Saturday, January 30, 2010

Apple iPad for boomers and seniors? Could be!

Having read the press report about the iPad the thought that went through my mind is the title of Laurie Orlov’s latest blog posting

We are not alone – this guy in Australia had similar thoughts

Let’s not forget that Steve Jobs is 55 so maybe his design priorities are now inclining towards the older end of the age spectrum. He is not exactly at the "pipe and slippers" stage but not that far away.

I can think of lots of reasons why the iPad will not work but I would love the job of positioning it to the older market.

Somehow I doubt if older people were high up on the list of targeted sectors but Apple might be in for a shock. Cannot wait to see a demographic breakdown of the sales figures at the end of the first year. Dick Stroud

Saturday, January 23, 2010

The increasing attractiveness (commercial) of Boomer women

As if you don’t already know, wealthy Boomer women are underserved by retailers and suppliers. This short article from Brand Channel, reiterates this point, plus adding a couple of new insights. The basic tenet of "think old, think female" is always worth reiterating. Worth a quick scan. Dick Stroud

Dell advertisements in Saga


Unlike most people, when I receive a magazine, I am more interested in the ads than the editorial. This applies even more so to Saga. This is not a reflection on the quality of Saga's writing but it more interesting, for me at least, to see who is advertising what and in what way.

To the best of my knowledge I spied the mag's first Dell ad, and from what I can see, it is pretty much age-neutral. Maybe they have increased the font size a bit but it looks the same as those in any other mag. If I find any major differences I will blog again about the subject. Dick Stroud

Data on household expenditure tells a lot of stories


I am never to sure about the accuracy of these stats, but they are the best (in terms of quality and breadth) that you are going to get in the UK. You will find it tucked away amongst a sea of other stats in this report from the Office of National Statistics.

What grabs your attention?

Why do the 30-49s spend 5 times more on ‘other’ than the 75+?

The spend of the 30-49 and 50-64 year old is not that much different (other than ‘other’)


The high percentage spend of the 65-74 year olds on recreation and culture


The almost constant percentage spend on restaurants and hotels for all of the ages up until 65+


The 50-64 year olds having the highest absolute spend per person.
All good factlets for a presentation and to justify the importance of the older market. Dick Stroud

A very sad tale

This has absolutely nothing to do with 50-plus marketing. It is not a gripe. To be honest I don’t know what it is.

A while back I wrote about the way that politicians lose their way and quoted a couple of examples of people where I had connections from the past.

Yesterday, an old school friend of mine became the first MP to be punished by being stripped of his £65,000 ‘pay-off’ when he leaves the House of Commons at the end of this parliament. Harry Cohen and I were always a million miles apart politically but we were good mates at school.

He went his way and via the route of working in local government then as a councillor and then to become the local constituency MP. We haven’t spoken for years, although I have followed his escapades as an increasingly left-wing Labour MP.

And now it has come to this. The abiding memory of Harry will be the speech, of apology; he is being forced to give to House of Commons, the loss of the £65,000 and the everlasting digital content describing him as the worst example of greed that has pervaded the UK political class.

In so many ways I have a sense of self satisfaction, as somebody who has grown tired of hearing the self satisfied clap trap of the liberal classes who espouse high moral ideals whilst practising the same, or lot worse, venal habits as the rest of the population.

I am sure there are numerous lessons to be drawn from the morality tale of Harry Cohen, but right now I feel very sorry for the guy. Don't get me wrong, he has got what he deserves. Believe me, the young Harry of 1960 would have demanded a far worse punishment.

If there is a 50-plus message amongst these ramblings it is that this generation is at a time in life when their chances of changing how they are perceived is fast receding. Other than the public humiliation aspects, Harry is in the same position as anybody else. A sobering thought. Dick Stroud

Friday, January 22, 2010

The cost of long term care something we would prefer to forget

You cannot blame Jo and Jolene public for putting their head in the sand and ignoring how the hell they will pay for their long term care. The Government has been doing it for the past few decades so why should its citizens be any different?

This item is from an online Independent Financial Adviser publication and spells the problems and the opportunities to the Finance Industry.

The marketing issues that have to be overcome are considerable. Most people reckon they have paid enough tax over their lifetime and hence the state should pay for their care. Most people don’t want to plan, 5 years into the future, let alone 50 years. Forgoing life’s pleasures today, for a better standard of care home, is not something to excite your average consumer.

