Multicultural Marketing
Marketing to a multicultural audience -- Starbucks and McDonald's
All businesses today must be multicultural to some extent (Makgosa 2012). The Internet has opened up new portals to multicultural, multinational consumer audiences. More foreign nationals in developing nations aspire to imitate the American, consumerist life they see portrayed in the modern media. America itself is growing increasingly diverse, which demands a more carefully-segmented approach to marketing. However, this creates a problem for global businesses such as Starbucks and McDonald's. On one hand, the core foundation of their business is based upon marketing a particular type of lifestyle, a lifestyle grounded in an image rooted in Americana (or in the case of Starbucks, a very American vision of a European cafe). The core problem of today's multicultural marketing is that changes must be made to address an increasingly diverse audience: an audience which demands more than mere tokenism or a few visual representations of diversity in a commercial. Minority populations do not necessarily see themselves as 'minorities' at all, and also may have complex relationships to their cultures, as they embrace global, American, and local identities simultaneously.
Market segmentation is obviously not a new concept for businesses, even in the case of relatively large companies with a fairly generic outreach such as fast food companies. It has also been observed that there are many different forms of multiculturalism, including those which honor diversity and the specific economic needs and life habits of consumers vs. ones which attempt to hold on to brand identity while still infusing diversity into marketing campaigns (Burton 2002). This paper will explore two companies that have adopted the latter strategy: both McDonald's domestically and Starbucks internationally have embraced multiculturalism but have also made a commitment to holding fast to certain brand identity concepts. Multiculturalism and differentiation is achieved through different emphasis rather than a ground-up rebuilding of the brand. This is the new multicultural marketing -- one which is fluid as well as segmented.
Diversification of the American marketplace: McDonald's multicultural strategy
Marketers must always have an eye upon the youth market because this is where market growth is occurring and these customers have the potential to have long brand relationships. In the United States, such market growth is increasingly non-Caucasian. In fact, 80% of population growth is nonwhite, predominantly because of the growth of the Hispanic, African-American and Asian populations. Hispanics alone make up 54% of contemporary total population growth and are having more children per couple, a coveted portion of the fast food market, as manifested by the popularity of 'Happy Meals' and other children's meals (Palacios 2011). This indicates that marketing to Hispanics is far from a 'niche' market -- the Hispanic market is increasingly synonymous with the American mainstream.
A company with a general marketing outreach must diversify its marketing strategy in recognition of a new reality. For companies with a very broad demographic appeal like McDonald's, there is no single target market, merely a series of 'versions' of that market. McDonald's embodies what could be called a "hybridization, or co-adaptation of cultures, meaning a compromise between the local, the national, the ethnic, etc. And the universalism of consumer culture" (Krzysztofek 2000).
Even before the current 'flat' world and globalized marketplace, McDonald's frequently featured non-white actors to promote its products (Krzysztofek 2000). This can be seen in this vintage McDonald's advertisement from the 1970s:
[Image credit: Prism]
Most firms, when marketing to non-whites, have traditionally adopted a 'general' strategy primarily focused upon Caucasians, and then modified this strategy to make it more ethnic, often with the help of another advertising firm. McDonald's multicultural marketing is an outgrowth of its core strategy and it is increasingly stylizing itself as a multicultural company. It puts just as much money into ads targeting Hispanic or African-Americans themes as ads featuring a more general audience image (Helm 2010). In its generic focus groups for new products, McDonald's uses a disproportionate number of nonwhites compared to other organizations and, in fact, the company's marketers are often asked to market a new product as if the majority population was nonwhite (Helm 2010). In short, McDonald's does not modify its product for what was previously considered the mainstream -- it views the current diverse market as the mainstream.
This has reaped substantial dividends for the company -- even as McDonald's has become less symbolically central and more demonized in an era where health concerns are predominant in marketing...
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