Posts Tagged ‘affluent ethnic consumers’

Black, Wealthy, Powerful…and Female

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

I’d like to bring to your attention a phenomenon – an African-American woman who owns a major golf resort, a luxury inn & spa and the WNBA’s Mystics.

She is a first lady of sorts: the first certified Black female billionaire (yes, even preceding Oprah); the first sheila-johnson-pic-dressyAfrican-American womansheila-johnson4 to be an owner or partner in three professional sports franchises; and the first African-American woman to own a golf resort. You may not be familiar with her name, but Golf.com recently posted an article about this co-founder of Black Entertainment Television and aspiring golf mogul, Sheila Johnson.

Ms. Johnson is representative of a niche segment of consumers we at Diversity Affluence refer to as Royaltons. Her extensive real estate holdings and portfolio of successful ventures have firmly placed her in the wealthiest stratum of this segment which is a group not even on the radar of most marketers – if their lack of marketing effort toward them is any indicator.

Note her vitals:

· 60 years old

· daughter of a neurosurgeon

· mother of two children

· divorced (after 33 years of marriage)

· accomplished violinist, professional photographer, author, documentary film producer and luxury linens designer

· budding golf enthusiast

· owner of several show horses

· generous philanthropist

That should blow away your notion of the typical African-American consumer. Sheila Johnson may be a first, but she is one of many.

Luxury brands would be wise to follow the adventures and acquisitions of this affluent African-American Royalton (AAR) as well as her peers. In prior years Forbes and Black Enterprise have paid homage to other AARs such as: Renetta McCann, Ann M. Fudge, Marian Wright Edelman, Sharon Sayles Belton, Cathy Hughes and Sylvia Rhone. These black female powerhouses are redefining the landscape of business across industries. Follow them, offer them a seat on your board, invite them to become diversity advisors to your business.

Insanity has been defined as doing the same thing over an over and expecting a different result. In the same way, continuing to target the usual prospects will deliver the usual results.

Do you know where and how to reach the affluent ethnic consumer? Diversity Affluence can help.


For more FREE insight: Sign up to receive our free monthly eNewsletter, the Royaltons Report. Join our LinkedIn Luxury Brand Executives Diversity Marketing Group. Follow us on Twitter. You can also buy our strategic insights papers.

President Obama is Not the Only Wealthy African American on the Green.

Friday, June 5th, 2009

With spring moving into summer for most of the country, the opportunity to blow off some steam or make a deal outside the boardroom with a golf club is beckoning. And, marketers who are looking for more “green” should be looking on “the green.”

Prominent figures giving credence to this idea are, of course, President Obama and Tiger Woods. club-swing1The Associated Press reported this week that the President has had four golf outings in the last five weeks. During Black History Month earlier this year, the PGA of America presented a display at the PGA Historical Center honoring four groundbreaking African-American heroes in the sport. The presence of African Americans in the game is noteworthy.

A Profitable Niche Segment for Golf Industry and Luxury Brands
Statistically, the African-American golf community has grown by thirty per cent in the last decade with interest in the game rapidly outpacing that of Asian American and Hispanic Americans. In fact, the National Golf Foundation reports that a full fifteen per cent of golfers – a stunning 5.5 million people – are minorities, and 2.3 million of them are African American.

Since participation is a function of household income, it stands to reason that gaining the attention of this niche segment of golf enthusiasts will help brands more effectively implement their target marketing strategy of reaching the affluent ethnic consumer – especially, the African-American RoyaltonsTM. Adding 2.3 million people to a list of potential consumers is any marketer’s dream come true.

Participants With Purchasing Power
Based on minority participation reports conducted by the World Golf Foundation and their Golf 20/20 initiative, the industry has been targeting minority groups who are viewed as important to growing interest and participation in the game. African Americans, along with women and Hispanics, are the demographics “with pent up demand” who will help the sport meet its target of having 55 million participants by the year 2020. If Year 2000 census data showed the golf industry having $62 billion in sales – more than the motion picture and sound recording industry and the amusement, gambling and recreation industry – then the currently growing participation of affluent African-American players offers significant purchasing power to be harnessed. That purchasing power has been estimated to become nearly half (45%) of the projected $1.1 trillion of all African Americans by 2012.

With the proportion of African-American female golf participants found to be above average, another potentially fruitful sub-segment is appearing. Many professional black women are taking to the golf course to capture that lucrative business deal often negotiated on the green. In the Spring 2009 issue of Odyssey Couleur, Pam Swensen, CEO of the Florida-based Executive Women’s Golf Association, stated that she is seeing an increase in membership as more African-American women use golf as a business-building tool.

