the advertising.

The Hispanic market currently represents some $600 billion in spending power and is expected to grow to $1 trillion by the end of the year.

With income and wealth growing, new windows of opportunity will develop to fill the gap between the Latino consumers' needs and existing products and services.

Studies has shown that female Hispanic consumer is highly cognizant of trends and styles and likes to shop for fashion, stated by Kim Kitchings, director of research and strategic planning for Cotton Incorporated.

They like to jump on a trend as it's happening, rather than catching it when it's phased through the mainstream.

Hispanic women are very much into their appearance and how they comes across, shares Evan Gordon, president and founder of Hispanicity, a Chicago-based Hispanic marketing agency.

Research has shown that Hispanic women tend to spend extra time and money on clothing and accessories so they can be one of the sharpest dressed people out there, 40% of the of these women buy the latest fashion at the beginning of the season, they are willing to spend 15% more.

Exploring the attitudes of the Hispanic credit card users, their socioeconomic and characteristics, where they consider credit cards generally useful.

The industry and marketing strategies develop enhancements that appeal to changing customers needs, especially for the Hispanic market that is growing.

Traditionally, businesses have perceived the Hispanics as a low income group with little education and lacking credit cards. However, this perception may be changing, and for a good reason.

Today, the Hispanic market numbers about 30 million in size with around $350 billion in spending power.

Do think Hispanics are shopaholics?


Terra/ Farah Chajin

Monday, November 22, 2010

Holiday Spending Season: Consumer Intentions and Attitudes in Q4 2010 October 2010



Go to Article: http://burstmedia.com/research/research.asp.

According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the so-called “Great Recession” technically ended in June 20091. But as we head into the fourth quarter of 2010, consumer pessimism remains stubbornly high. In this environment of economic uncertainty – coupled with noisy mid-term elections – the American consumer sits on the sideline, mindful of their spending, waiting for prospects to brighten.

With the holiday season rapidly approaching, marketers and retailers are looking for signs that consumers will reemerge and start spen
ding again. Our September 2010 survey of 2,600 online U.S. adults aged 18 and over does not deliver a clear beacon that consumers are back; however, it does find a glimmer of hope as the majority of consumers do not plan to cut back on spending from last year’s levels.

Key Findings:
  • The holiday shopping season may not be all doom and gloom: the majority of consumers say they will spend the same or more on gifts in 2010 than they did in 2009.
  • More than half of consumers anticipate purchasing gifts online this season.
  • Consumers continue to have concerns when making an online purchase; security of information and privacy concerns top the list.
  • Cash makes a comeback: consumers plan to use cash, checks or debit cards more than their credit cards this holiday season.

Insight #1: Consumers Are Slowly Warming Up to Spend
This Season
Our study found that more than one-third (36.0%) of respondents expect to spend the same on holiday gifts this year compared to 2009, 17.4% plan to spend more and 34.6% anticipate spending less. The number of respondents planning to spend less (current year versus previous year) is similar to findings from our 2009 holiday spending study conducted last year at this time. But for retailers it’s not all coal in the stocking: at least one-fifth of men (see chart #1) and respondents reporting a household income of $75,000 or more say they’ll spend more in 2010 vs. 2009.

We also asked respondents about their holiday entertaining plans, and one-fifth (19.5%) say they’ll spend more on entertaining this season compared to 2009; three-in-ten (30.9%) expect to spend less and 37.8% expect to spend the same. Interestingly, the segments that anticipate spending more on holiday entertainment in 2010 compared to 2009 are, again, men (particularly young men aged 18-34) and respondents reporting a household income of $75,000 or more.


Insight #2: Online is the Bright Star in the Sky
Online sales have been growing in the months leading up to the holidays: July 2010 sales grew 10.9% year over year, according to MasterCard Advisors’ “SpendingPulse” report – and the U.S. Census Bureau reported that retail ecommerce sales were solid in Q2 2010, growing an estimated 13.7% year over year2.

This growth trajectory may continue, considering the fact that 56.5% of respondents to our survey expect to make a gift purchase online this holiday season. More good news for online retailers this holiday season is our finding that one-quarter (26.8%) of holiday consumers who bought online last year say they’ll purchase more online this year, and one-half (52.9%) say they’ll purchase about the same amount. Our study also found that 9.0% of respondents who did not make an online holiday purchase in 2009 anticipate making an online purchase this holiday season.

Interestingly, the traditional start of the holiday shopping season, Black Friday, is looking like a relic of years past with only 9.5% of respondents saying the day after Thanksgiving is when they start buying for the holidays. That said, savvy consumers – knowing that retailers are posting some of their best Black Friday deals online – will shop the web on Black Friday from the comfort of their homes rather than rise early to face crowded stores3.