Other than these factors it is a pretty straightforward marketing challenge. Dick Stroud

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Kim Walker’s SilverTips newsletter is always worth reading

If you are not a regular reader of Kim’s blog about all things 50-plus in the Asia Pacific region then you can catch with his thoughts in the monthly newsletter.

Here are a few of the topics covered:
  • Movies and Music Learn To Profit from the Boomer Market
  • Thailand Identifies Senior Tourism Opportunity
  • Microsoft Forecasts the Needs of Baby Boomers; Report
  • Australia's Telstra Reaches Silver Online Users in New Campaign
  • P&G Rethinks Strategy to Reach Older Consumers
  • Asia's Silver Elites Show Their Spending Power

That should be enought to wet your appetite. Dick Stroud

Monday, January 18, 2010

Growth in ‘ethnic minorities’ an effect of ageing

An article in Adage - A Primer on the New America for CMOs – contains a fascinating factlet.
80% of people age 65-plus is white non-Hispanics. But just 54% of children under age 18 will be white non-Hispanics. It looks almost certain that White non-Hispanics will account for fewer than half of births by 2015. In 2010, Hispanics are the US’s fastest-growing and largest minority (50 million people).
Only two in three babies born in England and Wales are white British.

If you add geodemographics to the mix you find that England, and I am sure the US, is a patchwork of high density ethnic minority/younger and white/older geographic areas.

The bottom line of this is that when marketers think about the differences in their approach to marketing to older and younger people they should also include the ethnicity factor. It means that older age group is more homogenous then the young. Now that is a sentence I never thought I would be writing. Dick Stroud

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Just when you think you're out, they pull you back in


The ‘they’ in this case is the recession. Data from Pew Research shows the impact of the recession on the young people and especially where they live (back home).

Just get your head around this fact: “13% of parents with grown children say one of their adult sons or daughters has moved back home in the past year.” That is a big change in the dynamics of the household and they way it operates and purchases.

Overall, the proportion of adults ages 18 to 29 who live alone declined from 7.9% in 2007 to 7.3% in 2009. Similar drops in the proportion of young people who live by themselves occurred during or immediately after the recessions of 1982 and 2001.

The current decline has been particularly steep among young women; the proportion who live by themselves fell by a full percentage point to 6.1%. Among young men, the share living on their own fell 0.2 percentage points to 8.4%, a statistically insignificant change.

While the recession has touched Americans of all ages, it has been particularly hard on young adults. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a smaller share of 16- to 24-year-olds are currently employed—46.1%—than at any time since the government began collecting such data in 1948.

That’s terrible, but putting the social implications to one side, marketers must understand the implications on the priorities they give to the generations. Yoof seems to me to be going down the list. Dick Stroud

Friday, January 15, 2010

Let’s be really retro and buy a newspaper


Research from Adweek is bad news for the long-term health of the Newspaper Industry.

Daily newspaper readership skews heavily toward the older age groups. Almost two-thirds of those ages 55+ (64%) say they still read a daily newspaper almost every day. Younger Americans read newspapers less often. Less than one-fourth of those ages 18-34 (23%) say they read a newspaper almost every day and 17% in this age group say they never read a daily newspaper.

The possibility of charging a monthly fee to read a daily newspaper’s content online suggests that it is unlikely to work. Three quarters of online adults (77%) say they would not be willing to pay anything to read a newspaper’s content online. Among the minority willing to pay, one in five online adults (19%) would only pay between $1 and $10 a month for this online content and only 5% would pay more than $10 a month.

The article includes research from Boston Consulting that comes to a similar set of conclusions.

In some ways this makes things easier for advertisers since the printed newspapers will become the sole preserve of the older person. I guess we will have to wait whilst the newspaper industry goes, what looks like futile efforts, to attract a younger readership and admits to the inevitable. Dick Stroud

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Do you have an iPhone and want to follow my Blog/YouTube/Twitter postings




Thanks to some great work by the guys at MotherApp I am the proud possessor of my own iPhone app. If you want to view it you MUST have iTunes installed and to use it you need an iPhone or iPod touch.

An exercise in vanity – probably. But I think it shows how simple it is for companies to add value to what they do and make it accessible via a mobile app. Cripes, if I can do it surely any company wanting to engage the 50-plus can do the same.

Final plug for the excellent work done by MotherApp.

