Here is another great presentation I found on social media. It’s a great snapshot of progress in a very user friendly format.
I think it speaks for itself. This evolution is something our market needs to understand and embrace!
- Miamiadguy
Here is another great presentation I found on social media. It’s a great snapshot of progress in a very user friendly format.
I think it speaks for itself. This evolution is something our market needs to understand and embrace!
- Miamiadguy
Here is a really cool presentation that a friend found and shared regarding social media. I think it should serve as a wake up call to the Hispanic market although the learnings are from the general market. It should serve as a roadmap of what is to come. However, we are obviously not as jaded as the general market when it comes to trust and messaging as stated in the presentation. As our market remains mostly traditional in its approach, the evolution will occur fast and furious so it will be survival of the fittest. I call it the global warming of the Hispanic market.
Well, the future is here. These social trends and technologies are affecting the more acculturated portions of our market; starting with our youth. In order to communicate with them, we will need to begin to acknowledge these mediums as viable marketing channels. Will you (agency or advertiser) be a fossil or a survivor?
- Miamiadguy
Last week in a Hispanic press blitz, Coors revealed astonishing findings of a recent research project.
“The ‘cold standard’ of Hispanic consumers is colder than other consumer groups because the majority of Latinos come from countries or were born in areas of the U.S. with warmer temperatures and longer summers. The Coors Light and Coors Cold Activated Bottle helps ensure the coldest, most refreshing beer possible,” said Paul Mendieta, Marketing Director of U.S. Hispanic & Latin America for Coors Brewing Company.
“Our research shows that Hispanic consumers will go to many lengths to get the coldest beer possible, an insight incorporated into a new TV commercial introducing this product innovation. The label on Coors Light and Coors bottles features mountains in a Thermochromatic ink that turn blue when the beer has been chilled to the perfect temperature of about 42 degrees Fahrenheit or lower for ice cold refreshment,” he said. Mendieta added that the best part of the label outside the bottle is finding cold refreshment inside the bottle.
As the number of Hispanic mothers in the
Arlette Torres, Editorial Director for the Sinceramente line explains the role of mothers which are the latest inspiration for Hallmark Cards designs.
“Mothers are beloved, deeply respected, revered figures in the Hispanic community,” she says. “Her children view her as the source of goodness and love, affection, warmth and forgiveness. She is the idealized female figure, unequaled by other women.”
A new report from Forrester Research reveals that 51% of U.S. Hispanics who use the internet prefer Spanish-language websites, while 23% are Spanish dependant. The Hispanic Consumer Technographics report also states that 49% of Hispanic adults are online at least monthly, up from 45% in 2005.
Tamara Barber, a researcher at Forrester Research, reported that device ownership is growing among Hispanics. This includes mobile devices like PDAs and ipods. I have found various pieces of research that back these findings that show Hispanic out-indexing the general market in instant messages, rich media consumption and use of multiple devices at once. Other results of her research include the following:
Hispanics are more likely to listen to Internet radio than general market consumers.
Associated Press
MIAMI, Florida (AP) — Indie rocker Eric Monterrosa checks his ElHood.com Web page at least three times a day, answering fans, surfing for other new Latin artists and keeping in touch with friends from his native Colombia.ElHood is sort of a bilingual MySpace promoting the latest in Latin music, and for Miami-based Monterrosa, it has become a personal and professional lifeline. It is also the latest in a wave of Hispanic social-networking sites building links across the U.S., Latin America and Spain, all hoping to capture coveted advertising dollars.
“A lot of Latin artists are plugged in,” Monterrosa said. “So if you want to find them it’s easy. If you go to sites like MySpace, you have to go through all sorts of genres, types of music, and languages.”
About 56 percent of Hispanics in the United States use the Internet, compared with 71 percent of non-Hispanic whites and 60 percent of non-Hispanic blacks, according to the Pew Internet and American Life Project. But the number of Hispanics online jumps to 67 percent among 18- to 27-year-olds — the group most likely to visit social-networking sites and one coveted by advertisers.
The online gathering spots allow users to post profiles and keep in touch with friends, as well as expand their circle of acquaintances. Ads and partnerships that help spread new music keep the sites afloat.
ElHood’s easy-to-use tools make it a breeze for first-time surfers — artists and fans — who often mix Spanish and English in their profiles.
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BY LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ
AP HISPANIC AFFAIRS WRITER
MIAMI — Indie rocker Eric Monterrosa checks his ElHood.com Web site at least three times a day, answering fans, surfing for other new Latin artists and keeping in touch with friends from his native Colombia.
Elhood is sort of a bilingual MySpace page mixed with a the latest in Latin music, and for Monterrosa it has become a personal and professional lifeline. It is also the latest in a wave of Hispanic social networking sites building connections across the U.S., Latin America and Spain, all hoping that they can capture a slice of the millions of dollars in advertising being purchased.
“A lot of Latin artists are plugged in. So if you want to find them it’s easy. If you go to sites like MySpace, you have to go through all sorts of genres, types of music and languages,” Monterrosa said. “It’s cool that we can break the boundaries and reach out to other countries and have so many people sharing music and talking across international borders.”
About 56 percent of Hispanics in the U.S. use the Internet, compared to 71 percent of non-Hispanic whites and 60 percent of non-Hispanic blacks, according to study released last month by the D.C.-based Pew Internet and American Life Project. But the number of Hispanics online jumps to 67 percent for 18 to 27 year olds, who also happen to be the group most likely to visit social networking sites and a plum advertising demographic.
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