| By Rodger Roeser | Article Rating: |
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| November 17, 2010 11:37 AM EST | Reads: |
446 |
Young Adults Prefer Offline Marketing Offers
North American consumers in the 18-34 year-old demographic prefer to learn about marketing offers via postal mail and newspapers rather than online sources such as social media platforms, according to survey research from ICOM, a division of Epsilon Targeting.
In addition, the ICOM research shows that preferential attitudes about the trustworthiness of mail strengthened for consumer respondents in all age groups from 2008 to 2010.
The 2010 study of 2,569 U.S. households and 2,209 Canadian households focused on consumer preferences in regard to the ever-expanding array of communications channels for the delivery of marketing information, offers and promotions. Responses came from consumers ranging in age from 18 to 55 and above.
Some key results:
Young adults say they prefer direct mail and newspaper advertising over online marketing in every instance except travel.
The trust pendulum is swinging in the direction of postal mail for respondents in all age brackets.
Other key findings from ICOM’s survey about channel preferences include the following:
45% of U.S. men and 35% of Canadian men do not have any social media accounts; 36% of U.S. women and 31% of Canadian women do not have any social media accounts.
25% of respondents said they get more postal mail versus a year ago; 72% U.S. and 66% Canadian said they get more email versus a year ago.
Women are more likely than men to prefer addressed or unaddressed mail for many product categories, and men are more likely to prefer the Internet or email as a mode of receiving marketing information.
“Overall, our research confirms the proliferation of channel choices but shows that a unique combination or balance of favored channels needs to be identified, and that combination likely includes direct mail and other offline options, despite the notion by some that offline is no longer effective,” and that “marketers targeting coveted 18-34 year olds who are tempted to invest solely in social media could be missing a significant portion of their audience,” said ICOM’s Vice President Warren Storey.
Sources: Response Magazine, Young Adults Might Prefer Offline Marketing, Research Suggests. August 25, 2010, and Epsilon news release, Young Adults Strongly Prefer Offline to Online Sources for Marketing Offers, Research Reveals, August 24, 2010. http://printinthemix.rit.edu/fastfacts/show/369
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Published November 17, 2010 Reads 446
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Roeser is the founder, owner and president of The Eisen Agency – Cincinnati’s largest and highest rated Public Relations Firm. He served as the 2005 president of the Cincinnati Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America and for several years on its Board of Directors. He is the founder of the chapter’s Blacksmith Awards Program. Roeser is the national chairman of the Public Relations Agency Owners Association, and serves on several boards and committees. He founded The Eisen Agency’s Operation: Outreach program which provides non profit groups professional marketing services pro bono, and he is also the founder of the Rodger Roeser Scholarship Fund, which provides dollars to minority and other graduating high school students seeking to enter a career in journalism or public relations. Roeser is an award winning print, radio and television journalist and has worked in both agency side and corporate side public relations. He is a graduate of Kent State University and holds a degree in broadcast news. He continues to write for a number of publications, and also is the host of the award winning audio podcast “That Marketing Show,” and the host of online webside series Business Focus.

