BEYOND STEREOTYPES

Stereotypes in marketing
Are you marketing to people or stereotypes? Sweeping generalizations result in crappy marketing campaigns, offend audiences and spark backlashes. So take the necessary steps to keep your personas real and relevant.

The Dark Side

You don’t have to go far to witness offensive stereotypes. Just Google a few nationalities and you’ll see what the search engine giant suggests with its autocomplete feature, based on popular searches.

Stereotypes - Brits

Stereotypes - French

Stereotypes - American

So are Brits ugly, French rude and Americans stupid? No. Just like all Canadians aren’t nice, syrup-swigging hockey freaks. Not all black people listen to hip-hop. And not all Asians are good at math.

Many of these beliefs are totally off the mark. Take, for instance, the internationally renowned myth of bad teeth in Britain. Mike Meyers packed his Austin Powers scripts with countless jokes reinforcing this stereotype. However, Brits statistically have the best teeth, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which studied the average number of decayed, missing or filled teeth in 12-year-olds. They were rated ahead of 17 countries, including the US, which ranked 10th.

Where Do Stereotypes Come From?

Stereotypes in marketing

Children absorb stereotypes from families, friends, teachers and media. These oversimplified, dogmatic beliefs continue to be reinforced for years, often about people we have very limited or no authentic personal experience with. So we define and then see, versus experiencing encounters and subsequently forming our own impressions. As a result, we approach each encounter with bias.

Why? It’s cognitively efficient. Categorizing groups helps make sense of the world and saves processing time, so we don’t have to think too much. We feel we generally know what to expect from ‘our group’, as well as members from the ‘other groups’. Remarkably, we tend to see members of our own group as individuals, and view those in other groups as an undifferentiated mass.

Additionally, stereotypes can superficially make us feel better about ourselves. It’s like the playground bully with low self-esteem putting down others. To feel good about the ‘ingroup’ we belong to, we look down on and bad mouth outsiders from the ‘outgroups’.

Stereotypes are categories that have gone too far, says Yale Professor John Bargh, Ph.D, a leading authority on unconscious processing related to social behaviour.

“When we use stereotypes, we take in the gender, the age, the colour of the skin of the person before us, and our minds respond with messages that say hostile, stupid, slow, weak,” Bargh told Psychology Today. “Those qualities aren’t out there in the environment. They don’t reflect reality.”

Typical Marketing Stereotypes

There are countless stereotypes that are portrayed in marketing, which miss opportunities and alienate audiences. Common culprits include:

Women

Stereotypes in Marketing - Women

Women are often portrayed in domestic settings, obsessed with a new house cleaner or stressed about dinner. Check out these stats surrounding women and men in advertising from the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science:

  • Women were 4 times less likely to have a speaking role
  • Women were 3 times more likely to be presented as a product user rather than an authority
  • Women were 3.5 times more likely to be presented at home or in a domestic environment

Since Word War II, popular media have increasingly put forth a thinner and thinner body image — often unattainable and unhealthy — as the ‘ideal’ for women. Fortunately, several brands are launching campaigns that empower, reassure and connect emotionally with women.

For instance, a This Girl Can campaign by Sport England challenges the typical portrayal of women in sports advertising and celebrates a wider range of body types. Slogans like “I’m slow but I’m lapping everyone on the couch” resonates with their target audiences.

Society in general may be shifting. France, for for example, recently passed a bill banning ‘excessively thin’ models. And an advertising watchdog has recently launched a formal investigation into a “beach body ready” campaign that it claims is offensive and socially irresponsible.

Men

Stereotypes in marketing - Men

While women are urged to pursue beauty and sex appeal, men are packaged into traditional ‘meat and potato’ categories, such as:

  • The strong, silent type
  • The big shot
  • The jock

Many positive traits are promoted as unmanly, like the ability to feel a range of emotions, including fear, hurt and confusion. Maybe that’s why so many guys refuse to stop and ask directions. While the media industry tends to characterize men as macho meatheads, skirt chasers and inept at parenting and relationships, some brands are actually connecting.

Take personal care company Dove, which realized men weren’t happy with how they’ve traditionally been depicted as fathers. Research revealed that while three-quarters of dads say they are responsible for their child’s emotional wellbeing, only 20% saw that reflected in the media. The brand responded with a Super Bowl ad that highlighted a more modern take of fatherhood, complete with the tagline: “Care makes a man stronger.”

Culture

Stereotypes in marketing - Arab

Being culturally and racially sensitive is important. When Coca-Cola aired a Super Bowl advertisement, members of a number of American-Arab groups were furious for being portrayed as “backwards,” and the company’s relationship with the Arab community was compromised.

The advertisement depicted four different groups: Arabs towing camels and wearing keffiyehs; cowboys on horses; a biker-style gang; and a bus with showgirls. Set in a desert, the four teams raced toward a jumbo Coca-Cola bottle. Coca-Cola then had consumers vote which team would win — and the Arab group was not included in the poll. They lacked respect and understanding, and got heat for it.

Are You Bias?

Here’s a quick test that might burst your bubble. Think about the gamer industry. You know, those socially-inept, acne-ridden guys living in their parents’ basements? Right. Well, a UK study revealed a quarter of all gamers are actually over 45-years-old, and here’s the kicker: 52% are women.

