Survey Finds 51% of Men
Are Primary Grocery Shoppers, but Few Believe Advertising Speaks to Them
BATAVIA,
Ohio (AdAge.com) -- Mom is losing ground to Dad in the grocery aisle, with more
than half of men now supposedly believing they control the shopping cart. The
implications for many marketers may be as disruptive as many of the changes
they're facing in media.
Through decades of
media fragmentation, marketers of packaged goods and many other brands could
take solace in one thing -- at least they could count on their core consumers
being moms and reach them through often narrowly targeted cable TV, print and
digital media.
But
a study by Yahoo based on interviews last year of 2,400 U.S. men ages 18 to 64
finds more than half now identify themselves as the primary grocery shoppers in
their households. Dads in particular are taking up the shopping cart, with
about six in 10 identifying themselves as their household's decision maker on
packaged goods, health, pet and clothing purchases. Not surprisingly, given
that such ads long have been crafted for women, only 22% to 24% of men felt
advertising in packaged goods, pet supplies or clothing speaks to them,
according to the Yahoo survey.
The
Great Recession has thrown millions of men in construction, manufacturing and
other traditionally male occupations out of work and by extension into more
domestic duties. At the same time, gender roles were already changing anyway,
with Gen X and millennial men in particular more likely to take an active role
in parenting and household duties.
Of
course, in the survey, men could be overestimating their own role in shopping
for the family. Lauren Weinberg, director-research and insights for Yahoo,
acknowledges that could be possible -- and that women don't see them making as
much progress on that front. But she said the fact that so many men now see
themselves as masters of the shopping cart not only reflects real shifts but
also means any stigma once attached to men as shoppers is fading fast.
Yahoo's
interest in the subject is obvious: The portal has a lot of inventory geared
toward men, such as page after page of fantasy-sports content, that could use
more advertisers. But its research on men nonetheless seems to describe a new
and disruptive reality.
Behavioral
research of shoppers shows a number more like 35% of grocery and
mass-merchandise shoppers are now men, said Mariana Sanchez, chief strategy
officer for Publicis Groupe's Saatchi
& Saatchi X. That number has
been growing thanks to the economy and changing gender roles, she said.
And
while that figure may be far from a majority , the fact that a third of a
brand's shoppers are male is an awful lot to ignore. As a result,
shopper-marketing efforts are increasingly gender-neutral rather than targeted
for female shoppers, Ms. Sanchez said.
A
subtle case in point came during the latest Procter & Gamble Co.-Walmart
collaboration on "Family Movie Night" Jan. 8 on Fox. The program
itself, "Change of Plans," did show a new dad more domestically impaired
than a mom when unexpectedly thrust into adoptive parenthood. But in the
commercial pod "story within a story" via Martin
Agency, Richmond, the dad
made a shopping trip to Walmart to load up on P&G and private-label Great
Value products.
Such
scenes could be a wave of the future for more categories as consumer packaged
brands must elbow their way past car insurers, pickup trucks and
erectile-dysfunction drugs into one of the surest and most-DVR-proof forums for
reaching men: football.
P&G's
Head & Shoulders and Prilosec already have become deeply involved in NFL
marketing. But most P&G brands still primarily target moms, and it's not
always easy to please both. While last year's tear-jerking "Behind Every
Olympic Athlete is an Olympic Mom" Winter Olympics ads for P&G from
Wieden & Kennedy were generally well received, the Twitter stream about
them included an undercurrent of resentment from dads, who still make up the
vast majority of volunteer coaches for youth sports.
The
shift toward male shoppers, of course, didn't happen overnight, and that may
also help explain why some brand managers for years have privately said more
broadly focused network prime-time programming delivered better for their
brands than more female-focused cable buys, regardless of the cost and what
media optimizers indicated.
Perhaps
favorably for marketers, Yahoo research finds men are more brand-loyal and less
focused on promotions than women shoppers, Ms. Weinberg said. In advertising,
they do more product research in packaged-goods categories than women, she
said, and, because they're often newer to the categories, prefer ads with more
information.
John
Badalament, author of "The Modern Dad's Dilemma" and operator of
ModernDads.net, does see more ads that speak to men, including recent ads for
P&G's Old Spice and Kimberly-Clark Corp.'s Huggies. But many ads featuring
men still portray them as hapless domestically, which he doesn't believe helps
marketers. He likens such ads to the once laughable, now anachronistic grocery
scene from 1983's "Mr. Mom."
"Men,"
he said, "need to be something other than invisible or buffoons in
advertising."
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