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U.S. Marketers Say Hola! to Hispanic Consumers | U.S. Marketers Say Hola! to Hispanic Consumers |
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Companies such as General Mills and State Farm Insurance boost advertising spending to promote basic products and services
source BUSINESS WEEK.
What do Procter & Gamble (PG), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Verizon (VZ), and General Mills (GIS) have in common? All are pouring more advertising dollars into marketing aimed at Hispanics.
Last year, General Mills tripled its spending on commercials on
Spanish-language TV to more than $35 million, according to ad tracker
TNS Media Intelligence. "We've gone aggressively into Hispanic
marketing," explains the food company's Chief Marketing Officer Mark
Addicks, "because we're getting double-digit sales gains."
As one might expect, Hispanic consumers spend heavily on the basics, including packaged goods and wireless phone services. "Their disposable income might be lower," says Kelly McDonald, a Dallas-based marketing consultant, "but Hispanic consumers spend a far greater percentage of what they have" than the rest of the U.S. population. Since General Mills began buying more ads in Spanish-language media, it says sales of its Progresso, Honey Nut Cheerios, and other brands have soared. Besides putting Hispanic TV stars in its commercials, General Mills has been sending a quarterly magazine to 350,000 Latino homes, featuring recipes made with its products. Companies are funneling much of their Hispanic marketing budgets into Spanish-language TV. It's not hard to see why. So far this year, ratings at the three largest Hispanic networks—Univision, Telemundo, and Telefutura—are up by 22% for the 18- to 49-year-old demographic, while overall ratings at the Big Four broadcast networks are flat. "Hispanic consumers appreciate when you speak to them in their own language," says Edward Gold, advertising director at State Farm Insurance. SINGING THE COMPANY SONGState Farm agents regularly get new clients in the days following Univision's highly rated Saturday night variety show Sábado Gigante. The program features several State Farm-sponsored segments and even a company song sung by the audience. (The refrain goes: "They will give you a discount. This is true. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is for you.") Hispanic media companies are working overtime to make it easier for marketers to find a home on their airwaves and in their pages. Univision recently produced a commercial for Carl's Jr., a Western hamburger chain, that looks like a steamy soap opera, with a scantily clad woman seducing her lover—and then eating a burger in bed with the lover and her husband. In December, Telemundo and Vidal Partnership, an ad agency whose clients include Kraft Foods (KFT), Home Depot (HD), and Wendy's (WEN), joined forces for a promotion in which advertisers will sponsor an online contest allowing viewers to pick the ending of one of the network's telenovelas. "When we do product integration," says Univision CEO Joe Uva, "we do more than just put a Coke cup in front of Paula Abdul." This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it is Los Angeles bureau chief for BusinessWeek. |
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