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COLLECTING INFORMATION AND FORECASTING DEMAND | CHAPTER 3 77<br />

workers in two generations. Despite lagging family incomes, their disposable income has grown<br />

twice as fast as the rest of the population and could reach $1.2 trillion by 2012. From the food U.S.<br />

consumers eat, to the clothing, music, and cars they buy, Hispanics are having a huge impact.<br />

Companies are scrambling to refine their products and marketing to reach this fastest-growing<br />

and most influential consumer group: 29 Research by Hispanic media giant Univision suggests<br />

70 percent of Spanish-language viewers are more likely to buy a product when it’s advertised in<br />

Spanish. Fisher-Price, recognizing that many Hispanic mothers did not grow up with its brand,<br />

shifted away from appeals to their heritage. Instead, its ads emphasize the joy of mother and child<br />

playing together with Fisher-Price toys. 30<br />

Several food, clothing, and furniture companies have directed products and promotions to one<br />

or more ethnic groups. 31 Yet marketers must not overgeneralize. Within each ethnic group are consumers<br />

quite different from each other. 32 For instance, a 2005 Yankelovich Monitor Multicultural<br />

<strong>Marketing</strong> study separated the African American market into six sociobehavioral segments:<br />

Emulators, Seekers, Reachers, Attainers, Elites, and Conservers. The largest and perhaps most influential<br />

are the Reachers (24 percent) and Attainers (27 percent), with very different needs. Reachers,<br />

around 40, are slowly working toward the American dream. Often single parents caring for elderly<br />

relatives, they have a median income of $28,000 and seek the greatest value for their money.<br />

Attainers have a more defined sense of self and solid plans for the future. Their median income is<br />

$55,000, and they want ideas and information to improve their quality of life. 33<br />

Diversity goes beyond ethnic and racial markets. More than 51 million U.S. consumers have<br />

disabilities, and they constitute a market for home delivery companies, such as Peapod, and for<br />

various drugstore chains.<br />

EDUCATIONAL GROUPS The population in any society falls into five educational groups:<br />

illiterates, high school dropouts, high school diplomas, college degrees, and professional degrees.<br />

Over two-thirds of the world’s 785 million illiterate adults are found in only eight countries (India,<br />

China, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Indonesia, and Egypt); of all illiterate adults in the<br />

world, two-thirds are women. 34 The United States has one of the world’s highest percentages of<br />

college-educated citizens: 54 percent of those 25 years or older have had “some college or more,”<br />

28 percent have bachelor’s degrees, and 10 percent have advanced degrees. The large number of<br />

educated people in the United States drives strong demand for high-quality books, magazines, and<br />

travel, and creates a high supply of skills.<br />

HOUSEHOLD PATTERNS The traditional household consists of a husband, wife, and<br />

children (and sometimes grandparents). Yet by 2010, only one in five U.S. households will consist<br />

of a married couple with children under 18. Other households are single live-alones (27 percent),<br />

single-parent families (8 percent), childless married couples and empty nesters (32 percent), living<br />

with nonrelatives only (5 percent), and other family structures (8 percent). 35<br />

More people are divorcing or separating, choosing not to marry, marrying later, or marrying<br />

without intending to have children. Each group has distinctive needs and buying habits. The<br />

single, separated, widowed, and divorced may need smaller apartments; inexpensive and<br />

smaller appliances, furniture, and furnishings; and smaller-size food packages. 36<br />

Nontraditional households are growing more rapidly than traditional households. Academics<br />

and marketing experts estimate that the gay and lesbian population ranges between 4 percent and<br />

8 percent of the total U.S. population, higher in urban areas. 37 Even so-called traditional households<br />

have experienced change. Boomer dads marry later than their fathers or grandfathers did,<br />

shop more, and are much more active in raising their kids. To appeal to them, the maker of the<br />

high-concept Bugaboo stroller designed a model with a sleek look and dirt bike–style tires. Dyson,<br />

the high-end vacuum company, is appealing to dads’ inner geek by focusing on the machine’s revolutionary<br />

technology. Before Dyson entered the U.S. market, men weren’t even on the radar for vacuum<br />

cleaner sales. Now they make up 40 percent of Dyson’s customers. 38<br />

The Economic Environment<br />

The available purchasing power in an economy depends on current income, prices, savings, debt,<br />

and credit availability. As the recent economic downturn vividly demonstrated, trends affecting<br />

purchasing power can have a strong impact on business, especially for companies whose products<br />

are geared to high-income and price-sensitive consumers.

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