Thursday, February 14, 2008

The Ford Website

Whether a marketer is selling linen sheets or sheet metal, the frontline in the battle for the sexes’ dollars is simply this:
If marketers can meet women’s expectations, they’ve already exceeded men’s.
So says marketing guru Marti Barletta who wrote the book on it – “Marketing to Women” (Dearborn Press). She’s also the founder and CEO of the TrendSight consulting a research firm in suburban Chicago that advises marketers on what women – and men – want.
When it comes to buying a new car, the difference between men and women consumers is that guys focus on the basics – quality, reliability, safety, design, fuel economy – while women sweat the details.
“Men quickly figure out what they want and buy it, while women have longer lists,” Barletta says. ‘“Does that SUV have a back-up beeper and grocery-bag holders?’ ‘Does that minivan come with remote-control doors?’ ‘Is there enough storage under the floor? ‘Does the rear-view mirror also let me glance into the backseat?’
“It’s not that men don’t want all that stuff too. It just isn’t at the top of their conscious minds.”
And women tend to look at car attributes in a different way than men. Take the need for speed. For him it’s all about going from zero-to-60 before he can sing, “Tramps like us, baby we were born to run.” For her it’s all about being able to punch the accelerator when going from the on-ramp to the freeway so an oncoming 18-wheeler won’t squeeze her.
Men like convertibles for their sense of speed and power. Women like droptops because they appeal to their heightened sensory experiences, from feeling the wind in their hair to seeing the stars overhead and smelling the roses along the parkway.
And savvy carmakers, acutely aware that women now buy 62 percent of new cars, are responding by rethinking their advertising messages.
They know women don’t like hard-sell and they don’t take to patronizing “special-for-women” ad messages, which they perceive to really mean under-quality and over-priced. And so-called “pink-and-frilly” advertising themes went out with the Stepford wives.
A case in point: It’s no coincidence that the fashionable and authoritative Lincoln Mercury TV spokeswoman implores her audience to “add” the Mercury Milan sedan to their list, instead of the traditionally blatant, “you should buy it.”
"Women respond best to conversational and informal ad pitches and spokespeople who are ‘just like me,’” says Barletta. “I call it ‘the girlfriend factor.’”
The fine line for advertisers, of course, is not to turn off their boyfriends in the process.
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THE Y-BUY CHROMOSONE
Men and women car shoppers look for the same basic qualities, but there’s something Y chromosome-related that makes each sex view them in different ways, says Marti Barletta, who adds that the following generally apply:
SAFETY
He Says: “It’s all about avoiding accidents,” (tight steering, anti-lock brakes).
She Says: “It’s all about surviving accidents,” (seat belts, air bags).
FUEL ECONOMY
He Says: “Saving money at the pump”
She Says: “Saving the planet”
RELIABILITY
He Says: “Keeps me out of the repair shop.”
She Says: “Keeps me from being stranded at the side of the road.”
FUN TO DRIVE
He Says: “Single sense: Power, you can’t touch me.”
She Says: “Total sensory: Feel the wind, hear the engine purr, smell the new-car aroma.”
COMFORT
He Says: “Feeling bumps in the road can be fun.”
She Says: “Life has enough bumps. Give me heated seats and cushy leather.”
DURABILITY
He Says: “Important, but old cars aren’t cool.”
She Says: “As long as it’s reliable, drive on. Throwing away a perfectly good car is wasteful.”
VALUE
He Says: “All the categories above.”
She Says: “Those categories are just the short list.”STYLING
He Says: “The exterior --What other people see.”
She Says: “The interior -- Where I live.”
POWER
He says: “The thrill of it all.”
She says: “The confidence to keep up on the freeway”
WORST CAR AD PITCH
He Says: “Special for women.”
She Says: “Special for women.”

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