LGBT marketing
LGBT marketing is the act of marketing to LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) customers, either with dedicated ads or general ads, or through sponsorships of LGBT organizations and events, or through the targeted use of any other element of the marketing mix.
The LGBT market comprises a group of customers who buy goods and services from a broad range of companies across industry segments and in many countries.
History
One of the first instances of the impact of the LGBT community in the marketing world was in 1973 when Coors Brewing Company was the subject of a boycott by the LGBT. The LGBT community joined to protest Coors' hiring practices, since Coors used a polygraph test when going through the hiring process and specifically asking an employee of their sexual orientation. Coors ignored the boycott for several years, but made some concessions in 1978, and in 1995 began several countermeasures, including dropping the questions regarding homosexuality and extending domestic partnership benefits to its LGBT employees. The company also hired Mary Cheney as a marketing representative and began advertising in The Advocate and at events such as Denver's PrideFest.[1]
Statistics
Marketing to the gay and lesbian community faces statistical obstacles in that few credible peer-reviewed estimates of the gay and lesbian marketplace have been published. In particular, the common use of nonrandom “convenience surveys” of attendees at gay resorts or subscribers to gay or lesbian newspapers has resulted in some unreliable statistical estimates of gay buying power. The exact number of gays and lesbians in a given market is generally, if not always, unknown.
However, some national governments have started to publish data that include demographics of sexual orientation from census results. In the 2000 United States Census, two questions were asked that allowed same-sex partnerships to be counted, and the Census Bureau reported that there were more than 658,000 same-sex couples heading households in the United States. In 2013, the American Marketing Association reported that 3.5% of adults in the United States identify as lesbian, gay male, or bisexual and .3% of adults are transgender, and the LGBT consumer market is estimated to have an overall buying power of more than $835 billion.[2]
Advertising categories
Major ad categories include travel, financial services, alcoholic beverages, automotive, entertainment, hair and skincare, luxury goods, pharmaceuticals, and fashion. For example, American Airlines have launched a specific LGBT-targeted vacations website.[3] While over fifteen years old in the United States, LGBT marketing is a relatively new marketing phenomenon elsewhere in Australia and Europe, including Belgium[4] and the Netherlands.[5]
Many brands that have previously ignored the existence of this segment of society now increasingly target LGBT customers.[6] Time magazine in August 2006 carried a Business article on growing interest amongst brand name advertisers in Europe to target LGBT customers.[7]
In 2013, the Human Rights Campaign issued the Corporate Equality Index 2013, which provides a national benchmarking tool on corporate policies and practices related to LGBT employees in the United States. This is also used to determine a company's level of gay-friendliness.[2]
Social Media in LGBT Marketing
Social Media plays an incredibly important part in an LGBT youth’s life, with Amy Adele Hassinoff stating that “a variety of studies of gay, lesbian, transsexual and queer youth indicate that the internet provides an important way to connect with communities and romantic partners, find information, and gain confidence”. (Hasinoff, 2012[8]) For marketers, this is important knowledge to possess as it suggests that LGBT marketing should place a heavy focus on the social media side aspects of their campaigns.
Social Marketing
A large amount of the marketing that is aimed at LGBT has a heavy focus on social marketing.
Social Marketing is defined by Alan R. Andreasen in 1994 as:
“The adaption of commercial marketing technologies… to influence the voluntary behaviour of target audiences to improve their personal welfare and that of the society of which they are a part”. (Andreasen, 1994[9])
Put simply, social marketing’s main aim is to raise awareness about a topic or issue within a community and work to change the overall opinion, attitude, or actions associated with that issue. Social marketing in a community that is as intimate and intertwined as the LGBT community is an extremely effective and important way to get across messages that really benefit the community as a whole.
Social Benefits of Successful LGBT Marketing Campaigns
The effects of a successful LGBT marketing campaign can positively affect the LGBT community in ways that make the community safer and more welcoming, which is the overall goal of social marketing. Some examples of these effects include:
Love Your Condom – New Zealand
The New Zealand Aids Foundation (NZAF) launched the Love Your Condom (LYC) campaign in 2014 to promote the concept of safer sex through the active use of condoms and lube every time gay/bisexual men have sex. The overall goal of the campaign was to reduce the transmission of HIV in New Zealand amongst gay and bisexual men, as these were the groups that were identified as the highest at risk (Clayton-Brown, 2015[10]).
The LYC campaign incorporates traditional media, such as billboards and print, (i.e. newspapers and magazines), along with an active social media presence and guerrilla marketing to engage with its target audience – gay/bisexual men in New Zealand.
The campaign was launched after the NZAF executive director Shaun Robinson noticed condom use amongst men who have sex with men, otherwise known as MSM, was on the decline, both in NZ and internationally (Saxton et al, 2015[11]).
The success of the campaign can be measured through the popularity of the LYC social media channels as a part of the NZ LGBT community, and in the statistic published on the NZAF webpage that states “new HIV infection rates among MSM in NZ have dropped 12%” since the launch of LYC. (NZAF, n.d.[12])
Know Your Status Stage – New York
The not-for-profit organisation LifeBeat is a charity that works with the music industry to educate America’s young LGBT and their allies about the realities and dangers of HIV/AIDS (LifeBeat, c2013[13]).
In 2014 LifeBeat launched the Know Your Status Stage (KYSS) campaign to try and raise awareness for the importance of getting tested for HIV on a larger scale than ever before. The idea behind it was to hold a large scale music event with artists that were very attractive to the target audience, (LGBT aged 13–25), where the only way to receive a ticket was to take a simple HIV test. The two objectives were to get at least 167 youth to visit the testing locations, and to attract NYC youth who had never been tested. (Effie Worldwide, 2015[14])
Due to the mass followings of the artists on social media, as well as the incorporation of traditional advertising through the use of billboards in popular areas and ads in newspapers that were popular for the target audience, the campaign went viral.
