05/11/2005

Under the Microscope

Just how closely are tweens being studied by marketers and corporations who are vying for their love, attention and commitment to their products?

A close read of David Siegel et. al’s book entitled “The Great Tween Buying Machine,” provides some insight into the minds of marketers that are making a career marketing to tweens. While at times grossly disturbing, this book attempts to map out the tween mind and present its readers with a close up of what they should be targeting. One of the key methods that they suggest is to look directly at factors that drive tween behaviour, called centrics.

The book suggests centrics are useful because they “provide insight that can be applied to products, services, or communications that will speak directly to tween audiences.”

So what is a centric? According to the authors centrics are associated with either social or personal needs of the tween and will change depending on what is motivating the subject.

Below is chart found on page 51 of their book that will help clarify:

Need Motivational Platform Selected Centric
Personal Belonging Worth, Familiarity
Power Mastery, Intelligence, Rebellion
Freedom Individuality, Uniqueness, Independence
Fun Imagination, Simplicity, Sensation
Social Belonging Popularity, Friendship, Assimiliation
Power Superiority, Control, Love
Freedom Imitation, Exploriation
Fun Amusement, Creativity

This is where I digress… these guys are really like predators. They take common growing pains of youth and turn them into marketing advantages. You take something as basic as wanting to belong, something that is so visceral when we are young. Marketers are acutely aware of this desperate need and set out to make promises to kids, promises of more friends, popularity, being cool… promises that can be easily acquired with the simple purchase of product that embodies an identity or a subjectivity that can easily be taken up. That promise is of course the centric.

05/02/2005

Pay Now or Punish Later?

Below is a quote written by Susan George that was quoted by Henry Giroux at the Engaging Interpretation lecture series at Emily Carr last week.

"In 1945 or 1950, if you had seriously proposed any of the ideas and policies in today's standard neo-liberal toolkit, you would have been laughed off the stage or sent off to the insane asylum... the idea that the market should be allowed to make major social and political decisions, the idea that the State should voluntarily reduce its role in the economy, or that corporations should be given total freedom that trade unions should be curbed and citizens given much less rather than more social protection -- such ideas were utterly foreign to the spirit of the time. Even if someone actually agreed with these ideas, he or she would have hesitated to take such a position in pubic and would have had a hard time finding an audience."

I find this quote extremely provocative. Just how are notions of privitizations and market control so normalized in our society? And just how far will this go? While it is impossible to compare Canada to the United States it would be naive to dismiss the increasing support of the neoliberal agenda in our own backyard. This agenda really hit home when I attended a forum on the Commercialism of Schools on Saturday.

When it comes to public education, I think we should all be paying attention. With increased reliance on corporate donors it is no longer uncommon to have your grade 3 son or daughter come home singing the theme song of Home Depot (which they learned at school on your tax dollar) and wearing their corporate logo on their shirt because they paid for the playground at your child's elementary school. As was the case in North Vancouver last year. Nor is it uncommon to have corporations trying to dictate what should or should not be included in teachers' curriculum - as was the case for the Vancouver School Board who received a letter from McDonalds urging them not to allow the film Super Size Me be shown in classrooms. However, corporatization of education does not just extend to product placement or direct marketing to students it is also occurring at higher levels of government.

The BC government is a strong believer in the neoliberal credo which dictates that the market knows best. In 2002, the Provincial Liberal government took a good swing at publicly funded education and agreed on an amendment to the School Act in Bill 34. The result, public schools in BC are now allowed to incorporate themselves into School District Business Companies. Thus, School districts can now become 'entrepreneurs' and set up ventures in order to bring their schools additional income; such as the establishment of offshore private schools in China. While this may sound innocent, many critics warn that this approach is only going to increase the division between the have and have not districts who are now being left with the responsibility of financing themselves, with less and less government support.

Another new revenue tactic being deployed by the BC liberal government is the foreign student. Foreign students now make up 7% o BC's public system's operating budget. Like in post secondary institutions, foreign students must pay tuition to attend public schools, which is usually around $10,000. Between 2000–01 and 2001–02, the number of international students jumped from 2,947 to 4,035 which resulted in a net gain of in roughly $40 million. The result, school districts are now competing for these students creating a large gap between districts that can afford to attract students and those that cannot. What's more, many of these students have very low levels of English comprehension, which has a direct impact on the classroom, particularly as many of the ESL positions no longer exist due to the Liberal's 20% budget cut from Education. Read more here.

While it is hard to believe that this is really happening we must take a long look at ourselves and ask a very serious question - is this the best our kids deserve? How can we expect our kids to be critically engaged and active citizens when they are amidst such strong contradictions that are actively encouraged by our own apathy and compliance? We must lose our ephemeral perspectives that never extend beyond the immediate moment in question and start asking ourselves serious questions. Perhaps the most important, says COPE School Board Trustee, Kevin Milsip, "is do we want to pay now or punish them later..."

Here are some links:
School ADS Alert
BC Teachers Federation

04/27/2005

Tweens Pumping Up

As I lay in bed this morning listening to the news, I must admit feeling a little bit disheartened when I learned that many girls, some as young as nine years old are now using steroids. What’s more, these girls aren’t just using steroids to look more fit but as a means to control their weight... This is usually the moment where I put my hands in the air and say ‘what is the world coming to’ and my poor husband is left listening to me as I generally take the next few moments to go on an appropriate rant.

Today, however, I’ve decided to share a few thoughts, as the issue of body image is a serious one. This is a concern that is by no means new, yet what has changed is that kids are starting to worry about their bodies at younger and younger ages. What’s more, this issue, that is traditionally associated with girls, is now having an impact on young boys. Many ads found in teen magazines such as teen people, teen cosmo, or teen vogue show young tweens and teens who are impossibly thin and buff. This coupled with the specific tactics used by marketers who have spent significant time and resources mapping the inner workings of the tween landscape; leaves kids with even more social pressures and anxieties then ever before.

Alissa Quart, author of Branded also points out that there is a noticeable increase in the number of young boys who are taking steroids. One of the most popular body building websites for tweens and teens is teenbodybuilding.com. Here kids can read testimonials about other tweens and teens who have successfully ‘pumped themselves up’. If they like what they read they can purchase any number of suppliments such as creatine, anabolic flavones or various amino acid mixtures to ensure faster results for their workouts. Oh yeah and one other thing – after doing a bit of research, I found out that none of these suppliments have gone through any medical testing to assure that they are indeed safe with no side effects…

15:25 Posted in Tween Marketing | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email this | Tags: Politics