Insight #3: Consumers Use the Internet to Research and Compare Products
Online shopping encompasses much more than making an actual purchase, and our study found that consumers use the Internet for a variety of “window shopping” activities. Overall, the most popular online “window-shopping” activities are researching and comparing different brands (33.6%), comparing different retailers and finding the best prices (33.5%), finding the closest store location where they can make a purchase (23.8%) and finding products only available online (21.6%).

Interestingly, when asked about last year’s holiday shopping season, one-third (33.5%) of consumers say they researched gift ideas online but ultimately purchased the gift(s) offline at a physical retail location.


Insight #4: Concerns Can Impact the Online Shopping Experience
Compared to our findings last year, consumers in 2010 are feeling a bit more secure with their online shopping experiences. That said, the security of credit and/or debit card(s) is again the top concern for both men and women: this year, 63.1% of women cited it as a concern (69.4% cited it in 2009) and one-half (51.5%) of men find it concerning (58.0% cited it last year).

Other issues cited as concerns leading into this year’s holiday season include shipping costs (57.7% women; 44.2% men), the privacy of personally identifiable information (53.4% women; 42.0% men) and product quality (47.0% women; 43.9% men).

Interestingly, men overall appear less concerned than women about online shopping issues. The only category where men showed more concern than women was product availability: one-third (32.7%) of men say it’s a concern while 28.6% of women do.


Insight #5: Consumers Are Mindful About How They Spend
This season, it appears that cold hard cash will make a comeback. Overall, nearly three-in-five (57.3%) consumers will use cash, checks or debit cards as the primary means to purchase gifts and entertaining-related products this holiday season. One-third (32.4%) of all respondents say they plan to use debit card(s), cash and/or checks more frequently in 2010 than they did in 2009. Interestingly, men are more likely than women (35.3% vs. 29.7%) to say they will be using cash, checks or debit cards more frequently this year compared to last year.

Only one-fifth (22.7%) of respondents say they’ll primarily use credit cards to make their holiday purchases this year.

How You Can Use This Information
The most significant recession in decades may be over on paper, but consumers are still feeling the pinch and will be mindful of where – and how – they spend their dollars this holiday season. Online and offline marketers alike should strategically leverage the use of price and convenience-based incentives, which can include coupons, time-sensitive calls to action, exclusive online promotions, etc. These types of initiatives can be delivered to consumers in rich media advertising creative that offer marketers the powerful opportunity to create fully interactive ads that allow consumers to gather product information, download coupons or even use a store locator.

Compared to the past two holiday seasons, online retailers are poised to find relatively more success in 2010. Ecommerce sites and web-based merchants will please holiday shoppers if they simplify and update their brand research and comparison processes (e.g., easy webpage navigation, emphasize social sharing, etc.) as well as mitigate any issues on the security, privacy and other common online shopping concerns.

FOOTNOTES:
1National Bureau of Economic Research: “Business Cycle Dating Committee, National Bureau of Economic Research.” September 20, 2010.
2eMarketer: “What Retailers Need to Know About Online Holiday Shopping.” September 2, 2010.
3eMarketer: “Online Holiday Shopping Preview: What Retailers Need to Know.” August 2010.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Interactivation Launches Free Web-Based Developer Toolkit for Interactive Video Story Applications

Interactivation Launches Free Web-Based Developer Toolkit for Interactive Video Story Applications
InteractiveXML Takes Interactive Video Stories to Facebook and the Web Press Release

Source: Interactivation On Tuesday November 9, 2010, 10:30 am EST

NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwire - 11/09/10) - Interactivation, a New York City-based media company, has launched InteractiveXML, a free web-based interactive video scripting toolkit (available at www.interactivexml.com and www.interactivexml.net) which allows web developers to quickly build video applications that can, interact with consumers' clicks, touch, text and voice.

Examples of interactive video applications using InteractiveXML can be viewed at www.frixxer.com.

Interactivation additionally provides free creative, scripting and deployment support to anyone developing "hyperinteractive" videos.

Beyond YouTube's Annotations product which offers clickable "choose-your-own-adventure" experiences, InteractiveXML allows developers to incorporate variables, branching logic, web service calls, screen overlays and more, to produce rich interactive video experiences that can live anywhere a Flash Player can be embedded, including Facebook.

"Our web-based tool allows developers to focus on the scripting and creativity of the user experience rather than the mechanics of building and deploying," said Matthew Davidge, President of Interactivation. "That makes development and deployment fast. When we shoot a demo for an advertising agency, we aim to shoot, cut, build and deploy in three days from script to screen."

InteractiveXML has been integrated with Lumenvox's voice technology (www.lumenvox.com) for through-the-browser voice recognition and Voxeo (www.voxeo.com) for telephony and IM applications.

"The video player and the video experience are one of the least interactive elements of a web page. You can start and stop videos and sometimes you can click an overlay or a hotspot, but not much else," continued Davidge. "With InteractiveXML, you can talk to a video, telephone it or email it and it will respond to you in video in real time."