A large factor of this success is that today’s youth experience a new phenomenon that has been labelled ‘FOMO’, or Fear of Missing Out as a result of social media which meant more and more of the target audience were getting tested just to attend this event. (Przybylski et al, 2013[15])
The success of this campaign was unprecedented due to the heavy online social media presence of the youth, spreading this event through word of mouth. The objective of 167 youth tested was almost tripled, and 60% of those youth tested said they had never been tested before, with 98% of those saying they would get tested again. (Effie Worldwide, 2015[14])
As a direct result of this campaign, numbers of youth that were educated in terms of HIV and their own status in New York City grew considerably, and therefore the LGBT community could be perceived as a safer place, as these youth were now aware of the risks involved with sex, and the consequences of unsafe sex. LifeBeat stated that “due to the impressive performance of the KYSS idea in New York, the name was registered to spread the initiative to other cities in other states with high youth HIV indices, like Florida, California, Texas and Georgia” (Effie Worldwide, 2015[14]).
Controversies
LGBT marketing initiatives have not been without controversy both for and against them. Coors Brewing Company was the subject of a boycott by the LGBT community starting in 1973. The boycott was initiated by labor unions to protest the company's antagonistic practices, and was later joined by African Americans, Latinos, and the LGBT community.[16] The LGBT community joined to protest Coors' hiring practices - polygraph tests were often required, during which the prospective employee was asked about their sexual orientation.
Coors ignored the boycott for several years, but made some concessions in 1978, and in 1995 began several countermeasures, including dropping the questions regarding homosexuality and extending domestic partnership benefits to its LGBT employees. The company also hired Mary Cheney as a marketing representative and began advertising in The Advocate and at events such as Denver's PrideFest.
Specialist LGBT marketing agencies in various countries provide specialised LGBT market services to companies seeking to target LGBT customers.
Pinkwashing
"Pinkwashing" is a portmanteau compound word of the words "pink" and "whitewashing" that is used to describe a variety of marketing and political strategies aimed at promoting a product or an entity through an appeal to queer-friendliness, primarily by political or social activists. The phrase was originally coined by Breast Cancer Action to identify companies that claimed to support women with breast cancer while actually profiting from their illness.[17]
See also
- Commercial Closet Association
- Out Now Consulting
- Pink Dollar
- Project SCUM
- Witeck-Combs Communications, Inc.
References
- ↑ Mirken, Bruce. "Coors Courts Queers".
- 1 2 Oakenfull, Gillian W., (2013) "What Matters: Factors Influencing Gay Consumers' Evaluations of 'Gay-Friendly' Corporate Activities" Journal of Public Policy & Marketing Vol. 32 (Special Issue), 79–89, American Marketing Association ISSN 0743-9156 (print), ISSN 1547-7207 (electronic) 79. Retrieved July 16, 2013 http://www.gayadnetwork.com/files/AMAreport.pdf
- ↑ "American Airlines Vacations Welcomes You: Fly with a friend while you vacation with a partner!". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ↑ "Brand Activation" (in Dutch). Archived from the original on October 8, 2007. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ↑ "Gay Marketing Seminar" (in Dutch). Archived from the original on July 12, 2007. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ↑ Manning-Schaffel, Vivian (September 13, 2004). "Take Pride in your Brand". BrandChannel.com. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ↑ Smith, Adam (July 30, 2006). "A New Ad Adage: Same Sex Sells". Time. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ↑ Hasinoff, A. A. (2013). "Sexting as media production: Rethinking social media and sexuality.". New Media & Society 15: 449–465.
- ↑ Andreasen, A. R. (1994). "Social Marketing: It's Definition and Domain.". Journal of Public Policy & Marketing. 13 (1): 108–114.
- ↑ Clayton-Brown, B. (May 26, 2015). "Graphic video aims for safe gay sex". Fairfax Media. The Hutt News. pp. 8–9. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
- ↑ Saxton, P.J; Dickson, N. P.; Hughes, A. J.; Ludlam, A. H. (2015). "Infrequent condom use with casual partners among New Zealand gay and bisexual men.". NZ Med Journal 128 (1426): 2010–2019.
- ↑ NZAF. "Love Your Condom". New Zealand Aids Foundation. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
- ↑ LifeBeat. "LifeBeat Music Fights HIV/AIDS". LifeBeat. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
- 1 2 3 Effie Worldwide (2015). "LifeBeat: Know Your Status Stage". Gold, North American Effies (Warc). Retrieved March 28, 2016.
- ↑ Przybylski, A. K.; Murayama, K.; DeHaan, C. R.; Gladwell, V. (2013). "Motivational, emotional and behavioral correlates of fear of missing out.". Computers in Human Behavior. 29 (4): 1841–1848. doi:10.1016/j.chb.2013.02.014.
- ↑ Rapp, Linda (2004). "Boycotts". glbtq.com. Retrieved June 27, 2007.
- ↑ Schulman, Sarah. "A documentary guide to 'Brand Israel' and the art of pinkwashing". Mondoweiss. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
External links
Look up pinkwashing in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- CommercialCloset.org - Nonprofit with worldwide LGBT marketing information.
- Gay Market News - covers latest news on gay marketing
- Survey Reveals Gay Spending Power
- Corporate America Taking Notice of GLBT Market
- Survey: Advertising Motivates Gay Consumers