All any luxury marketing executive has to do to potentially gain new prospects is to let go of some assumptions about who the “typical” golfer was in the past and choose to step into the future of the golf market.

Are you a brand marketer or golf industry related business wondering where and how to reach this audience?

Diversity Affluence™ can help you.
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Bloggers: The New Consumer Marketers

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

I ran across a post titled, “Word of mouth still rocks,” on Afrigator (blog.afrigator.com) that made me arrive at a new realization: Bloggers are the new marketers.

Marketing as we’ve known it has taken a dramatic shift because, with the case of bloggers, the consumer is the marketer. Forget the “Big Four” - bloggers are the new power players wielding the mighty power of the mouth…word of mouth, that is – but at lightning speed and almost limitless reach.

So what happens when the consumer becomes a marketer, and the consumer’s “friends” are all of cyberspace? It means the reputation of your product or service – and ultimately your profit margins – can be touted or trashed in mere seconds and that message spread hundreds of times over, to thousands, in mere minutes.

Lester Hein of Afrigator says that “bloggers are changing the way that we access and distribute information meaning that we make decisions faster and according to different rules.” Practically then, I should be able to throw some advertising dollars on a blog and get a huge bang for my buck as that investment will increase exponentially to reach an untold number of prospects.

This example affirms the Diversity Affluence philosophy that smartly reallocating marketing dollars toward affluent ethnic consumers, via new media outlets, with the right call to action, can be more affordable and can deliver prospects instantly. If you can identify, target and attract wealthy minorities, they will help you to survive and thrive – even in this economy.

To gain more insight on affluent ethnic consumers and planning an effective target marketing strategy:
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IS THERE A VALID BUSINESS CASE FOR DIVERSITY MARKETING IN AN ECONOMIC RECESSION?

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Emphatically, I say, “YES!”

I’m sure you’ve heard the American proverb, “He who has the gold makes the rules!”

As we near the end of the second quarter of 2009, marketers would be wise to follow this bit of astute wisdom as they assess their remaining advertising budgets.

Of course, first you’ll need to discover the gold-holding rule-makers: I will tell you they are the affluent ethnic consumers.

Being the savvy marketer that I’m sure you are, it’s likely you’ve read the articles identifying ethnic consumers as viable new prospects. What I’m not seeing much information disseminated about is the affluent segment – not the middle class – but the truly affluent sub-segments within this consumer group. They are a largely ignored and under-served market segment who are patiently awaiting the right marketing approach from you.

The key to your approach is to never make the mistake of marketing to affluent ethnic consumers from your perspective and asking them to come to you. This sub-segment has made their own rules, and they are highly influential in today’s marketplace. Deliberately cater to them by getting on their turf, seeing through their eyes, and speaking their language. You must go to them, and serve them on their terms, in order to build lasting and meaningful relationships. I’m sure their $282 billion in purchasing power is something you want to harness.

Here are a few tips for luxury marketers, or any marketer, to plan a successful target marketing strategy:

• Identify and utilize appropriate ethnicity-based traditional and non-traditional media outlets in your advertising.
• Partner up with membership-based ethnic organizations.
• Consider instituting a Diversity Advisory Board in your company.
• Hire a more diverse workforce.

Now is not the time to cut back marketing expenditures; instead, correctly divert them toward this sub-segment, and I guarantee you will see better ROI in the way of stronger loyalty, broader word-of-mouth, and fresh revenue streams in addition to your general market initiatives.

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Wealthy Blacks are Latest Target for NationsBank

Monday, April 20th, 2009

africanamerican_stockbrokerThis is a reprint of a 1996 article featured in the Atlanta Business Chronicle on how one brand seized a targeted marketing opportunity. I felt that it was important reprint in order to express to marketers what is possible. It’s a brilliant example of how they acted on the opportunity, tracked the results and used every marketing platform from PR to event marketing to execute the plan. And this dates back to 1996. Just imagine the increased significance of the opportunity today.

NationsBank Corp. is pushing into Atlanta with an unusual strategy: The bank has singled out wealthy black professionals as its next round of target customers.

Many banks have pursued niches — such as professional athletes — in private banking. “But I just don’t know of anyone else targeting African-Americans that way,” said a spokesperson with the American Bankers Association in Washington.

NationsBank honed in on the group’s lucrative demographics about a year ago and started looking for ways to hook its members, said Shedrick L. Barber, the national coordinator for a unit the bank calls Professional African-American Market Development.

The market is huge. “We found that this group has an annual purchasing power of $427 billion, and it’s growing,” Barber said. There are more than 1 million black households in which one member makes at least $50,000 a year, and what matters even more to NationsBank, 75 percent of those are in the Southeast, according to its research.

