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Subcultures. What is a Subculture?. A distinct cultural group that exists as an identifiable segment within a larger, more complex society. A homogeneous segment within a heterogeneous national society. Relationship Between Culture and Subculture. Subcultural Traits of Hispanic Americans.
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What is a Subculture? • A distinct cultural group that exists as an identifiable segment within a larger, more complex society. • A homogeneous segment within a heterogeneous national society.
Relationship Between Culture and Subculture Subcultural Traits of Hispanic Americans Subcultural Traits of Asian Americans Dominant Cultural Traits of U.S. Citizens
Nationality • Primary subculture identified on the basis of nationality in the U.S. is the Hispanic subculture. • Identifying Hispanics • Country of origin • Self-identification • Degree of identification
Hispanic Subculture • 32 million people (2001) • 64% of Mexican origin • 10% of Puerto Rican origin • 4% of Cuban origin • Remainder from Spain, Central American, or South America • “Pan-Hispanic” middle class
Hispanic Market • Prefer well-known or familiar brands • Buy brands perceived to be prestigious • Fashion-conscious • Prefer to shop at smaller stores • Deliberate buyers • Buy brands advertised by their ethnic-group stores • Likely to buy what their parents bought
Hispanic Market, continued • Tend to be negative about marketing practices and government intervention in business • Less than 1/3 have credit cards • Only 30% have checking accounts • Increasingly using coupons • Very price-sensitive • Prefer fresh to frozen or prepared items
Marketing to Hispanics • Use Spanish-language media • Personal, small stores • Emphasize prestigiousness of products • Offer coupons, sales • Advertising should tie in to family
Race • Major racial subcultures in U.S. are Caucasian, African-American, and Asian-Americans
African-American Subculture • 34 million (2001) • Moving from inner cities to suburbs • Moving from Northern cities to the South • Strong middle class
Characteristics of African-American Market • Value-conscious • Prefer popular or leading brands • Unlikely to purchase private-label and generic products • Brand loyal • Use fewer coupons than Caucasians • Read more advertising
Marketing to African-Americans • Broad appeal ads for products that broadly appeal to all ethnic groups, including African-Americans • Specialized appeals for products specifically developed for African-Americans • Preferred mediums are radio, African-American magazines, African-American cable stations
Asian-American Subculture • 10.9 million (2001) • Represent more than 29 different countries • Middle East to Taiwan • Tendency to live near entry ports; overwhelmingly urban • Median household income $40,600 (1995) • Wealthiest subgroup: Asian Indian
Asian American Market • Very family oriented • Very industrious • Strive for excellence in education • Strive to achieve higher class • Typically employed in professional, managerial, or technical occupations • Consumption decisions tend to be male-oriented • Likely to patronize Asian shops • Brand loyal
Marketing to Asian Americans • Use Asian American models • Use native languages • Niche marketing • Family-based messages • Base message appeals on desire to achieve
Age • Generation Y • Born between 1979 and 1994 • 7-22 year olds • 60 million • Echo boomers, Millenium Generation • Indifferent to many well-known brands • Savvy consumers • Internet kids
Generation X • Born between 1966-1976 • 23-33 year olds • 46 million • Enjoy life, have flexible lifestyles • Job satisfaction more important than salary • Purchase good brand names, but not necessarily designer labels • Low newspaper readership
Baby Boomers • Born between 1946-1964 • 37-55 year olds • 76 million (40% of adult population) • Trend-setters • Consumption-oriented • Segment boomers by age: younger and older • Affluent boomers--yuppies
Mature Adults • 56-65 year olds • Represent 70% of nation’s wealth • Silent generation • Easy to market to--TV, newspapers, radio
Older Consumers • 65+ age category • Growing segment • Diverse interests, opinions, and activities • Cognitive age vs. chronological age
Characteristics of Older Consumers • Price/value conscious • Deal-prone • Like to shop • Tuned in to mass media • Read everything • Use credit cards infrequently relative to other age groups
Marketing to Older Consumers • Segment by attitudes or lifestyle issues • Be careful not to embarrass older consumers about their age • Show diversity of age cohort in visual ads • Avoid stereotypes • Allow for sensory deficits • Print size • High frequency sounds • More time for information processing • Use print media
Sex • Sex roles • Gender identity • Working woman • Segmentation issues • Shopping patterns