Comprende your market.Successfully taking Latino marketing beyond Spanish-language media will require moving the focus away from conventional presumptions about that sector, a new study suggests. Carl Kravetz, chairman of the Association of Hispanic Advertising Agencies and founder of Cruz/Kravetz Ideas, issued the first results of the group's Latino Identity Project at the recent Multicultural mul·ti·cul·tur·al adj. 1. Of, relating to, or including several cultures. 2. Of or relating to a social or educational theory that encourages interest in many cultures within a society rather than in only a mainstream culture. Marketing Conference in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. . The project found four quadrants of Latino identity that marketers ought to understand: interpersonal in·ter·per·son·al adj. 1. Of or relating to the interactions between individuals: interpersonal skills. 2. orientation, time and space perception, spirituality and gender perception. "It's not such so much what unites Latinos that's important; rather, it's what makes us different from non-Latinos," said Kravetz. "Conventional factors such as acculturation acculturation, culture changes resulting from contact among various societies over time. Contact may have distinct results, such as the borrowing of certain traits by one culture from another, or the relative fusion of separate cultures. , ethnic pride, language preference and socio-economic level that we thought defined Latino cultural identity are, in fact, contextual and not defining factors in our new model." On the interpersonal issue, the project found Latinos give more emphasis to groups than individuals--a clear contrast to U.S. culture U.S. culture has two main meanings:
Cohesion (physics) The tendency of atoms or molecules to coalesce into extended condensed states. This tendency is practically universal. . On the time and space continuum, Latinos focus on the present and past more than then the future and consider appointments more of a goal than a commitment. On a personal level, Latinos touch and kiss more than non-Latinos. |
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