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Marketing and Motivating Boomers and Beyond

Posts Tagged ‘MetLife’

Mature Marketing Links of the Week – 5/14/12

Monday, May 14th, 2012

We hope everyone had a wonderful weekend honoring the mothers in their lives. (Or being honored; that’s nice, too!)

Two quick stats on moms:

My mother, Patricia Read, was an "older mom"-trendsetter. She had me at 38. Today she supports an adult child & several grandchildren financially.

1) Mothers today are older and better educated, compared with mothers a decade ago. Roughly 7,500 women gave birth at age 45 or over in 2008 and an increasing number of those women who have their first child after 35 don’t stop with just one.

2) MetLife found that nearly 80% of women of all generations have the desire to be able to give more financially to children or grandchildren. More than half of boomer moms are supporting adult kids financially today.

Marketing take-away: Check your assumptions about 50+ women being “empty nesters” with newly liberated wallets at the door. Be sure you really listen to your prospect and understand their personal situation.

 

Now, on to our weekly round-up of top baby boomer and seniors marketing links, resources and articles.

1. MOST SHARED: Our post on “Re-Thinking Retirement – 6 Lessons for Marketers” was re-tweeted and shared widely last week. Those lessons aren’t unique to retirement communities. We’d love your thoughts on how your organization is responding to the re-invention of that lifestage called retirement.

Read the post/add your comments: http://bit.ly/IR6PtO

Related post with a senior consumer perspective, courtesy of North Hill retirement communities: http://blog.northhill.org/?p=1480

2. MOST CLICKED: Baby boomers appear to be sacrificing their own retirements for the sake of their (adult) children. As the Wall Street Journal reports,

Ameriprise Financial in 2007 surveyed three generations—boomers, their children and their parents—and learned that less than half of boomers (44%) were trying to save for retirement while also providing support for their children and parents.

Fast forward to December 2011: The portion of boomers saving for their own retirement has fallen to one in four (24%)—but they’re still helping out their families. More than half (58%) are assisting their aging parents, including helping them pay for groceries (22%), medical expenses (15%) or utility bills (14%).

“It’s disturbing that people are still providing the same, intense level of support, up or down, and they’re five years closer to retirement,” says Suzanna de Baca, Ameriprise’s vice president of wealth strategies. “This is not registering with boomers.”

Read the full article: http://on.wsj.com/J4l8Pm

Chart from OptiRate based on Harris Interactive survey data:

Also re-tweeted repeatedly, two quotes that seem to have struck a chord with followers and blog readers:

- “A tweet is like toothpaste – once it’s out, you can’t put it back in the tube.” ~ www.scrambls.com via the Social Media Insider (Twitter “handle” @socialmedia411 and worthy of a follow)

- “Plan your life like you’ll live to 100. Live your life like you’ll die tomorrow.” Jim Firman of the National Council on Aging

 

Study of Mature Homebuyers, New Home Builders Shows Need For Clearer Marketing

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Kudos to MetLife and NAHB who recently released a study about how builders were doing meeting the expectations of the mature market (Baby Boomers and beyond).  At Creating Results, we love research!  Decisions can be made based on data rather than that gut feel in your stomach or the old fall-back “we’ve always done it that way.”  In this economy, when budgets have been cut to the bare bone, research often has been the first to go.  Thanks to this study, marketers and builders have a little more insight into what Boomers and seniors are looking for in a new home.

What Mature Homebuyers Want, and Builders Aren’t Offering

The report, 55+ Housing: Builders, Buyers, and Beyond, found that

“While consumers expressed a preference for maintenance-free lifestyles, with services such as interior and exterior home repair, transportation, housecleaning, etc., few builders offer such services, which depart from their primary business of construction.” 

63% of the 1500 respondents stated their primary reason for moving was the desire for a maintenance-free lifestyle. That beat out moving to be closer to family or friends as well as a wish to reduce the cost of living.

In our work with active adult builders and community developers we have found as many definitions of “maintenance-free” as there are “green building.”  The Boomers and older homebuyers want, and in many cases need, all of the exterior maintenance taken care of for them.  This goes beyond mowing the lawn to include fertilizing, leaf raking, and mulching of flower beds; cleaning the gutters and washing the windows; clearing snow from driveways and lead walks … 

Real estate marketers need to be sure that online/offline materials are specific on what is and is not included in a community’s “maintenance-free” lifestyle.  Clear details (and more services) will speed sales.

Pat_WLR_PCard_950px

What Builders Offer, But Buyers Don’t Appear to Want

Creating Results’ 15 years of marketing to Baby Boomers means we understand the need for builders and community developers to communicate new features and their benefits very clearly to prospects.  Universal Design (UD) is a case in point.

NAHB’s research showed that consumers didn’t fully appreciate UD features like lever-handled doors knobs and wider doors and hallways that builders are already putting in to new homes. 

Why?  Perhaps because those door knobs are now anticipated, viewed as a luxury feature but expected to be included as standard.  Those old round ones are boring and just so passé.  And not because the market perceives them as UD-friendly but because levers are the new generation of door knobs. 

Wider doors and hallways?  My guess is that customers do appreciate them because they make the entire home feel more spacious. But value?  It’s hard for consumers to assess a value to space like this—we’re not talking the latest hi-tech feature or granite countertops here.  And, like the lever-handled door knobs, buyers don’t connect the feature to UD benefits.

The communication challenge is to educate our Baby Boomer consumers on the lifestyle value these and other features in the home and community provide now and in the future.  Whether your Boomer buyer is 62 suffering with arthritis in their hands or simply has an armful of laundry those lever-handled door handles will be appreciated.

How will you apply this research and insights to your marketing?


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