Sometimes the truth is identical to fiction…

I had one of those nights where I just crashed in front of the tv, flipping throughdesire.jpg channels, when I caught the movie What Women Want just beginning.  I paused for a minute, not sure I wanted to start watching another sugary romantic comedy… not my favorite choice.  Within minutes I was drawn into the movie, but it wasn’t the romance that got me.

In the movie, Mel Gibson (chauvinist pig) gains the supernatural power to read women’s minds.

Hilarity, of course, ensues.   But this isn’t what hooked me either.

It was the marketing lessons.  In the film Gibson plays an ad-exec who is passed over for promotion and Helen Hunt gets the job (talk about what women want… I want to be as gorgeous as Hunt when I reach her age!)

Hunt’s goal as creative director of the ad agency is to snag a share of the women’s market.  Her sights are set on Nike Women… and this also appealed to me personally since I’ve a renewed focus on running.

Because Gibson got inside the heads of women, he listened while they were working out of what they were thinking about.  At one point he says that women worry all the time.  This seems to be true from my experience.

So when marketing to women, ask yourself.  How does this product address the things a woman worries about?  Or, does this product provide a vacation from worry, even for a little bit?

If you can find that connection, you may just have some of What Women Want.

 

If you want to really create a brand that stays in the minds of families for generations to come, it’s time to start marketing to tweens.

gloss.jpgA tween, as they are effectionately called, is a pre-teen, a child between middle childhood and adolescence, generally in the age range of 8 to 12 years old.

There are a few things to know about when you’re marketing to girls in this agegroup.

They are very much like teenagers themselves, striving hard to be like them, tweens are apt to immitate the looks and fashion of older girls.  Tween Brands (NYSE TWB) which owns the Limited Too and Justice chains that sell apparel to girls 7-14, markets the same styles to tweens as they do to the older girls, with just more and brighter color choices.  They capture the marketing young and provide them with their clothing fashions as they age when they move through their sister companies, like the Limited.

They aren’t alone.  Take a look at Bonnie Bell, a makeup and skin care company.  Founded in 1927, the company was directed towards the youth market long before it was fashionable, which could explain why they have such a large marketshare today.

Bell puts out Lip Smackers Lip Glosses, and the average tween girl owns 10 of them.  Then they move through the brands, with more adult colors and an increased selection of products.  Their aim?  To be the makeup provider of young women through their teen years and into adulthood.  In fact, the company starts even earlier than tweens with their Lip Smackers Lip Balm, and markets these to girls 4-6 (pre-tweens).  It’s smart marketing.

But sometimes the tactics used to "hook ‘em while their young" aren’t exactly ethical.  You might remember a few years back it was Limited Too that was centered in a scandal around vanity sizing.  The stores were proven to artificially reduce the numbers on their clothing sizes, which would make girls feel overweight when shopping at other stores.

At such a vulnerable time in their lives, when tweens and even pre-tweens are starting to feel pressure to be thin and developing eating disorders, this method of giving the customer what they want seems manipulative and even harmful.

So, what’s the lesson here?  Young women aren’t much different than adult women.  They want a company that understands them, variety, choice, and the perfect shade of lipgloss.

"On the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy"
David Ogilvy

Are your headlines that good?