All Articles Tagged "african american marketing"
America's Not Post-Racial But Marketers Think So
(Huffington Post) — The current economic slump many African-American niche industries face is evident as Black-on-Black Love, Black Pride, Black History Month, and Black media — all traditions, slogans, feel good celebrations, and niche industries in the African-American community, are gradually going the way of affirmative action — to the bone yard. But why? Post-race progress, where race is not considered a factor in our buying habits, business pursuits, or self-identity, is wreaking havoc on the Black niche industry and the Black community, a panel of experts argued during the 40th Annual Rainbow Push Convention. Some argue that the Black consumer market is not as distinctive as before; to wit, in many markets Black radio has become the more diversified, urban radio, and race is not considered at all.
Dove Ad Highlights Advertising's Race Problem
(Huffington Post) — As Copyranter, the blog that caused an stir on the Internet earlier this week by posting the ad, noted, it’s as though the ad is pitching a product that “turns Black Women into Latino Women into White Women.” The blog Styleite reached a similar conclusion, writing, “Visually, it communicates that if you have dark skin before you use VisibleCare, you’ll have pale skin afterward.” Noting another salient difference between the black model and white one, Styleite added, “You’ll also be thinner.” In a press statement, Unilever, the company that makes Dove products, said that all three women were “intended to demonstrate the ‘after’ product benefit” and added, “We do not condone any activity or imagery that intentionally insults any audience.” What’s most significant about the ad — and most embarrassing to Unilever — is that no one at the company seems to have anticipated that people would find it offensive. And that speaks to a larger issue, one that the activist and former magazine editor Michaela Angela Davis framed like this: “When it comes to advertising, it’s not enough to just have a black woman in the room. She has to be in the boardroom — she can’t just be in the changing room.”
Universal Pictures Taps Multicultural Marketing VPs
(Hollywood Reporter) — Fabian Castro and Talitha Watkins have joined Universal Pictures as vps of multicultural marketing. Reporting to co-president of marketing Michael Moses, they will work across all marketing divisions on outreach efforts to African-American and Hispanic audiences for titles across the Universal slate.
Exclusive Excerpt: Black is The New Green
“Go where the money is.” This pithy way to navigate should be obvious to any marketer worth his or her salt. It’s known as “Sutton’s Law,” and it comes to us out of the Great Depression, by way of a colorful character known as “Slick Willie” Sutton. Sutton was a prolific bank robber known for his immaculate dress, quick wit, and gentle manners. Although the sheer number of heists he pulled off made bank thieves like John Dillinger look like amateurs, Sutton never engaged in violent behavior. Sutton is best remembered today for his reputed answer to a question from the reporter Mitch Ohnstad: Why do you rob banks? “Because that’s where the money is.”
Though Sutton never actually uttered these words—he admits as much in his autobiography, speculating that Ohnstad “invented” this answer, probably to fill out his story—the exchange has become urban legend. The sentiment has since been fashioned into an instrument for teaching medical students, forms a principle of activity based costing (ABC) of management accounting where it is known as “Sutton’s rule,” and has become shorthand for simple common sense to anyone who has a product or service to sell.
At one time “go where the money is” may have sounded like a fairly straightforward directive. There was a time about forty or fifty years ago when it might have been true—a picture of a time we are admittedly painting with broad strokes. Though the population of the United States has always been richly diverse, founded as it was, by immigrants and proudly proclaiming itself a “melting pot,” day-to-day life was lived out within a rather strict class system. There was an obvious shorthand for figuring out who fit where in the scheme of things: fur coats, big cars, and certain Anglo-Saxon surnames belonged to rich people; the suburbs were reserved for the middle class who, like the rich folks, were assumed to be White; working-class and lower-class neighborhoods were for the most part peopled by the latest waves of immigrants who—almost invariably—lived within their own ethnic clusters, laboring in the least desirable jobs, struggling to find their footing on the class ladder so that their children could make it up a rung or two. Aspirationally, if not culturally, the country appeared to be homogenized. The manner in which a centralized media portrayed and reported about American lives certainly lent itself to that conclusion, and targeting those who would use certain products and services within that media was a no-brainer.
But the days when plying the craft of marketing was limited to presenting a client with a clever layout for a general print campaign designed to appeal to the “typical” consumer are long gone, as is the “typical” consumer himself. The eulogy for that old advertising era would be the recent hit television show Mad Men. This eloquent look back is proof of how far we’ve moved on from the era—the early 1960s—the program showcases. Part of the show’s appeal rests on nostalgia, and not necessarily the kind that women, African Americans, or most of their minority groups revisit with pleasure.
