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Toyota has a new little number, the Aygo. It will hit the streets of Europe's cities this summer. What it lacks in size it makes up for in attitude. The media splash, the websites, the posters, the advertising—it is all super-cool stuff. This is a car for "da' yoof."
If you fancy one yourself, please heed the following warning on the aygo.com website: "With its sporty and dynamic design, Aygo is the ideal car for the young urban driver." Hands off hicks; get lost grown ups.
Toyota is just one of many companies trying to woo urban youth, a segment admired by marketers for its substantial disposable income and trendsetting tendencies. Pedro Pacheco, spokesperson for Toyota Europe, sums up the attraction. "The urban youth segment is attractive to us because it can successfully influence the whole of the youth sector, and it allows us to attract customers to the brand at an earlier stage," he writes by email. "We want these customers to 'grow' with the brand, by offering them products that will adapt to each stage of their life. In other words, these customers give Toyota the opportunity of establishing a life-lasting relationship."
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The logic is simple, but the practice is far from easy. Successful urban youth branding involves a lot more than a few hip-hop artists and skateboard pros (although these do tend to be standard props).
"Youth brands have to be relevant. If the product or service is needed then it is welcome," remarks Sean Pillot de Chenecey, a trends analyst based in the UK. "But there can be no dodging. A brand is a reputation and nothing more, part of a mental picture. If people see through what you are trying to do and see you are hijacking your position, then the image palls."
"You have to earn their respect," says Mark Fewell, senior director of business development at Boost Mobile, a telecommunications brand dedicated to the youth market in Australia and the US. "You can't just come in as a big company, throw your money down and expect them to like you."
Boost Mobile launched in Australia in 2000. From the outset it aimed to be the leading youth brand in telecommunications. "We saw that no one was talking to youth on its own terms and in its own language," says Fewell. "We approached the market less from the product and more from the brand, built around lifestyle elements common to urban youth—surfing, skateboarding, snowboarding and motocross, with a bit of music thrown in."
But to really win customers, a brand has to become part of the culture. "Everything you do must have your audience in mind, and you have to prove that you are engaged with them," says Fewell. To this end, Boost has sponsored athletes and been involved in relevant urban sporting events. In 2005 its major events will include the And 1 Mixed Tape Tour for street ball, moto-X and professional skateboarding and surf tours, and a summer youth basketball initiative.
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But while Boost has been phenomenally successful, Fewell concedes that targeting urban youth can be a risky strategy. "They are difficult to market to because it is too easy to put them in a single box, but they have a broad range of interests and attitudes—just like any other age segment."
Simon Roberts, research director at an ethnographic research agency called IdeasBazaar, agrees. "People say 'Here's the youth category and here is a list of its characteristics and properties.' But I find the thing rather false. Aren't we just listening to a list of adjectives? It is clichéd because all the same characteristics and attitudes are found in other groups. Youth is an overstated category. A lot of attitudes are attributed to young people, but [those attitudes] are not the sole preserve of the youth."
Nevertheless, Pillot de Chenecey notes that all youth do tend to have one thing in common: a lack of loyalty. "Young people tend to chop and change consumption habits far more than over 35s. Your average 17 year old has little loyalty. They are a promiscuous consumer, which is exactly why all the advertising is directed at them. You have to constantly talk with them, and if you're not as good as your competitor, they will ditch you. The stats look impressive when they say the youth market is worth X billion, but the over 45s segment is worth many times more than that."
So is youth marketing a necessary expense, a valid strategy or totally misguided? Researcher Roberts thinks it makes much more sense to target particular generations rather than age brackets. "We've got three generations at the moment. There are the baby boomers, generation X, and millennials who [came] of age around the turn of the millennium. Attitudes and behaviors are much easier to identify and generalize in these groupings."
Roberts has been involved in a large-scale ethnographic study of the millennial generation, also called Generation Y or the echo generation and commonly characterized as those born between 1980 and 1990. "They are about self-navigation. A lot has changed in the world and it is now about making sense of it. Certainties have gone. Gone are the days where you have a regular career for 30 years and a good pension at the end. This is a generation brought up in an age of technology and globalization."
"You can talk about youth and the enduring truths about what being young is," says Roberts. "Talking about millennials tries to tie things down to a specific juncture in history."
"Youth is a mindset," states Pillot de Chenecey. "Remember that today's 70 year olds bought 'It's Alright' by Presley. They lived though the 60s youth culture. The attitudes they had then are the ones they have now. They don't want to be treated like a bunch of old idiots."
Generational marketing is a better long-term strategy, Pillot de Chenecey argues. "Companies lose track of customers when they go through age stages because they ask 'What do 15 year olds want?' rather than 'What do the people we talked to last year want?' "
Of course, that does not mean that the highly targeted branding of Aygo, Boost and other urban youth brands will fail. But how will they fair in the long term? Will their funk and freshness feel right to the youth of 2020—or should they be allowed to grow gracefully into middle age along with their current clientele? [27-Jun-2005]
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Edwin Colyer is a science and technology writer based in Manchester, UK.
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Oct 24, 2005
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Branding, a Job Well Done -- Dale Buss
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How do major brands like Costco and Ritz-Carlton become household names without relying on traditional advertising? By tapping into their greatest resource: Employees.
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Aug 8, 2005
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Hotel Brands Break the Chain -- Rob Mitchell
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After decades of perfecting the known experience at chains around the world, hotel brands are now trying to create boutique hotels as guests go on a quest for the one-off experience.
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Jul 25, 2005
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Best Global Brands: Focus on UBS -- Robin Rusch
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Among the top five fastest growing brands on the list of 100 Best Global Brands 2005, Swiss financial services company UBS reflects the work in progress of growing and sustaining a global brand.
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Jun 20, 2005
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Growing Pains Small Brands -- Alicia Clegg
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How can a brand remain true while broadening its reach? Popular but small brands like Innocent Drinks, Tyrrells and Hill Station risk losing their original fans in their quest to grow bigger.
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Apr 18, 2005
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Dove Gets Real -- Alicia Clegg
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Unilever’s Dove is the latest beauty brand to use "real" women to sell product. But can this campaign turn ugly?
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Mar 7, 2005
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Should Global Brands Trash Local Favorites? -- Randall Frost
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When P&G, Unilever and Nestlé clean house, they risk losing local markets for beloved brands. Companies like Henkel, on the other hand, retain a portfolio of national and international brands to satisfy both global and local tastes.
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