Youth Marketers Feel It Is Appropriate to Begin Marketing to
Kids at Age Seven
Results from Harris Interactive/Kid Power Poll of Youth
Marketers shows three-fourths think the positive impact their organization has
on youth far outweighs any negatives
ROCHESTER, N.Y. – April 20, 2004 – A new ground-breaking survey of
professionals who work in youth-related fields shows that they feel it is
appropriate to begin marketing to children at age seven, on average. This is
more than two years before they feel most young people can view advertising
critically (age 9.1), or when they feel most young people can effectively
separate fantasy from reality in media and advertising (age 9.3). Youth
marketers feel it is appropriate to target marketing to children almost five
years before they feel that most young people can make intelligent choices as
consumers (age 11.7).
These are some of the findings of the Harris Interactive/Kid Power Poll of
Youth Marketers conducted online by Harris Interactive in February 2004 among
878 individuals working in youth-related fields. Survey participants were
professionals working in a range of youth-related fields, including: youth
marketing, market research, advertising/public relations, media, education and
non-profit organizations. The poll covered a number of topics regarding
commercialism and youth, marketing in schools, youth obesity, and sexual and
violent content in media.
"The poll results show that youth marketers have a great deal of respect
for the power and influence of children," said Candi Schwartz, Managing
Director of the Kid Power Exchange. "In fact, we found that youth marketers
tend to define today’s young generation as a consumer group."
Study findings indicate that:
- 91% of respondents feel that today’s youth are more powerful consumers
than young people were 10 to15 years ago
- 91% agree that young people are marketed to in ways that they don’t even
notice
- 61% agree that advertising to children begins at too young an age
"This poll shows that youth marketers are pressured by a sense of
urgency to reach kids early so that brands will be familiar to them when they do
reach an age where they make or influence purchase decisions," said John
Geraci, Vice President of Youth Research at Harris Interactive. "Data also
show that those working in youth fields are comfortable and supportive of their
organization’s practices. They welcome the challenge and responsibility that
comes with serving the needs of young consumers and their parents."
Additional findings from the study include:
- 91% feel that their organization treats young people with respect
- 90% feel their organization treats parents with respect
- 78% feel that their organization plays a positive role in the lives of
children
- 74% feel that the positive impact their organization has on children far
outweighs any negatives
"Youth industry professionals tell us that many of their most ethical
practices occur out of the view of the public," added Geraci. "They
see ideas discarded because they may not be suitable for young consumers even
though these ideas may have strong commercial value. They invest considerable
resources on market research to ensure products have an educational value for
youth and are acceptable to parents."
About the study
The Harris Interactive/Kid Power Poll of Youth Marketers was conducted online
by Harris Interactive in February 2004. In total 878 interviews were conducted.
Some questions are based on sample sizes less than 878 due to skip patterns and
suspended interviews. Respondents were recruited for participation from Harris
Interactive and Kid Power Xchange newsletter distribution lists – lists that
contain a broad representation of individuals working in organizations concerned
with youth. Results are representative only of the total population sampled.
These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the National
Council on Public Polls.
A summary of the results of this poll is available at: http://www.harrisinteractive.com/news/newsletters_k12.asp.
The results of the Harris Interactive/Kid Power Poll of Youth Marketers will
be presented at the Kid Power 2004 conference in Orlando on May 4. More
information about the Kid Power 2004 conference can be found at www.kidpowerx.com.
Harris Interactive and Kid Power Xchange will be conducting an audio
presentation of study findings on April 1, 2004. Information on this audio
conference can be found at http://www.harrisinteractive.com/news/calendar.asp.
About Harris Interactive®
Harris Interactive (www.harrisinteractive.com) is a worldwide market
research and consulting firm best known for The Harris Poll®,
and for pioneering the Internet method to conduct scientifically accurate
market research. Headquartered in Rochester, New York, Harris Interactive
combines proprietary methodologies and technology with expertise in predictive,
custom and strategic research. The Company conducts international research from
its U.S. offices and through wholly owned subsidiaries—London-based HI
Europe (www.hieurope.com), Paris-based Novatris and Tokyo-based Harris
Interactive Japan—as well as through the Harris Interactive Global Network
of independent market- and opinion-research firms. EOE M/F/D/V
To become a member of the Harris Poll OnlineSM and be invited to
participate in future online surveys, visit www.harrispollonline.com
About Kid Power Xchange
Kid Power Xchange (www.kidpowerx.com)
is an unbiased source for youth marketing information, that creates a total
experience that encompasses all areas of marketing, promotions, market research,
e-commerce and branding. Through conferences, training programs, newsletter and
website - the Kid Power Xchange is a single source for information that
"fills in" the important details that just might mean the difference
between marketing success and failure.
Press Contact:
Nancy Wong
Harris Interactive
585-214-7316
nwong@harrisinteractive.com
Candi Schwartz
Kid Power Xchange
973-812-5154
candi.schwartz@kidpowerx.com
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