The US population (excluding Puerto Rico) is becoming increasingly multicultural, and more than 40% of the population will belong to one of the 3 major ethnic groups by 2019, according to a recent report [pdf] from Geoscape. This year, non-Hispanic whites are estimated to account for 62.1% of the US population, down from 75.8% in 1990. By 2019, that figure will be down to 59.5%, as Americans of Hispanic and Asian origin will grow to represent about one-quarter of the population.
After making the necessary preparations for a small business event, you have to come up with a marketing plan to ensure its success. Whether you plan to hold a garage sale, open house, or night out, try to add these social media strategies to promote and boost attendance for the event.
According to Crowdtap, partnered with Ipsos Media surveying 839 millennial men and women online, millennials reported spending roughly 18 hours of their day engaged with media, often viewing multiple devices simultaneously. Whether it’s called peer-created content, consumer content or user generated content (UGC), the research found that millennials spend 30% of their media consumption time with content that is created by their peers.
This exceeds television consumption and is rivaled only by the time spent with all traditional media types (TV, print, radio), a combined 33%. Millennials are also committed to engaging with social media on a daily basis above all other media types.
Millennials spend more time with User Generated Content than with TV
|
Share of Daily Media (All Media Types;17.8 hours) |
|
|
% of Time Spent |
Media |
|
20% |
Browse the internet / go online |
|
13% |
Watch TV (live) |
|
10% |
Watch TV (pre-recorded) |
|
10% |
Play computer or video games |
|
7% |
Go to the movies |
|
7% |
Listen to the radio |
|
3% |
Read print magazines / newspapers |
|
 |
|
|
Share of Daily Media Time (UGC; 5.4 hours) |
|
|
% of Time Spent |
Media  |
|
18% |
Social networking & content (FB, Instagram, LinkedIn) |
|
6% |
Use e-mail, text, chat, texting apps |
|
6% |
Talk with others about news / products /brands |
|
Source: Ipsos MediaCT/Crowdtap Jan 2014 |
Millennials prioritize social networking above other media:
|
Daily Use of Media Types |
|
|
Peer Generated |
 |
|
Format |
Use Daily |
|
Social Networking (eg. FB, LinkedIn, Inst...) |
71% |
|
E-mail, text, chat, texting apps |
49% |
|
Talk about products/brands |
39% |
|
Watch video clips (eg. YouTube) |
35% |
|
Read peer reviews (eg. epinions) |
18% |
|
Blog online, post to bulletin boards, etc. |
15% |
|
 |
|
|
Other Media |
 |
|
Watch TV (live) |
60% |
|
Listen to Radio (broadcast/streaming) |
53% |
|
Retrieve news, weather, scores |
47% |
|
Watch TV (pre-recorded) |
46% |
|
Visit news media sites |
37% |
|
Read blogs, bulletin boards, etc. |
29% |
|
Read print magazines or newspapers |
18% |
|
Get product info/buy from a company |
17% |
|
Read professional reviews (CNET, etc.) |
15% |
|
Banner ad |
12% |
|
Source: Ipsos MediaCT/Crowdtap Jan 2014 |
Given millennials’ advertising savvy and skepticism around media, it is important to deliver a message through trusted sources, says the report. Millennials report that information they receive through UGC is highly trustworthy and trusted 40% more than information they get from traditional media sources (TV, print & radio), including newspapers and magazines.
Specifically, conversations with friends and family are the most trusted UGC format, followed by peer reviews. Conversations with friends and family are trusted 2:1 over TV and radio and almost 4:1 over banner ads. Brands looking for consumers to trust their marketing can no longer rely on tradiÂtional media to communicate their messages to consumers. In today’s landscape, it’s peer-created content, or “consumer to consumer marketing,†that drives trust.
The correlation between trust and influence is revealed in the 2013 Annual Edelman Trust Barometer Study, says the report, which finds that trust leads to influence. The more trusted the source of a message, the more likely it will have a positive impact.
|
Media Trustworthiness (UGC 59%) |
|
|
Format |
% Most Trusted |
|
Product/brand conversations with friends/family |
74% |
|
Peer reviews (e.g., epinions) |
68% |
|
E-mail, text, chat with friends/family |
56% |
|
Social networking & content (FB, Instagram, LinkedIn) |
50% |
|
Blogs, bulletin boards, forums, etc. |
48% |
|
 |
|
|
Other media 39% |
 |
|
Professional/industry reviews (CNET, etc.) |
64% |
|
Product info/buy products from a co. website |
49% |
|
Print magazines or newspapers |
44% |
|
Online magazines or newspapers |
40% |
|
Radio |
37% |
|
On TV |
34% |
|
At the movies |
28% |
|
Banner ads |
19% |
|
Source: Ipsos MediaCT/Crowdtap Jan 2014 |
With 18 hours of media consumption a day, across multiple screens, with channel flipping, tabbing and page turning, it’s a wonder anything stands out and makes a lasting impression, notes the report. Marketers rely on creative to break through the clutter, but often it’s a combination of creative and the right delivery channel. For millennials, user generated content is more memorable than non-user generÂated content, with peer-created content, including conversations with friends/family and peer reviews standing out the most.
|
Percent Finding Media Type Memorable |
|
|
UCGÂ 50% |
 |
|
Media Type |
% Finding Memorable |
|
Professional/industry reviews (CNET, etc.) |
47% |
|
On TV |
47% |
|
Product info/buy products from a co. website |
42% |
|
Print magazines or newspapers |
38% |
|
At the movies |
37% |
|
Radio |
33% |
|
Online magazines or newspapers |
32% |
|
Banner ads |
26% |
|
 |
|
|
Other Media 37% |
 |
|
Product/brand conversations with friends/family |
67% |
|
Peer reviews (eg., epinions) |
53% |
|
Social networking & content (FB, Instagram, LinkedIn) |
50% |
|
E-mail, text, chat with friends/family |
46% |
|
Blogs, bulletin boards, forums, etc. |
40% |
|
Source: Ipsos MediaCT/Crowdtap Jan 2014 |
UGC uniquely provides marketers greater access to millennials’ time, a trusted channel to deliver brand messages and a memorable experience. The combination to deliver all three makes UGC more influential on millennials’ product choices and purchase decisions than traditional media.
Percent of millennials who say media type has influence on purchase decision:
Concluding, the report says that professional influencers have the reach and resources to create and share quality content. Consumer influencers have personal relationships that enable their recommendations to carry weight. Together, this combination can drive both reach and powerful influence. As brands continue to aggregate types of influencers and refine their strengths, these programs will likely become a fundamental component of most marketing strategies.
By Jack Loechner,
Center for media Research
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The following article written by a Hispanic mom raising kids here in the US shares a perspective that is shared by a large segment of the US Hispanic population.
As a Hispanic woman raising kids in the United States, I'm especially attuned to the attitudes and challenges of moms like me. But in the past couple of years, I've noticed that a lot of big brands are tuning into our needs as well. The reason is simple: Between 2000 and 2010, the Hispanic population grew by 43% – that's four times the general rate of population growth.
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I was inspired to write this by a couple of retired academics that I have been meeting with during my stays here in Colombia, SA to discuss the differences in our respective languages and to solve the world’s problems and also some articles I’ve recently read to which I have  linked to throughout this article.
Listen and learn is what we all must do in today’s customer centric marketplace both through both social media channels and direct communication. But if we think about it listening, the central part of communication, is an art form that for many is not something that is done well or worse- not at all.© 2025 One Big Broadcast | All rights reserved
