How to Gain Monopoly-Like Profits Through Ethnic Marketing
by Michael Bolden
Published on this site: December 20th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

Introduction
In today's U.S. marketplace, marketing to various ethnic
audiences is vital to consumer-oriented product and service
companies. Latinos and African Americans already have a critical
mass of buying power of over $1 trillion combined and this
total is increasing rapidly. The growth of the Hispanic and
African American affluent and middle class is occurring faster
than the majority of Caucasian Americans. These ethnic audiences
are becoming so large and lucrative that even sub-groups of
them command substantial buying power. Becoming the dominate
player within a sub-group such as affluent and middle class
2nd generation Latinos would allow a company to make substantial
revenue and develop a strong loyal customer base. To "own"
an ethnic market space would enable a company to obtain monopoly-like
profits!
The 4 Benefits of Owning Ethnic Spaces
Tapping into and creating ethnic space monopolies is at the
heart of this article and should be the goal of every ethnic
marketing plan. Owning an ethnic market space yields the following
4 critical benefits:
- High Monopoly-Like Profits
- Loyal Customer Base
- High Lifetime Value of Customers
- Low Competitive Dynamics (Competition Blind Spots)
It is for this reason that ethnic marketing and owning market
space in the Hispanic and African American audiences is not
a "side" item, but a vital strategy which affects
the whole enterprise and will only increase in importance
as this century progresses. This kind of marketing can turn
a marginally profitable company into a revenue generating
"powerhouse" and an unprofitable company into a
firm that operates solidly in the "black" - no pun
intended.
Importance of Perceived Needs
The first step to finding "ownable" ethnic market
spaces is to discover which groups of ethnic consumers are
underserved or are not actively targeted by an industry's
product or service offerings. An executive, manager, or business
owner must find an ethnic market space with a differing set
of values, and different perceived needs than mainstream consumers.
For example, Hispanics believe that family life and the home
are very important, so products and services by a company
geared toward key aspects of domestic home life have a chance
to dominate niches within that space.
The most powerful driver of finding an untapped market space
of ethnic customers is perceived need - whether that is for
basic functionality or additional comfort or luxury. One may
say that this is also true for the general market but a good
marketer will understand that this perception of need differs
from mainstream consumers. Latinos and African Americans view
the world and products & services from a completely different
paradigm than Caucasian Americans. Their values, lifestyle,
cultural and taste are all different from the mainstream and
this phenomenon translates into unique selection, buying,
and usage habits for a given set of goods and services. For
example, the urban African American 'middle class' higher
desire for stylish and designer brand items and the raised
threshold for luxury should be a driving factor in developing
products and services for this market space.
Capitalize on Heterogeneous View by Competitors
An additional key factor for locating potential monopoly
spaces is to examine ethnic spaces overlooked by the competition.
In the multicultural marketing of even the most progressive
companies, often whole ethnic groups are viewed heterogeneously.
Especially for Latinos, this could not be a bigger mistake.
Latinos have a multitude of sub-groups that are the result
of the following major factors:
- Country of Origin
- Acculturation
- Generation
- Spanish Language Usage
- Level of Affluence
A company cannot expect to use mainstream marketing to effectively
reach Latinos and African Americans. For Blacks, the "they
speak English too" syndrome pervades throughout industry
and is used as an excuse for not trying to understand the
various segments within the African American consumer audience. For astute executives and marketers, "broad
brush" marketing by the competition to ethnic audiences
represents huge opportunities to own a substantial set of
key niche spaces within the Latino and African American audiences.
To many marketers, these ethnic niches are invisible. This
creates the perfect opportunity in many industries for companies
to choose and capture valuable niche spaces within Hispanic
and African American consumer audiences.
Important Relationship Strategy
Strategically, it is important for an executive or marketer
to develop deep relationships with a particular ethnic audience.
This relationship is particularly important for companies
offering a service or providing a product that differentiates
itself in the marketplace. This means not just having marketing
featuring Latinos and African American characters and themes
but targeting specific groups within this audience. This type
of marketing will really speak to the target group and develop
deep ties with them that will be hard to break by competitors.
It is important to concentrate on a key set of sub-groups
to maximize penetration and effectiveness, and to create a
strong base. A company's product or service should not try
to be all things to all members of the larger general ethnic
group - this is a recipe for a weak market.
Conclusion
Owning ethnic market space is very profitable and in the
near future for the U.S. market, it will become essential
to ensure business growth. Companies are now looking to ethnic
minority groups as a source to fuel their growth as the mainstream
market continues to be over-saturated. To own a space, it
is vital to let the perceived need of a targeted group drive the product
or service offering, and to understand the nuances in reaching
sub-groups within the greater minority audience. This creates
markets within the U.S. which are equally or more attractive
than China or India, due to their easier accessibility and
huge buying power. In most consumer industries, these ethnic
sub-space pockets are huge gold ores just waiting to be mined!

Michael Bolden is a Managing Partner of the Chatham
Consulting Group. To learn more about ethnic marketing visit
Chatham Consulting's website at http://www.chathamchicago.com
and also obtain a full report based on this article in the
"Free Stuff" section. Readers of this article and
visitors to our website are eligible for a free 20 minute
consultation on your company's multicultural marketing.

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