“We found a new customer in our back yard,” he said.

His unit was designed to lure customers to NationsBank through what is increasingly known as “relationship banking.” Barber gathers a team of bankers in each market to work with prospective customers on their specific needs, pulling expertise from different parts of the company’s operations.

But the bank’s strategy has been to work from the top down, rather than starting one-on-one. Barber has gone after deals with larger groups to spread his message more quickly. In fact, one of the unit’s first loans brought the headquarters of Omega Psi Phi, a national black fraternity, to DeKalb County from Washington, D.C.

First Southern Bank, a minority-owned community bank based in Lithonia, actually heard about the deal first. But the $2.5 million loan needed by Omega Psi Phi exceeded the $46 million-asset bank’s legal lending limit, said First Southern CEO James E. Young. So the two banks wound up working together, closing the deal with the fraternity last December.

Since then, NationsBank has concentrated its efforts elsewhere, although it has found Atlanta customers at professional conventions in other cities, Barber said. “Most people assume we’ve been marketing heavily in Atlanta, but we bypassed it during the Olympics. Now, we’re coming back. If not in the fourth quarter, in the first quarter [1997].”

The unit could provide formidable competition. It has booked $148 million in 37 deals through September, and Barber said he has almost $500 million in business in his pipeline, including mortgage loans, franchise financing, securities and other products.

He has found much of that business by marketing the unit at national meetings of black professional associations — often held in Atlanta. In April, NationsBank was the title sponsor of the first Black Enterprise Magazine Entrepreneurs Conference, attended by more than 500 black business owners. The day Barber sent a team of executives into the crowd, he received 84 voice mail messages, he said.

And Barber has reached marketing agreements with several other groups, including the Black Automobile Dealers Association.

The bank has also worked out deals with groups to exchange services for access to potential customers. Its alliance with Meharry Medical College could lure business from alumni of the Nashville, Tenn., medical school — a top producer of black doctors. NationsBank’s private banking unit has offered workshops to alumni in financial planning, and the bank is developing an affinity credit card.

“The people I’m talking to could get their deals done anywhere,” Barber said. But they usually don’t tend to their finances as they should unless a banker seeks them out, he found from observing his and his wife’s friends. The Barbers are black professionals who live in Charlotte, N.C., and Dr. Mary Lindsay-Barber is a pediatrician.

Another part of his job is pure public relations, Shedrick Barber said. “We find we have a lot to overcome in terms of the bank’s reputation for serving African-Americans.” Barber worked in NationsBank’s community investment division, which focuses on low-income lending, before shifting market segments last year. He defends the bank’s new effort as an aggressive way to seek out customers who often are unfamiliar with NationsBank’s products, and he insists that it will not deter community reinvestment work.

Minority-owned banks, such as First Southern, acknowledge their most profitable customers fit the description now wanted by NationsBank. “We recognize that a 200-pound gorilla can sit anywhere he wants,” said First Southern’s Young

Affluent Ethnic Consumers: 2009 Economist Report

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

I am excited to announce that Diversity Affluence now has an updated Economist Report available for luxury marketers and other brands and businesses interested in insight on affluent ethnic consumers. Conducted by our chief economist, this 12 page report (only $495) provides estimates of Population, Income, and Purchasing Power for African Americans, Asian Americans, and Hispanics in America.

Study Overview:

The report estimates the population, income, and purchasing power of “affluent ethnic consumers in the United States. The ethnic market continues to be an important segment for businesses to target. The ethnic population in the United States grew at rates almost three times that of the total population from 2000 to 2007. For the purpose of this analysis, the ethnic population is composed of three groups:

1. Non-Hispanic, African Americans/Blacks
2. Non-Hispanic, Asian Americans
3. Hispanics/Latinos

From 2000 through 2007, the ethnic population grew 19.9 percent, compared to only 7.2 percent for the total population. In total, the ethnic population increased by almost 15.8 million people. The Asian American and Hispanic/Latino populations both grew at rates of 29 percent, four times that of the national population. In 2000, the Hispanic population totaled just 12.5 percent of the U.S. population. By 2007 that share represented 15.1 percent. The ethnic share of the total U.S. population now stands at 31.6 percent, compared to 28.2 percent in 2000. Considering this trend, the affluent ethnic population is an important target market for businesses across the country. Statistics for these ethnic groups are presented for affluent individuals with annual income of $75,000 or greater, and households with annual income of $150,000 or greater.

Call Diversity Affluence for a synopsis or to inquire about purchasing this report. We also welcome media inquiries for articles and feature stories.

Diversity Affluence in the News

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

View our recent press in NJ Biz: Deep Ethnic Pockets Continue to be Untouched

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