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Why gender-based marketing is bad for business

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    Like a lot of people around the world,
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    earlier this summer
    my friends and I were obsessed
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    with the Women's World Cup held in France.
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    Here we are, watching
    these incredible athletes,
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    the goals were amazing,
    the games were clean and engaging,
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    and at the same time, outside the field,
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    these women are talking about equal pay,
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    and in the case of some countries,
    any pay at all for their sport.
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    So because we were mildly obsessed,
    we wanted to watch the games live,
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    and we decided that one of
    the Spanish-speaking networks in the US
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    was the best place for us to start.
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    And it wasn't until a few games
    into the tournament
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    that a friend of mine
    talks to me and says,
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    "Why does it feel
    like everything I'm seeing
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    is commercials for makeup and
    household cleaning products and diets?"
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    It did feel a little bit too obvious,
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    and I don't know if
    we were sensitive about it
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    or the fact that we were watching
    with men and boys in our lives,
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    but it did feel a little bit too obvious
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    that we're being targeted for being women.
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    And to be honest there's nothing
    necessarily wrong with that.
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    Someone sat down and looked
    at the tournament and said,
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    "Well, this thing is likely
    to be seen by more women,
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    these women are Hispanic
    because they're watching in Spanish,
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    and this is women content.
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    Therefore, this is a great place
    for me to place all these commercials
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    that are female-centric
    and maybe not other things."
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    If I think about it as a marketer,
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    I know that I absolutely
    should not be annoyed about it,
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    because this is what marketers
    are tasked with doing.
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    Marketers are tasked with building brands
    with very limited budget,
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    so there's a little bit of an incentive
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    to categorize people in buckets
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    so they can reach their target faster.
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    So if you think about this,
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    it's kind of like a shortcut.
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    They're using gender as a shortcut
    to get to their target consumer.
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    The issue is that as logical
    as that argument seems,
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    gender as a shortcut
    is actually not great.
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    In this day and age,
    if you still blindly use a gender view
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    for your marketing activities,
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    actually it's just plain bad business.
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    I'm not talking even about the backlash
    on stereotypes in advertising,
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    which is a very real thing
    that has to be addressed.
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    I'm saying it's bad business because
    you're leaving money on the table
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    for your brands and your products.
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    Because gender is such an easy thing
    to find in the market
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    and to target and to talk about,
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    it actually distracts you
    from the fun things
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    that could be driving growth
    from your brands
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    and, at the same time,
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    it continues to create
    separation around genders
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    and perpetuate stereotypes.
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    So at the same time
    this activity is bad for your business
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    and bad for society, so double whammy.
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    And gender is one of those things
    like other demographics
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    that have historically been
    good marketing shortcuts.
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    At some point, however,
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    we forgot that at the core
    we were targeting needs
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    around cooking and cleaning
    and personal care and driving and sports
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    and we just made it all a bucket
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    and we said, "Men and women
    are different."
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    We got used to it and
    we never challenged it again,
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    and it's fascinating to me,
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    and by fascinating I mean
    a little bit insane,
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    that we still talk about this as a segment
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    when it's most likely carryover bias.
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    In fact, I don't come
    to this conclusion lightly.
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    We have enough data to suggest
    that gender is not the best place
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    to start for you to design
    and target your brands.
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    And I would even go one step further:
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    unless you are working in
    a very gender-specific product category,
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    probably anything else
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    you're hypothesizing
    about your consumer right now
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    is going to be more useful than gender.
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    We did not set up to draw
    this conclusion specifically.
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    We found it.
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    As consultants, our job
    is to go with our clients
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    and understand their business
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    and try to help them find spaces
    for their brands to grow.
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    And it is our belief that if you want
    to find disruptive growth in the market,
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    you have to go to the consumer
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    and take a very agnostic view
    of the consumer.
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    You have to go and look
    at them from scratch,
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    remove yourself from biases and segments
    that you thought were important,
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    just take a look to see
    where the growth is.
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    And we built ourselves
    an algorithm precisely for that.
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    So imagine that we have a person
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    and we know a person is making a choice
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    about a product or service,
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    and from this person,
    I can know their gender, of course,
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    other demographics, where they live,
    their income, other things.
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    I know the context where
    this person is making a decision,
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    where they are, who they're with,
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    the energy, anything,
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    and I can also put
    other things in the mix.
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    I can know their attitudes,
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    how they feel about the category,
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    their behaviors.
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    So if you imagine this kind of blob
    of big data about a person --
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    I'm going to oversimplify the science here
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    but we basically built an algorithm
    for statistical tournaments.
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    So a statistical tournament
    is like asking this big thing of data,
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    "So, data, from everything
    you know about consumers at this point,
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    what is the most
    useful thing I need to know
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    that tells me more
    about what consumers need?"
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    So the tournament is going
    to have winners and losers.
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    The winners are those variables,
    those dimensions,
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    that actually teach you a lot
    about your consumer,
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    that if you know that,
    you know what they need.
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    And there's losing variables
    that are just not that practical,
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    and this matters because
    in a world of limited resources,
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    you don't want to waste it on people
    that actually have the same needs.
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    So why treat them differently?
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    So at this point, I know,
    suspense is not killing you,
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    because I told you what the output is,
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    but what we found over time
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    is after 200 projects around the world --
    this is covering 20 countries or more --
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    in essence we ran about
    a hundred thousand of these tournaments,
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    and, no surprise, gender was very rarely
