ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Kunick Kapadia on Aug 13, 11:05 AM
Despite the marketer's edict that mobile should be an essential part of today's marketing strategy, agencies and clients that market to affluent consumers continue to look at mobile as an afterthought in their brand journey. Mobile executions are too often simply just that- executions that are thrown in simply to acknowledge that mobile is covered as part of the marketing mix. Display, social, search and other aspects of digital continue to garner the majority of our marketing attention. But in order for us to effectively reach affluent consumers, we first have to understand their behavioral patterns, and today that starts …
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Bob Shullman on Aug 6, 10:00 AM
As part of our recent focus on wealth, our previous column, "Millennials Are the Future, But Boomers Are Today," addressed where household income and wealth currently reside among upscale consumers. For the first time, we also included mass-market consumers in order to provide affluent marketers with a benchmark of the rest of America, which is often a target market.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Erik Pavelka on Aug 1, 11:29 AM
Quality is a word in digital media that hasn't been spoken much in recent years. It's been overcome by words and phrases relating to efficiencies, programmatic, reach, audience extension, and the like. However, it's word that is of great importance to luxury buyers and brands and the pendulum is starting to swing back where quality is making a comeback to our lexicon.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Frank Riolo on Jul 30, 11:42 AM
Recently, Advertising Age highlighted Cadillac's recent commercial featuring French model Magali Amadei. In the spot, eager fathers look on as Amadei's character picks up her kids at school in the Cadillac SRX while clearly sporting work attire, as if she has just come from the office. The commercial is noteworthy, because even here in the 21st Century, women are rarely portrayed as dominant figures in advertising. This is something that brands might want to consider changing. As our country's population continues to evolve, whether it is due to the maturing of Millennials, new family dynamics, or a shift in nationalities, …
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Frank Riolo on Jul 22, 11:23 PM
As our country's population continues to evolve, whether it is due to the maturing of Millennials, new family dynamics, or a shift in nationalities, the face of the wealthy American will continue to evolve, as well. This means that a shift in luxury product marketing strategy is inevitable.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Stephen Kraus on Jul 16, 9:40 AM
As we explore how Affluents make media choices and purchase decisions, we are consistently struck by the importance of word-of-mouth and personal recommendations from others. In fact, across many of the categories we examined, recommendations from friends or family are consistently among the most frequently cited factors shaping marketplace decisions.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Doug Grinspan on Jul 9, 11:00 AM
In 2014 when 80% of affluent customers prefer to do their research online and 47% prefer of buy products online, you'd think that luxury brands would be all over digital media. Not so. In fact, a surprising number of luxury brands still wary of digital media and online retail. They do so at their own peril.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Aditya Ghuwalewala on Jul 8, 10:41 AM
What luxury brands do consumers talk most about? Which ones are the sexiest, most in vogue, best at brand promise, best at customer service, best social appeal, and best emotional appeal? We completed a study that answers these questions.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Bob Shullman on Jul 2, 9:47 AM
Recently my columns have focused on millionaire consumers, those with a personal net worth (total assets less total liabilities) of $1 million or more. The columns have generated some interesting feedback regarding the wealthy, who number about 20 million adults according to our projections based on Bureau of the Census estimates.
ENGAGE:AFFLUENT
by Frank Riolo on Jun 25, 10:00 AM
While crippling student debt, high unemployment rates, and a recovering economy have put a damper on wealth outlook for Millennials, a notable portion of the generation is actually doing quite well for itself. As a matter of fact, a recent report from the Shullman Research Center found that 23% (roughly five million) of millionaires are actually Millennials; more than the total of Generation X millionaires, which stands at about four million, and about half that of Baby Boomers, a generation that had a 30-year head start.