InteractiveXML is an evolution of technology deployed for an interactive Beavis and Butt-head phone call campaign that the Interactivation founders built and deployed for MTV back in 2006.

A downloadable screenshot of InteractiveXML can be found at http://www.interactivexml.net/resources/1/pieceofcode.jpg and a screenshot of the development tool is at http://www.interactivexml.net/resources/1/ivxmltool.jpg.

About Interactivation
Interactivation is a New York City-based media company that delivers highly interactive and personalized content to consumers through its proprietary interactive technology. For more information, please visit www.interactivation.com.

Example of interactive video:



Monday, November 15, 2010

What your favorite TV shows say about your personality - NYPOST.com

What your favorite TV shows say about your personality - NYPOST.com

What your favorite shows say about you

What you watch may be the key to who you really are.

A new study for the first time matches people’s personality traits with the TV shows they watch — and finds that TV tastes can tell a lot about your character.

Are you a modest person?

Chances are you’re a fan of “Deadliest Catch.”

Altruistic?

Bet you watch “Rachael Ray” or reality shows with happy endings, like “The Bachelor.”

The ad agency Mindset Media — which specializes in targeting ads — analyzed data from 25,000 TV viewers to correlate what they watched with their personality traits.

The information is used to determine which products the viewers of shows are likely to buy.

“We actually developed it as a TV planning tool for marketers,” says Lauren Hudson, a spokeswoman for Mindset.

But the research also found that people with specific character traits were drawn to different shows.

“Glee” fans, for instance, tend to be “more open-minded” — the opposite of the type who prefers “Dancing With the Stars,” whom the study found “more sweet and easy-going.”

“You’d have thought the two shows would draw the same type people, since both are about performing,” says Hudson.

It was impossible to determine a personality type for a few shows, like “House” and “Bones,” according to Ad Age, where the study was first reported.

The audience was too broad, the researchers found.

The agency released its finding on only a handful of shows. They are keeping the rest for the clients who paid for the study and whom they declined to name.

YOU ARE WHAT YOU WATCH ...

Mad Men: If you like “Mad Men,” then you are creative —meaning “emotionally sensitive and intellectually curious types tend to be dreamers rather than realists” — and liberal.

Family Guy: If you like “Family Guy,” you are a rebel — someone who “doesn’t like authority, rules or structure they deem unfair, and usually won’t hesitate to make their feelings known with anger or sarcasm” — and a rule breaker.

Glee: If you like "Glee" you are what ad people call an “ experientialist” — meaning someone who believes that “imagination and intellectual pursuits contribute to a good life, and goes out in search of unique and varied experiences” — and creative (see “Mad Men”).

Dancing With the Stars: If you watch “Dancing With the Stars,” you are a traditionalist — the opposite of the “Glee”-loving experientialist, prefering “stability and the tried and true” — and someone who doesn’t rock the boat and gets along with others.

The Office: If you watch “The Office,” you are, not surprisingly, a lot like the show’s main character, Michael: someone who believes they are “superior to others.” You “prefer to be in charge, directing others rather than being directed.”

Real Housewives of Orange County: If you watch “Real Housewives of Orange County,” you are “pugnacious” — described as “unafraid to tell others what they think and value honesty over keeping the peace” — and probably a leader.

The Biggest Loser: If you watch “The Biggest Loser,” you are a realist who lives “in the present and works with what they have been given.”

McDonald's to hold wedding ceremonies and receptions at fast food chain in Hong Kong

Forget about traditional white wedding arches: why not go golden?


By Aliyah Shahid
Daily News Staff Writer
Friday, October 15th 2010




Starting in January, McDonald's locations in Hong Kong will offer on-site wedding ceremonies-- complete with meal deals for guests, a wedding cake made from the fast food chain's famous apple pies, and even Happy Meal toys for party favors.

Sound ridiculous?

Apparently, there's a market for McNuptials. Helen Cheung Yuen-ling, director of corporate communications at McDonald's Hong Kong, told the
South China Morning Post they've been flooded with phone calls from fast food fanatics wanting to tie the knot over a burger and shake.

"People said they'd dated here, or met here, and wanted to get married here…We see this as a business chance," Cheung said.

And at just $400 a pop for a ceremony and reception for 100 guests, the Chinese are lovin' it.

Poverty researcher Chua Hoi-wai, of the Hong Kong Council of Social Service, said the strategy reflects a social phenomenon.

"The social mobility and incomes of young Hongkongers have fallen," Chua said. "They have saved money for years and can't buy flats when they get married."

While several fast food chains have held individual weddings abroad and in the U.S., including Burger King and Taco Bell, the McDonald's in Hong Kong isthe first to actively promote wedding services.

The bad news? McWedding toasts must be alcohol-free. And, the bride shouldn't expect any special treatment. During the ceremony, business will go on
as usual.