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  1. #1
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    Default More Retailers Are Courting Gay Customers: Wall Street Journal

    By Karen Talley from the Wall Street Journal


    Same-sex Couples Show Up in Catalogs and Other Advertising as Stores Find That the Pluses Outweigh Possible Risks

    Retailers are becoming a lot less closeted.Many retailers are turning their attention to gays and lesbians, a group that wields substantial buying power but isn't fully integrated into mainstream advertising. Similar to other moves to attract different minority groups, the push comes with risks, as it could threaten the retailers' relationships with some of their longtime shoppers.



    JC PenneyJ.C. Penney hired Ellen DeGeneres, who is openly gay, as the retail chain's spokeswoman.

    Nonetheless, from J.C Penny Co.'s JCP - 1.64% high-profile hiring of openly gay Ellen DeGeneres as its spokeswoman, to Target Corp. TGT +1.61% selling same-sex greeting cards, retailers are trying ways to cozy up to a community that by one estimate is as much as 16 million strong and has almost double the disposable income of the average American—some $49,000 per capita compared with the $26,000 average.

    The efforts, while nascent, show a growing interest in reaching out to consumer groups beyond the standard Caucasian audience. Indeed, courting the gay market follows on retailers' increased interest in ethnic groups, specifically blacks and Hispanics.

    For years retailers have advertised in gay magazines and through other gay media. But now they increasingly are going mainstream, whether through their choice of representatives or whom they put on the front of their catalogs. Many households populated by gays, especially couples, have migrated to suburbia, long the bastion of large retailers.

    J.C. Penney has been more aggressive than other large retailers in courting gays. In addition to hiring Ms. DeGeneres, the company featured two women as a couple in its May catalog and two men in its June offering. J.C. Penney also had a float in New York's Gay Pride parade.

    J.C. Penney's monthly catalog is mailed to 14 million customers nationwide.

    "We are committed to being a store for all Americans. Our marketing reflects the diversity of today's families," J.C. Penney spokeswoman Kate Coultas said.

    It is a welcome trend to many. "It's not just putting a float in a gay-pride parade once a year. It's J.C. Penney putting a gay couple in mainstream ads," said Rich Ferraro, spokesman for the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. "This tells me that corporate America is recognizing gays and their families are a significant part of our culture.

    "
    Target last month began selling greeting cards for same-sex couples, such as a wedding congratulations card emblazoned with "Mr. & Mr." The retailer is selling the cards nationwide, signaling that it believes that demand extends beyond cosmopolitan centers and into Middle America. A line of gay-pride T-shirts sold out in less than a month, Target said.




    WSJTarget last month began selling greeting cards for same-sex couples.

    The retailer "supports inclusivity and diversity in every aspect of our business and has a long history of supporting the [gay] community," Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder said.

    Retailers' efforts, while embryonic, "are great," said Christine Arax, an editor and gay woman who lives in New York City. "They were slow to the game," Ms. Arax said, but she said she believes gays will respond well to the overtures by "buying their products and staying loyal.

    "
    Building brand loyalty is seen as a benefit of acknowledging gays and lesbians. "There are countless more people who support the gay community" and they could also become loyal shoppers, said Robert Ross, professor of sociology at Clark University in Massachusetts.

    Macy's Inc. M -0.70% uses gay-friendly graphics in some of its windows during Gay Pride Month in June. "We support, and have for many years, pride parades in many cities," Macy's spokesman Jim Sluzewski said.

    The move by retailers isn't happening in a vacuum. The government allows gays to serve openly in the military, ending its "don't ask, don't tell" policy. Several cases challenging the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act—which limits federal recognition of marriages to those between one man and one woman—are winding their way to the Supreme Court.

    Meanwhile, Americans increasingly are likely to shrug off news that a celebrity is gay, as was happened recently regarding Anderson Cooper of CNN.

    With a sensitive subject, it is easy to draw the ire of some conservative shoppers. A group called One Million Moms called for a boycott of Penney when the retailer hired Ms. DeGeneres this year. Penney didn't respond to One Million Moms, Ms. Coultas said.

    A representative for One Million Moms didn't respond to a request for comment. It is unclear how many members the group has. The group's Facebook Web page showed under 50,000 "likes."

