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Marketing and
Kid Power
By Josh Golin
Mothering.com,
March 2006
On May
7-11,
marketers from
all over the
world will
gather at the
Disney Yacht
Club in
Orlando at the
13th annual
Kid Power
Conference and
Awards. Kid
Power, of
course, means
purchasing
power—it is
estimated that
children under
twelve spend
more than $30
billion on
purchases and
influence more
than $500
billion in
purchases per
year. Given
these
staggering
figures, it's
not surprising
that Disney,
Nickelodeon,
Scholastic,
and other
major
marketers to
children are
gathering for
a week of
networking and
presentations
on the latest
market
research.
For those
of us,
however, who
are not in the
business of
selling to
children,
there is
something
profoundly
disturbing
about Kid
Power and
other
conferences
devoted to
helping people
market to
children. When
CCFC's
co-founder Dr.
Susan Linn
attended the
Advertising
and Promoting
to Kids
conference in
2002, she was
struck by the
fact that it
was the only
conference
about children
she'd ever
been to where
no one was
talking about
what was best
for them.
Among
themselves,
marketers
don't have to
pay lip
service to
concerns that
child-directed
marketing
undermines
parents'
efforts to
raise healthy
children and
contributes to
childhood
obesity, youth
violence,
precocious and
irresponsible
sexuality, and
children's
diminished
capacity to
play
creatively.
Instead, they
can focus all
their energy
on how to
exploit
children for
profit.
Take
Firefly
Mobile, for
instance.
Firefly has
marketed its
phone for
preteens as an
essential
safety device
and a way for
parents to
keep tabs on
their
children. But
it's not the
safety
features that
Firefly will
be talking
about at Kid
Power. Fred
Bullock,
Firefly's
Chief
Marketing
Officer will
discuss the
"unique
characteristics
of wireless
communications
for kids" and
the
implications
for "marketers
and content
developers."
Cell phones,
it seems, are
a pretty good
way for
marketers to
stay in
constant
contact with
your kids too.
Bullock
will also be
part of panel
that asks,
"Are Kids
Getting Older
Younger?" In
another
context, such
a panel might
entail a
serious look
at how the
various
academic and
social
pressures
facing
children today
are affecting
children's
well-being.
For marketers,
however, the
oft-repeated
mantra "Kids
are getting
older younger"
is a simply an
excuse to
market sex and
violence to
younger
children.
At "Untapping
Kid-fluence",
marketers will
learn how
"kids wield
increasing
power in
families'
choice of
traditional
consumer
packaged goods
to more
non-traditional
choices like
the family car
or vacation
destination."
But you can
bet that no
one will be
asking if this
increased
power is a
good thing,
whether kids
should be
involved in
car purchases,
or whether
families are
well-served by
having their
children lobby
for vacation
destinations
they've seen
advertised on
Nickelodeon.
Instead,
marketers will
learn to
leverage "the
best ways to
tap into and
use kids'
negotiation
power." In
other words,
they'll learn
how to get to
kids to nag
more
effectively
for their
brands.
In fact,
just about
everything
objectionable
about
child-directed
marketing will
be on display
at Kid Power.
Concerned
about the
growing
corporate
presence in
schools? At
"Eyes Up Front
Please.
Getting Your
Message to
Kids in the
Classroom"
marketers will
learn how to
create
"materials
that align
with National
Standards so
that the
programs are a
'need' to
teach and not
a 'want to
teach'".
Appalled by
the gendered
messages that
marketers sell
to children?
At Kid Power,
marketers will
learn how to
create a
"lifestyle
brand" from
Disney
Princess.
Horrified by
children's
nonprofits
that sell out
children and
families by
collaborating
with
exploitative
corporations?
At Kid Power,
marketers will
learn about
"Partnering
with
Organizations
and Building
Alliances"
from US Youth
Soccer
Director of
Marketing
Chris
Branscome. It
was under
Branscome's
watch that US
Youth Soccer
partnered with
the lawn care
company
ChemLawn and
sent mailings
that were
designed to
get young
soccer players
to nag their
parents for
ChemLawn's
potentially
toxic
products.
And then
there are the
awards. At Kid
Power,
marketers will
actually
celebrate and
honor their
peers for
manipulating
young children
(only ads
aimed at
children
twelve and
under are
eligible).
According to
the Kid Power
website,
campaigns are
evaluated
based on the
following
criteria:
-
Objective:
the goal of
the campaign
-
Strategy:
how unique,
compelling
and
insightful
-
Creativity:
strategy and
originality
-
Implementation:
quality of
campaign
execution
-
Effectiveness
Notice
anything
missing?
Campaigns are
not judged on
whether they
positively or
negatively
influence
children.
There is no
evaluation of
the message -
whether it
implies that
children need
a product to
be happy or
popular;
whether it
propagates
gender or
racial
stereotypes -
or even
whether the
product being
advertised is
good for
children.
That's why, in
the midst of
growing
concerns about
the role junk
food marketing
plays in the
childhood
obesity
epidemic, last
year's winner
of the Best
Campaign in
Food and
Beverage
category was
Burger King.
As
disturbing as
the Kid Power
Conference and
Awards are,
they offer an
important
lesson: If we
are serious
about
protecting
children from
exploitative
marketing, we
cannot look to
the marketing
industry to
take the lead
or expect
self-regulation
to work. It is
clear from the
way the child
marketers talk
to each other
and evaluate
their peers,
that the
well-being of
children is
simply not a
priority. It
is up to those
of us who
value children
for more than
what they can
buy to
advocate for
policies that
will limit
corporate
marketers'
access to
children. If
we really want
to empower our
kids, we'll
allow them to
grow up
without being
undermined by
commercial
interests. |