So, if a return to that more culturally constrained and technologically innocent time isn’t possible, let alone desirable, how do marketers find their footing today when the task of defining and reaching customers and potential customers is more complicated and downright difficult?
The first step is to recognize that business is entering a brand new era. It is fresh and, for the most part, unexplored territory. And, as it has been during every other time in history when change was in the air, those who stick to old ways of thinking and doing things—traditional practices and/or technologies that are fast becoming obsolete—miss the boat while those who adapt sail smoothly into the future. And the only way to keep your company and your brand from becoming irrelevant is to reach out and really figure out which way the wind is blowing. We’ve identified the four converging gale-force winds that are knocking around business—and specifically the luxury brand market. The purpose of this book is to show media, marketing executives, brand managers, business development experts, television programmers, Internet content developers, and others how to harness all that natural power and use it to their advantage.
Excerpted from Black is the New Green by Leonard E. Burnett, Jr. and Andrea Hoffman. Copyright © 2010 by the authors and reprinted by permission of Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
Exclusive Excerpt: Black is The New Green
“Go where the money is.” This pithy way to navigate should be obvious to any marketer worth his or her salt. It’s known as “Sutton’s Law,” and it comes to us out of the Great Depression, by way of a colorful character known as “Slick Willie” Sutton. Sutton was a prolific bank robber known for his immaculate dress, quick wit, and gentle manners. Although the sheer number of heists he pulled off made bank thieves like John Dillinger look like amateurs, Sutton never engaged in violent behavior. Sutton is best remembered today for his reputed answer to a question from the reporter Mitch Ohnstad: Why do you rob banks? “Because that’s where the money is.”
Though Sutton never actually uttered these words—he admits as much in his autobiography, speculating that Ohnstad “invented” this answer, probably to fill out his story—the exchange has become urban legend. The sentiment has since been fashioned into an instrument for teaching medical students, forms a principle of activity based costing (ABC) of management accounting where it is known as “Sutton’s rule,” and has become shorthand for simple common sense to anyone who has a product or service to sell.
At one time “go where the money is” may have sounded like a fairly straightforward directive. There was a time about forty or fifty years ago when it might have been true—a picture of a time we are admittedly painting with broad strokes. Though the population of the United States has always been richly diverse, founded as it was, by immigrants and proudly proclaiming itself a “melting pot,” day-to-day life was lived out within a rather strict class system. There was an obvious shorthand for figuring out who fit where in the scheme of things: fur coats, big cars, and certain Anglo-Saxon surnames belonged to rich people; the suburbs were reserved for the middle class who, like the rich folks, were assumed to be White; working-class and lower-class neighborhoods were for the most part peopled by the latest waves of immigrants who—almost invariably—lived within their own ethnic clusters, laboring in the least desirable jobs, struggling to find their footing on the class ladder so that their children could make it up a rung or two. Aspirationally, if not culturally, the country appeared to be homogenized. The manner in which a centralized media portrayed and reported about American lives certainly lent itself to that conclusion, and targeting those who would use certain products and services within that media was a no-brainer.
But the days when plying the craft of marketing was limited to presenting a client with a clever layout for a general print campaign designed to appeal to the “typical” consumer are long gone, as is the “typical” consumer himself. The eulogy for that old advertising era would be the recent hit television show Mad Men. This eloquent look back is proof of how far we’ve moved on from the era—the early 1960s—the program showcases. Part of the show’s appeal rests on nostalgia, and not necessarily the kind that women, African Americans, or most of their minority groups revisit with pleasure.
So, if a return to that more culturally constrained and technologically innocent time isn’t possible, let alone desirable, how do marketers find their footing today when the task of defining and reaching customers and potential customers is more complicated and downright difficult?
The first step is to recognize that business is entering a brand new era. It is fresh and, for the most part, unexplored territory. And, as it has been during every other time in history when change was in the air, those who stick to old ways of thinking and doing things—traditional practices and/or technologies that are fast becoming obsolete—miss the boat while those who adapt sail smoothly into the future. And the only way to keep your company and your brand from becoming irrelevant is to reach out and really figure out which way the wind is blowing. We’ve identified the four converging gale-force winds that are knocking around business—and specifically the luxury brand market. The purpose of this book is to show media, marketing executives, brand managers, business development experts, television programmers, Internet content developers, and others how to harness all that natural power and use it to their advantage.
Excerpted from Black is the New Green by Leonard E. Burnett, Jr. and Andrea Hoffman. Copyright © 2010 by the authors and reprinted by permission of Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