    Plenty of shoppers aren't fazed by retailers advertising to gays. Karen Hewitt, who was shopping at a Target near her Amityville, N.Y., home, said gays have made such strides in recent years that it is time retailers recognized them. "It's not something you have to hide anymore, so why not do it?" said Ms. Hewitt, who said she is straight.


    Target was lambasted two years ago by the gay community for making a $150,000 contribution to political-action committee MN Forward. The group supported gay-marriage opponent Tom Emmer, a Republican who was running for governor of Minnesota, Target's home state.

    MN Forward "was a pro-business group, which was the reason for the contribution," Target's Ms. Snyder said.

    Some retailers are tentative. A Sears store in a Toronto mall that was along the route of this year's gay-pride parade in that city had models holding flags in rainbow colors, the symbol of gay pride.

    A spokesman for Sears Canada said the Toronto store was the only one that had such a display. Sears doesn't participate in gay-pride displays in the U.S., according to a spokeswoman.

    "I think we will be seeing an increase as corporations see the value, both social and financial, in developing these relationships," said Andy Marra, spokesman for the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network, an organization that works on behalf of young gays and lesbians.

    The University of Georgia's Selig Center for Economic Growth calculated the average buying power of the overall U.S. market at $26,000 a person by taking the Census Bureau's total U.S. population and dividing it by the amount of money people have left after taxes.

    It is harder to determine the figure for gays because there is no box on the census for gays to check off unless they are part of a committed couple.

    Bob Witeck, a consultant who has studied the gay community for 20 years, estimated that there are roughly 16 million gay adults in the U.S. with projected spending power of $790 billion this year, or roughly $49,000 each.
    Last edited by ~Tyson~; 07-08-2012 at 07:49 PM.



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  2. #2
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    Arrow ...and back in 1996

    Found this from 1996, makes an interesting comparison....



    April 1996
    Outing the Pink Pound
    Publication: ScotsGay Magazine

    Teacher’s whisky wants to attract younger drinkers. In a ground-breaking ad that went out on Scottish Television last Christmas, Allied Domecq did something to meet the approval of the young and send most older, traditional, paunchy, grey-haired board-room whisky drinkers to an early grave: they advertised their drink to gay men. And all without a single bubble rising to the surface of the media cesspit. Garry Otton has a tipple…

    The pink pound is more closeted than most gay men or women who spend it would like. Too closeted for some gay activists who, a few years ago, began stamping their notes with the words QUEER MONEY or PINK POUND.

    Although drawing little attention to gay spending power, it inspired more professional PR and marketing services bent on ‘outing’ the pink pound. David Lewis, a gay PR consultant from The Advertising Company Limited in London, advises corporate businesses that "the gay community have a bigger disposable income than straights. As a market, we spend proportionately more on clothing, entertainment, grooming, financial services, drink, travel, music and cars." He stresses a difference between Britain and America. "We don’t use it politically. In America, when Philip Morris, the company who make Marlboro cigarettes, began funding an anti-gay ultra right-wing group: gays boycotted it, and Marlboro’s sales nose-dived."

    In Britain, gay consumer visibility is clearest around Old Compton Street in London where coffee bars, pubs, clubs and shops spill out onto the street, right in the heart of ad land. And with agency people walking right through it every day: it’s a small wonder they want a piece of the action.

    The acronym ad men like using for gays is DINKYS: (Double Income: No Kids). After a major bust up, gay men don’t have the usual financial burdens that rock straight marriages. Without family commitments, we can afford businesses greater flexibility in the job market. Advertising manager, Alex Frieson, from the gay men’s lifestyle magazine, Attitude added: "We are dealing with 21-year-olds with 31-year-old wage-packets. They are trendy, young, modern, forward-looking guys with enormous brand loyalty for companies that do something for gays."
    Last edited by Aquilla; 07-10-2012 at 09:48 AM.




  3. #3
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    It's a bit silly if they did anyway. Gay people's money is the same as anyone else's.



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  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Luka View Post
    It's a bit silly if they did anyway. Gay people's money is the same as anyone else's.
    no gay peoples money is gay .. I wouldnt accept it
    I'll take food stamps and road kill though




  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Luka View Post
    It's a bit silly if they did anyway. Gay people's money is the same as anyone else's.
    Well that's how business work, go where the demands are and satisfy it in return for $$$

    The gay/lesbian market is an largely untapped reservoir of market demands which makes it a prime target for businesses in these uncertain economic times.



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