MARKETERS EMBRACE NEW AMERICAN MAINSTREAM WITH PLANS FOR INCREASED INVESTMENT AND STRATEGIC FOCUS IN COMING YEAR

SAN JOSE, Calif. (September 1, 2015)—Multicultural marketing strategies will become increasingly important to brands looking to engage in a more culturally relevant and personalized manner. But despite rapid population growth and strong support for initiatives within marketing circles, CEO and board support falls far short, failing to assist marketer’s ability to prioritize and fully fund their efforts.


According to Geoscape, the leader in business intelligence across the multicultural market, groups including Asian-Americans, African-Americans and Hispanics will grow to nearly 130 million by the year 2020. Furthermore, the non-Hispanic white population will become the minority, dropping below 50 percent of the population by 2042.


A new poll from the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Council and Geoscape—entitled “Activating the New American Mainstream”—reveals that half of the 150 North America-based senior marketing executives surveyed feel there is some level of support for multicultural engagement strategies from the senior levels of the organization. While 67 percent admit that the CMO has a high level of buy-in and support for multicultural efforts, 55 percent admit that the CEO does not share that opinion, failing to fully support initiatives.


This lack of top-level support translates into a de-prioritization of multicultural engagement programs as more than half (51 percent) of marketers admit that there are simply too many competing priorities. In fact, when asked to rate commitment levels, only 20 percent of marketers felt that multicultural strategies were mandatory and unanimously embraced across the organization, and just over one in four believed that the multicultural market was mission critical for the organization.


Specific to investments into multicultural programs, marketers indicate that:



  • Twenty (20) percent invest in excess of 15 percent of overall marketing budgets to engaging with multicultural markets; 28 percent spend less than 5 percent.

  • Fifty-three (53) percent of marketers believe their investment into the multicultural market will increase going forward; 15 percent believe this increase will be significant; only 2 percent anticipate a decrease in investment.


For those marketers who have deployed multicultural marketing strategies, the operational approach is one that fails to separate initiatives into significant segments. Only 16 percent of marketers are separating marketing initiatives for specific ethnic groups, a practice which would allow for a deeper level of engagement thanks to relevant communications based on cultural behavioral patterns and insights.


“Multicultural marketing strategies must move away from the niche campaign mindset and become an engrained part of any personalized customer experience strategy,” noted Liz Miller, Senior Vice President of Marketing with the CMO Council. “This is no longer a scenario of replacing images or localizing content into a different language. This is about truly understanding the nuances of the customer, including any culturally distinct behaviors and buying patterns that can and must alter the way our brands reach and engage.”


Without doubt, the multicultural market in the United States is an increasingly powerful consumer. According to Geoscape research, Hispanics currently represent 18 percent of American households but were responsible for nearly half of the growth in consumer spending from 2013 to 2014. Between Asian-American and Hispanic markets, the groups accounted for two-thirds of the total economic spending growth.


“By understanding cultural nuances and marketing in a proactive and data-driven manner, marketers are positioned to grow ROI…however, none of this happens overnight,” added César M. Melgoza, Founder and CEO of Geoscape. “Targeting consumers without understanding their unique cultural behaviors and preferences risks growth optimization among the consumer groups that quarterly and annual budgets and success can hinge.”


Key findings from the 10-question online poll of 150 senior marketing executives are included in a 12-page complimentary white paper, now available for download from the CMO Council. Some 36 percent of respondents hail from B2B organizations, 29 percent are from strictly B2C organization, and 36 percent are from hybrid organizations. Forty-three (43) percent hail from organizations with revenues in excess of $1 billion USD.


Melgoza will join the CMO Council as a speaker at its upcoming CMO Summit (www.cmosummit.org), taking place on December 7–8 in Napa, California. Melgoza will join a panel focused on intense segmentation of valuable and misunderstood markets, including multicultural, LGBT and millennial consumers. The CMO Summit is the CMO Council’s annual gathering of senior marketing thought leaders. The by-invitation-only event will focus on the theme “CMO Rising” and will cover numerous topics with an eye toward reshaping the role through talent, technology and transformation.


About the CMO Council


The Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Council is the only global network of executives specifically dedicated to high-level knowledge exchange, thought leadership and personal relationship building among senior corporate marketing leaders and brand decision-makers across a wide range of global industries. The CMO Council's 9,000 members control more than $450 billion in aggregated annual marketing expenditures and run complex, distributed marketing and sales operations worldwide. In total, the CMO Council and its strategic interest communities include more than 35,000 global executives in more than 110 countries covering multiple industries, segments and markets. Regional chapters and advisory boards are active in the Americas, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East, India and Africa. The council's strategic interest groups include the Coalition to Leverage and Optimize Sales Effectiveness (CLOSE), Mobile Relationship Marketing (MRM) Strategies Forum, LoyaltyLeaders.org, CMOCIOAlign.org, Marketing Supply Chain Institute, Customer Experience Board, Digital Marketing Performance Institute, GeoBranding Center and the Brand Inspiration Center. Learn more at www.cmocouncil.org.


About Geoscape


Geoscape International Inc. was founded in 1995 by César M. Melgoza, with an emphasis on international and Latin American markets. In 2001, Geoscape began focusing more intently on the multicultural American business environment, and in June 2007, they engaged investment firm Goldman Sachs. Geoscape serves clients nationwide from offices in Miami and employees distributed throughout the U.S. Geoscape Europe BV is based in Amsterdam and serves the greater European community.


We are an internationally recognized firm with hundreds of clients across a number of industries. The Geoscape team brings a wealth of industry knowledge and expertise, coupled with cultural insights and analytical brainpower that is unmatched in this dynamic industry. Each year in March, we host a leading conference—The New Mainstream Business Summit—to share data, thoughts, insights and experiences on the emerging American mainstream consumer. Learn more at www.geoscape.com.