Today’s marketers, recognizing that multicultural audiences in the U.S. represent a massive opportunity, are seeking new ways to engage and define those communities. Historically,
there’s been two camps. On the one hand, there’s general consumer marketing, which is meant to speak to the total market—what you might call a “Main Street, USA”
audience. On the other hand, there’s multicultural marketing, which by default has basically become a catchall for non-white audiences.
That distinction never made much sense, but in a
moment of intense cultural disruption, brands are realizing that these kinds of labels are simply inadequate for the reality of U.S. society. So what’s the current situation look
like?
Marketers know multicultural matters, but budgets don’t yet reflect reality
In itsGuide to Multicultural Marketing, Pandora pointed out that Black, Asian,
and Hispanic consumers collectively control $3.4 trillion in buying power, and that in the coming decades those groups will combine to create a non-white U.S. majority. Given those broader trends, you
have to ask why advertising budgets allocate relatively few dollars to multicultural agencies, given the
growth in population and purchasing power of those audiences?
advertisement
advertisement
There is no doubt that marketing has made great strides over the past decade toward greater inclusiveness. In fact,
many brands enjoy significant social media and sentiment lift because they cast for diversity. That’s a good thing, because America is more diverse than what we have
historically seen in mass media. But if the strategy is simply to infuse diversity into total market campaigns, brands’ messages will inadvertently ignore the need for culturally nuanced
ads, because the thinking goes, diverse ads speak to everyone.
As multicultural initiatives get rolled into total market campaigns, advertisers don’t have any incentive to
increase multicultural budgets. For this reason, marketers should be careful to avoid making the mistake of assuming that diversity in total market ads means they can or should shrink their
multicultural budgets or do away with them altogether. Such a mistake might look like progress on the surface but could certainly end up being a step in the wrong direction.
Speaking to multicultural audiences means embracing nuance
In marketing circles, multicultural can mean any ethnic or racial group, but within those groups there
are intricate levels of nuance. Take Latinos as just one example. At nearly 60 million people, U.S. Latinos represent a significant market for American brands. But of course, Latino identity is more
complex than a singular label. First-generation Latino Americans experience a decidedly different cultural reality than their children or grandchildren. Likewise, a Mexican-American is going to have
very different cultural touchpoints than Latinos who come from South American or Caribbean countries. And like all Americans, geographic location is critical—the cultural experience of Latinos
in the Southwest is literally and figuratively thousands of miles away from Latinos in New England.
None of that nuance registers in the legacy TV model, where doing Spanish
language ads has long been the approach to addressing Latino audiences. Digital, however, is a different story. By using the rich data that digital provides, marketers can now tap into something
deeper and much more powerful than an ad that’s in Spanish and includes a diverse face. After all, the music we choose and the media we cherish aren’t just preferences, they’re
proven signifiers of identity.
As marketers, we are at a crucial moment in time where we no longer have to adhere to the constructs of a legacy model that divides Americans
into demographics. Today we have the opportunity to follow the audience data to better understand a culture that reflects the lived reality of the people we want to reach — and when we do, the
results will truly be a beautiful mosaic.