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MARKETING to CYBER-TEENS
 

A Jupiter Communications survey of online teens (U.S.) found: that 20 percent had made a purchase online, and 52 percent said they’d do more online shopping if they could.

20 percent had made a purchase online
52 percent said they’d do more online
Close to 2 billion people (the equivalent to the total world population in 1930) are under 15 years old
Internet users under age 16 worldwide will surpass 77 million by 2005, with most of the growth coming from North America and the Asia Pacific region
U.S. teens were expected to spend US$161 million online in 1999, a figure that’s forecast to increase nearly tenfold, to about US$1.4 billion, by 2002, according to eMarketer’s eRetail Report

 

 

Smart Strategies for Marketing to Teens

Teenagers worldwide recognize the Coca-Cola (www.cocacola.com) brand logo more often than any other, says Elissa Moses, author of The $100 Billion Allowance: Accessing the Global Teen Market. They also watch MTV (www.mtv.com) and worry about the future. They’re linked by issues such as their love of family and their rejection of tradition. But despite the enormous amount of similarities they share, when marketers want to reach them they must keep one thing in mind: Never generalize.

Though many similarities exist globally within this age group of 15- to 19-year-olds, what is important to one region may not be important to another, Moses says. She does recommend global marketing to teens, but she says that companies are too quick to assume that all teens are involved in the same types of activities. Dating, for example, an activity that many may think of as beginning in the teen years, is an issue for only 12 percent of teens in Vietnam, compared with 67 percent in Ukraine. According to Moses, the best marketers out there, like Coca-Cola, find a careful balance of macro and local marketing. And she believes television is a good way to do that. "I think of MTV as being a loudspeaker in a high school," Moses says. "If you want to reach teenagers overnight, you get on these music video channels, and you will reach the majority of them."

Now is the right time to reach them because of the enormous amount of money teens are spending. Worldwide averages range from a high of $50 a week in Norway to a low $4 a week in Vietnam. The United States falls somewhere in the middle with its teens spending approximately $38 a week. All of this money combined means that teenagers around the world are spending more than a billion dollars a year. And this doesn’t even include money they are helping to spend, such as when they give an opinion to their parents on a new car or computer. Sales &Marketing Management; July 31, 2000.


Kids online in 1997

Almost 10 million children and teenagers under 18 were online this summer, a news study finds. "Children on the Internet," a report by New York-based market research firm FIND/SVP and Grunwald Associates of Santa Monica, Calif., also found nearly half of the online kids get on the Net at school, and 2.2 million of them use America Online as their gateway, according to a summary by Media Daily. The most popular reason to go online was for help with homework and school, followed by e-mail and chatting. However, it was parents rather than the children who detailed how the Net was being used, the report said.

Internet Daily Thursday, October 23, 1997 by Frank Barnako, DBC News