    the most predictive thing
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    to understand consumer needs.
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    From a hundred thousand tournaments,
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    gender only came out
    as the winning variable
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    in about five percent of them.
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    This is true around the world, by the way.
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    We did this in places
    where traditional gender roles
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    are a little more pronounced,
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    and the conclusions were exactly the same.
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    It was a little bit more important,
    gender, than five percent,
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    but not material.
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    So let's let that sink in for a second.
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    No matter how you're looking
    at a consumer,
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    most likely anything else is going
    to be more interesting to you than gender.
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    There's probably something very important
    you need to know about them,
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    and you're getting distracted because
    you're doing everything based on gender.
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    And that's why I say you're leaving
    money on the table.
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    Gender is easy. It's easy to design
    advertising based on gender,
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    it's easy to target people online
    and on TV based on gender.
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    But at the end, that's not where
    the exciting growth will come from.
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    If you're a food company, for example,
    it's actually much more interesting to you
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    to know where people are eating,
    who they are eating with,
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    are they very nutritionally oriented.
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    All of those things are actually
    significantly more powerful and useful
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    than knowing if a person
    is a man or a woman.
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    And that matters, of course,
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    because then if you're putting
    your limited budget into action,
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    then you're better off creating
    solutions for different occasions
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    than trying to target women
    versus young men.
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    Another example is alcoholic beverages.
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    Thirty-five percent to 40 percent
    of consumption in alcoholic beverages
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    around the world
    actually happens with women,
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    but, you know, "women don't drink beer."
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    Those are the things
    that we typically hear.
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    But actually, when a man and a woman are,
    for the most part, in the same location,
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    the emotional and functional needs
    they have at that moment
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    are very similar.
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    There's only one exception, by the way,
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    and the exceptions exist,
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    where if you have a man and a woman
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    on a date,
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    the man is trying to impress the woman
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    and the woman is trying
    to connect with the man,
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    so there's going to be
    a little bit of tension,
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    but that's important to know.
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    We'll take a few dates.
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    Financial institutions:
    that's something where we've heard a lot
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    about the difference
    between men and women,
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    but actually talking about
    men and women as different
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    is distracting you
    from the thing that is underneath.
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    We made it so simple
    as "women don't like to invest,"
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    "women hate managing their money,"
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    "men are great and aggressive
    and risk-takers,"
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    but at the end it's not
    about men and women.
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    It is actually a different narrative.
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    It is about, there are people
    that are excited and energized
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    and educated to manage their finances
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    versus people that are not.
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    So if you change the conversation
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    from men and women
    to actually what's underneath
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    then probably you'll stop being
    so condescending to women
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    and you may start serving some men
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    that are actually shy
    about managing their finances.
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    I'll leave one more example.
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    If I go back to the women
    that were playing sport at the beginning,
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    one of the fascinating things we found
    over different countries,
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    exploring sportswear,
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    that if a person is a competitive person
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    and they are in the moment of action,
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    the needs are not different
    between a man and a woman.
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    An athlete is an athlete.
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    It doesn't matter for men and women,
    it doesn't matter for old and young,
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    you are an athlete,
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    and in the moment of action
    and extreme competition,
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    you need this gear to work for you.
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    So these soccer-playing women have
    a lot in common with their counterparts.
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    Out of the field, it doesn't matter.
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    Out of the field, they may be
    into fashion, into other things,
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    but on the field,
    the needs are not different.
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    So these are just a few examples
    on categories where we found
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    that gender was not the best place to go,
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    and actually the argument is
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    that at this point
    it's not even a feminist push,
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    it's just we got used to it.
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    We got used to using gender,
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    and it's important for us
    to start finding ways
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    to measure other things about consumers
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    so that we don't revert back to gender.
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    I am not naïve,
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    and I know there's still
    going to be appetite
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    and certain ease around using gender,
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    but at least this warrants a conversation.
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    In your business, you have to inquire,
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    is this really the best lens
    for me to grow.
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    So, if you are, like me,
    a person that is in business,
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    that I am constantly worried
    about what is my role
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    in the broader societal discussions,
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    if you're listening to your business
    and you hear things like,
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    "Oh, my target are women,
    my target are men,
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    this goes to young girls, young boys,"
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    when it's that gender conversation,
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    unless you are working, again,
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    in a very specific,
    gender-specific product category,
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    take this as a warning sign,
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    because if you keep
    having these conversations,
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    you will keep perpetuating
    stereotypes of people
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    and making people think
    that men and women are different.
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    But because this is business,
    and we're running a business,
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    and we want to grow it,
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    at least kind of challenge
    your own instinct to use gender,
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    because statistics say that you're
    probably not choosing the best variable
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    to target your product or service.
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    Growth is not easy at all.
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    What makes you think
    that growth is going to come
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    from going into market
    with such an outdated lens like gender?
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    So let's stop doing what's easy
    and go for what's right.
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    At this point, it's not just
    for your business, it's for society.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why gender-based marketing is bad for business
Speaker:
Gaby Barrios
Description:

Companies often target consumers based on gender, but this kind of advertising shortcut not only perpetuates outdated stereotypes -- it's also bad for business, says marketing expert Gaby Barrios. In this clear, actionable talk, she explains why gender-based marketing doesn't drive business nearly as much as you might think -- and shows how companies can find better ways to reach customers and grow their brands.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:49

English subtitles

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