Segmentation of the U.S. Hispanic population has evolved through the years as Hispanic marketing has gone from a novel idea to a lifeline among brands in desperate pursuit of new markets. Once
driven primarily by language (Spanish-dominant to English-dominant), segmentation became more granular, looking closer at acculturation levels (less acculturated to more acculturated) to craft a more
relevant marketing message.
Both segmentation tools rely on a linear progression, or a movement from less to more, assuming all individuals move neatly across a predetermined
spectrum. But the flaw in that methodology is the assumption that consumer behavior is that predictable. Latinos do not move systematically along a predetermined range. Language, acculturation,
and culture, in general, ebb and flow throughout a person’s life as they amass different experiences. Those experiences impact brand loyalty, adoption of technology, and even consumption of
content across various forms of media.
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Consider the concept of “the 200% — 100% Latino and 100% American.” It embodies the shift away from a predetermined
roadmap and embraces the complexity of how Hispanics in the U.S. see themselves in relation to their country of origin and the U.S.
Forward-thinking online content studios
like mitu and Remezcla have embraced the concept of the 200%, not only for Hispanic audiences but cross-cultural audiences in the U.S. by developing content that infuses the
Latino point of view with mainstream entertainment to create a synergist community.
We can expect the concept of “the 200%” to catch fire in 2018, shaping
Hispanic and cross-cultural content in ways we’ve never seen. Here’s how:
1. Digital first content start-ups have made headlines recently with their plans to
pursue their share of the 200% in 2018. Most notably, BeSe, founded by Latina actress Zoe Saldana will create content “for young audiences craving positive portrayals of the modern Latino
experience.” We expect to see more content start-ups focused on highlighting diverse stories enter the market in 2018, many expanding beyond a Latino focus to the fastest growing group in the
U.S., Asian-Americans.
2. Cultural consultants will be a hot commodity not only for major movie studios in 2018 but digital content providers across the board. A great example of this is the
success of Disney’s new release, Coco. The studio’s careful attention to detail shows the tremendous impact sensitivity to cultural nuances can have on the success of the content.
We’ll see more studios follow suit in 2018.
3. Multiculturalism and diversity is a competitive advantage. It not only creates buy-in among audiences but bolsters the bottom line. Whether
it is team composition or representation in media, a brand’s commitment diversity and cross-cultural representation should play out in the content it produces, the people it employees, and the
partners they work with. Consumers are expecting the brands they love to be curators of real-life experiences, and 2018 will be no different.
The 200% is not just for Latinos. Our bidimenisional model shows African-Americans, Asians, and Whites
have a multidimensional view of themselves in relation to their ancestry and the U.S. Exploring this tension through media is universal and whether the person on screen looks like us or not is
irrelevant. The authenticity of the story is what matters and 2017 has proven that.
Only a few weeks away, 2018 will be a year that audiences fracture even further, but not
like you think. With the help of cultural consultants, user-generated content, and intentional innovation, content studios will mine both quant and qual data to look for the nuances that defy the
pre-determined spectrums and create content that better reflects life as we live it. And that’s a future worth looking forward to.
Editor’s
note: The mark 200% is a trademark of Telemundo. All rights reserved. Used with permission.