I promise this is the last mobile app posting for a few days. Honestly. Dick Stroud

57 million iPhones worldwide = lots of 50-plus users

Those of you who can remember the heady days of the dot.com era will know the name of Mary Meeker. She was guru, par excellence, about all things digital. Well she is still at it and has recently directed a study about the Mobile Internet for Morgan Stanley (Dec 15, 2009). She studied the rate of change spurred by the iPhone and all of the technologies and services it has spawned.  Here is just one of her observations.

It took Apple 2 years and 3 months to reach 57 million users, compared to 5 years for Docomo to reach 40M, Netscape 4 years to reach 50M. The trajectory for Apple is very steep at this time. Smartphone, in aggregate, will grow from 288M in 2008 to over 1B units by 2013.

You can read more about this report on the MotherApp blog.

Two months ago, BusinessWeek called it the “App Economy”. Prediction is that there will be 300,000 apps on the Apple App Store in a year.

My friends and colleagues seem amazed that I am so excited about the potential of mobile apps. Hopefully these factlets help explain the reason.

Anybody who thinks this has nothing to do with marketing to the older consumer is crazy! Dick Stroud

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Age Concern Liverpool is selling it experience

To be more precise it is selling access to the 20,000 people on its Age Concern database. I thought that Age Concern had morphed into Age UK – maybe not.

Anyway, market researchers can gain access to this group of older people in the Liverpool area by contacting David Rowland at Age Concern Liverpool. Alternatively you can contact the guys at Generation Comms. This is a new consultancy set up to advise on marketing to older people.

This is what Generation Comms says about itself.
Generation Communications Partnership has been established by a group of seasoned professionals with a wealth of communication, PR, marketing and business strategy experience to help you to untap customer potential in the 50+ age groups.
It is always good news to see new agencies providing services to companies wanting to market to the older market. I wish them well.

This is the first time I have seen an Age Concern region go it alone and promote its local marketing resources. I wonder I this is the shape of things to come? One Age UK and zillions of Age Regions Dick Stroud

Gadgets for Getting in Shape


Technology Review has an interesting item about the latest bits of technology that can help achieve/maintain fitness – something that is important to many of the 50-plus.


I have already written about serveral of these developments that are designed for smartphones.

The DirectLife product from Philips is the only one that is not developed in the US.

It is a pocket-sized plastic device that also uses motion sensors to measure a user's daily energy expenditure. These measurements are combined with the user's age, gender, height, and weight before being converted to the number of calories burned during each activity. DirectLife has to be worn in a user's pocket or around her neck, and the data can be uploaded to the Web by connecting it to a computer. Cost: $100.

I am sure we are going to see a lot more of these types of products hitting the market. Dick Stroud

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Why mobile apps and older people are made for each other

The first days of a New Year, in a new decade, demands a new blog. What better subject to blog about than apps - those bundles of functionality that are fast going to be the norm on our mobile phones?

The combination of smart new mobile hardware and operating systems, 3G, GPS, motion detection, zillions of data feeds, speech and character recognition all tied up in a bow using apps development toolkits makes for the most exciting technology breakthrough since we typed our first http://www.

As usual this new technology is seen as being only appropriate to the young, who are thought to be synonymous with early adopters. I am not so sure. Mobile apps provide companies with massive opportunities to provide benefit (in exchange for money) to highly targeted audiences.

We are not just talking about building ‘profitable’ apps but creating them to be bundled into the very core of other products and services.

In 12 months we will look at the today’s apps as primitive first attempts. For those of you who can remember, they will be like watching a data transmission using a 56k modem and thinking it was fantastic and couldn’t be bettered.

So here we go. The blog is up and going. I would love to hear about any apps or features of smartphones that you think are particularly useful for older people or are intrinsically age-friendly. Enjoy. Dick Stroud

Sunday, January 03, 2010

Music for oldies



I should have made this ancient blog posting back in October 2009. Better late than never. Neurotic Media and CM2Oldies have launched iOldies online music and entertainment store that features over two million MP3s. This is the press release.

This site claims to be the only source offering the 50-plus Baby Boomers single downloads, entire album downloads, CDs, vinyl records (LPS), ringtones and “retro” DVDs in one “shopping experience”.

I have no idea how the range of music from this site compares to iTunes but it certainly is a more colourful experience to visit although not as easy to use and the background music sends me mad!


Unless the site has major advantages in terms of price and/or range I wonder why the Web literate Boomer would come here rather than where they buy their non-retro/nostalgic music? Whatever, I wish them well. Dick Stroud