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The Six Costliest Mistakes
You Can Make in Marketing to Women.
If you've been paying
attention lately, some companies are marketing to
women very effectively, while others are not. Tired of
Mars & Venus?
by
Andrea Learned
If you've been paying attention lately, some
companies are marketing to women very effectively,
while others are not.
The smart ones are beefing up their customer
service training, offering incredible return policies
and providing intuitive "e-mail a friend" tools. The
slower-on-the-uptake companies may do as little as use
photos of women on their sites and call it a day.
The following mistakes, with tips for avoiding
them, are meant to serve as a quick checklist to
follow as you approach a new campaign or Web site
redesign. So print it and tack these to your bulletin
board!
Here we go:
1. Mistake: Thinking that women are a
"niche."
Reality: Women are the primary
consumers in the United States.
Women represent an economic powerhouse, making over
85% of the consumer purchases (in the United States)
and influencing over 95% of total goods and services.1
Women's consumer spending is $3.7 trillion and
business spending is $1.5 trillion.2 Women
also purchase 50% or better in traditional "male"
categories like automobiles, consumer electronics, and
PCs.
Tip: Develop a visual image to
represent how many dollars women consumers spend in
your industry. This exercise should help your whole
marketing or product development team to "get it" so
they join wholeheartedly into the effort.
How: If your business generates
$100 million a year and women purchase and/or
influence 80% of all your goods and services, women
are an $80 million factor in your business. Work the
numbers into a visual comparison to give you and your
management a clear, and dramatic, picture of the role
women play in your current success and future growth.
2. Mistake: Thinking that the female
consumer marketing opportunity requires less funding.
Reality: Women are no "specialty"
market, so reaching them should be a budget priority.
As a consumer group, women have not been the
"minority" for years. An initiative to reach a
sub-specialty market like "senior women who drink
scotch and ride motorcycles" can be treated
speculatively, for sure. But, efforts to connect with
your women consumers overall should have fully
dedicated funds (and corporate commitment) behind
them.
Tip: If securing marketing dollars
for reaching women is a challenge, focus on budgeting
around -- rather than trying to secure -- the illusive
(and often tiny) "women's initiative" budget.
How: Identify the best ways to
strengthen your customer touch points to the (higher)
standards of women and seek approval on their own
merit, as plain and simple customer service or
marketing enhancements.
3. Mistake: Dividing markets along purely
gender or demographic lines.
Reality: Within all those
demographic categories lies the key -- consumer
behavior.
Life-stage and the fundamental truths of consumer
behavior will matter the most in reaching women
consumers. Women, on the whole, cannot be expected to
respond to gender-oriented "pastel" print ads or Web
sites. Instead, think solid information, ease of use,
stellar customer service, and simple design (no
flash!). Web sites or marketing efforts meant to
appeal to consumers, in general (male, female, old,
young) must go deeper to develop a relationship based
on interests, personal identities, and affinities.
Tip: Develop an in-depth knowledge
of your customer group. Women are incredibly diverse
and can be better defined by their interests and
personal identities (musician, investor, collector of
rare books, person interested in foreign adoption)
than their gender alone.
How: Listening to women via small
gatherings, focus groups, forums, e-mail surveys and
customer feedback, will give you a clear understanding
of their interests. Using such methods you may
discover things like their passions, life-stages, the
problems they need solved, their consumer
sophistication level within your industry, and the
role they want your brand to play in their life.
4. Mistake: More men are on-line than
women.
Reality: Women have become the
majority of Web users and do the most on-line shopping
in the US.
According to the US Census in 2000, women became a
slight majority of Web users in the United States for
the first time in history (51% female/49% male). Women
make up almost half of first-time Web buyers.3
Women will continue to flock to the on-line platform
that allows them to save time researching and buying.
Tip: Keep your eye on the on-line
behavior trends of women consumers. Their numbers
on-line will grow and their comfort with on-line
shopping will only improve.
How: Even reading an occasional
case study or tidbit can really help you stay
up-to-date and thinking "fresh" about reaching women.
Some suggestions for keeping your finger on the pulse
without too much extra effort:
- Sign up for our newsletter (you knew I'd say
that) and check out the archives at:
http://www.reachwomen.com/archive/ (I cull from
a lot of the resources I recommend, so you can get
it all in one place)
- Subscribe or find in your library the print-only
newsletter, Marketing to Women by EPM
Communications
- Read back issues of American Demographics
- Check out MarketingSherpa.com's consumer
marketing biz newsletter:
www.consumermarketingbiz.com for some great case
studies.
5. Mistake: Women like to browse and be
entertained while on-line shopping (the same way they
do at the mall).
Reality: Making informed
purchasing decisions is an on-line woman shopper's
goal.
If you truly understood the role women want your
brand to play in their life, all of your efforts would
focus on informing them as consumers. This includes
any e-mail correspondence, site navigation, archives
and customer service. Seventy-eight percent of women
in the US use the Internet for product information
before making a purchase and 33% research products and
services on-line before buying offline.4
So, it's actually quite different than their
stereotyped, meandering and social, offline "mall
cruising" behavior.
Tip: Pay attention to the clues
women give in order to serve them better. Better yet,
ask your customers directly what you can do for them.
How: Become a detective. Clues
often come in the form of complaints, oversold items,
e-mail feedback, products that don't sell, marketing
content or programs that are flops, and the odd
unattended area of the business that is generating a
lot of consumer heat (like replacement washers for a
particular plumbing fixture).
6. Mistake: Focusing on women will alienate
men.
Reality: Focusing on women
delivers the best to everyone.
Women are not afraid to stop and ask for help, so
they will demand more, in terms of customer touch
points, from any product, service or marketing
campaign. If you incorporate the higher
information-delivery and customer service standards of
women into the development of your product or service,
or its Web site, you are bound to give men a bit more
than they even thought to ask for. And, of note:
marketing materials that use cliché women's colors
(filmy pinks and purples) or focus on "women's
topics," do, indeed, alienate men. But women are
insulted by that approach as well.
Tip: Survey your employees to
evaluate your Web site's language, tone, overall
"feel," and do some blind customer service inquires.
Remind them to use their eagle eyes and be truly
critical.
How: A quick comparison of
slightly different versions of your homepage could do
wonders. Use your existing homepage as one version,
and develop an alternative mock-up of your homepage
that has been tweaked to be more informative and
"customer supportive." (Even moving the Customer
Service link to a more visible spot is a worthy
change.)
The above tips should help you save significant
time and money whether you are examining your current
marketing strategy, or building a new initiative.
Whatever you do, don't try the latest tactic or
copy a program that seemed to work for another company
before you learn more about the women who buy your
product.
Reaching women more effectively ain't rocket
science, but it is a little bit complicated. And so
very worth the extra effort.
Notes:
1 Competitive Edge Magazine
and EPM's Marketing to Women
2 Women's Market
3 WiredNews.com
4 Millward Brown Intelliquest
Andrea Learned and Lisa Johnson are cofounders
of ReachWomen LLC, a marketing and research firm that
helps clients tap the buying power of women by better
understanding their consumer behavior. ReachWomen
publishes its own newsletter, Reaching Women On-line,
and its principals are working on a book or two.
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