Moving Past Stereotypes

The key to going beyond stereotypes is treating customers for what they are — individuals. Of course, you can’t always market to people one by one, but you can approach your market segments with intelligent interactions. Take a page from companies like Amazon and Netflix, which work tirelessly to deliver highly personalized experiences.

Here are some ideas to get past stagnant stereotypes:

Face-to-Face Time

Get out of your seat and talk to your customers — yes, actual people with names and personalities. There’s nothing like good, old-fashioned conversation to remind you that real people are using your products and services. Carefully listen to, capture and study their feedback. Also, if possible, talk to and draw experiences from your sales team and other frontline staff.

You can, of course, top up your information gathering efforts using your existing email list or social media accounts. Be sure to ask about your company, about themselves, their preferences and the marketplace at large. Affordable tools like Survey Monkey, Checkbox or Survata can help even the smallest businesses. And don’t be afraid to incentivizing them to prompt participation.

Combine Feedback With Data

The second step is to marry those anecdotal narratives with data. Today’s marketers have vast access to information and data about individuals to help reduce and even eliminate assumptions. Where can you look? Josh Loewen, Director at The Status Bureau, suggests leveraging data you probably already have access to.

Keyword research and Google Analytics provide a great starting point. However, according to Loewen, Google Search Console is the single most overlooked tool on the Web. “The search analytics identify specific market opportunities,” he explained. “Rather than trying to hunt for any elusive white whale opportunities, you can see what you’ve already caught or are able to catch.”

Measure, Measure, Measure

Gone are the days of Mad Men when marketers used to spend money blindly. There’s a plethora of marketing tools, metrics and formulas around us to promote continuous improvement and better serve people. The problem, stated Loewen, is businesses almost never have them set up properly.

“There’s piles of data, but out-of-the-box data doesn’t give you insights,” he said. “Filter queries to uncover the right numbers. It’s critical to identify what’s important and usable for you and your clients, otherwise you get PDFs and XLS files piling up with no value.” Loewen suggests even an hour a month setting up and reviewing data with a specialist can set a business up for long-term success.

Get Close, Get Personal

Stereotypes in marketing - Lennon_and_Yoko

Avoid stereotypes and celebrate diversity. Make the effort and investment to truly understand the people you’re marketing to. It’ll allow you to go beyond ‘the masses’ and create meaningful content and campaigns that speak directly to the needs and interests of real individuals. In return, they’ll reward you with real results.

 

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8 responses to “BEYOND STEREOTYPES”

  1. David W says:

    Intriguing! But there are so many stereotypes that are missed. It’s interesting that these things get taught at an early age and then get carried on, unless we adults break the cycle.

  2. Rick Sloboda says:

    Thanks for your thoughts, David!

    Conversations and heightened awareness are important as stereotypes can do more than shape perceptions. They can actually create conditions that lead to self-fulfilling prophecies.

  3. Aura says:

    Great article and observations.

    Do you think it has something to do with the pressure to target a niche market with homogenous psychographic behaviours and pain points?

    Meaning, that when preparing a marketing message we are told to picture an ‘ideal client’ or avatar client. Doesn’t this create the circumstances for stereotyping? Generalized, oversimplified, standardized mental pictures of people?

    And as you said in your comment above, can create and idealized image that people desire to live into.

    Thoughts? How can we communicate differently and still be effective in our message?

  4. Rick Sloboda says:

    Provoking comments and questions, Aura!

    I think it’s a matter of consciously discounting and eliminating common stereotype pitfalls, and exploring and researching the unique richness of who individuals are, and how and what they think.

    This requires a greater openness to observing and understanding people in more meaningful ways.

    For instance, instead of automatically focusing on ‘general’ characteristics, we should look for personality elements that might be inconsistent, subtle and complex.

  5. Aldona says:

    Very interesting article Rick!

    Especially the mention of big companies who have missed the mark once or twice. I want to know how they were able to recover from it or what they learned especially as a company known on a global level. I believe this article has been published at a great time where diversity is continually expanding and a lot of people are exposed to it more daily. It is crucial for companies to take this into account when designing interactions and interfaces.

    I feel like this is not to be viewed as a limiting thing for design but a new way to innovate, explore, learn through trial and error?

  6. Rick Sloboda says:

    Thanks for the kind words, Aldona!

    For starters, companies can offer an apology, and then demonstrate increased sensitivity and understanding.

    Definitely, while I discussed the marketing/branding realm in the article, it’s truly a global issue that goes far beyond the borders of the advertising world.

    Thanks again for taking the time to share your thoughts!

  7. Great article, Rick. Just a quick thought on avoiding Stereotyping. It’s probably near impossible (not entirely), to pass across your message without some trace element of stereotypical allusions and whims. However, as Rick has said, “you can’t always market to people one by one”, especially when the industry is all about ‘reach’—but what you can do is to identify the voice of your mesage. Find that one persona, individual that speaks the loudest in you target audience and commit to them. They would probably embody the most qualities and characteristics you are most interested in, for starters. They also probably are most representative of the ideal user you are interested in. Once you identify this user, speak to them. If you try to please every user you can think of, you’d fail to please the one the message is truly intended for.

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