| Podcast: Demographic Expert Ken Gronbach |
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| Tuesday, 08 July 2008 | |||||
Generational Marketing: Do the MathWhy Generation Size Matters to Marketers and to Everybody with a Stake in Americas Future ![]() Kenneth Gronbach According to Mr. Gronbach, for years, marketers have held on to unwavering beliefs that have dictated how they market to their consumers. But the hard truth is that the changes we see in marketing and business are based on one undeniable factor the size of the generations we are selling to. As each generation ages, what they buy and how much they buy will change. Each product and service has a best customer that sustains a business. As these customers grow up, the smartest marketers will stay ahead of them and their money. In The Age Curve:, How to Profit from the Demographic Storm Ken shows executives and entrepreneurs how to anticipate this wave of predictable demand and ride it to success.
Based on comprehensive research, Gronbach reveals how our largest generations, the Baby Boomers and Generation Y, are redefining how we market and how businesses can anticipate their needs more effectively. Complete with entertaining examples of companies like Apple who have perfected their strategies for building a loyal customer base, as well as those who havent (Levi Strauss and Honda Motorcycle), this book will show readers:
Questions Peter Clayton Asked Ken Gronbach
About Kenneth W. Gronbach Kenneth W. Gronbach is a nationally recognized expert on demographics and generational marketing. He frequently speaks to groups of marketing professionals and regularly counsels Fortune 500 corporations as well as large and small businesses across the United States. He doesnt claim to have unlocked the secrets to a particular generations psyche, or profess to have special language and strategies guaranteed to win unresponsive consumers. Instead, he shows his clients how to identify their best customer and calculate whether its buying power is expanding or shrinking by using the most obvious information: the number of U.S. Births from 1905 to 2005. Large and small generations, alternately moving and aging through the marketplace, determine many a companys success and failure, Gronbach observes. When a large generation, such as the Boomers, leaves the market and is replaced by a smaller generation, such as Gen Xers, sales are going to drop. In the course of his work to get marketing professionals and business leaders to pay attention to this clear-cut concept, Gronbach was driven to write THE AGE CURVE: How to Profit from the Coming Demographic Storm (AMACOM 2008). If you can understand the principles of shifting demography, you can forecast with uncanny accuracy what markets are growing and what markets are slowing, Gronbach says. Gronbach is the founder, president, and CEO of KGC Direct, a consulting firm specializing in direct marketing, growth management, and business turnaround. He was previously the president and CEO of KGA Advertising, a consumer products-focused advertising agency, which he founded and grew from zero billings to close to $40 million in 21 years. Before launching his career as an entrepreneur, he was Advertising Manager for Bobs Stores, which he helped grow into a retail chain from one store in Connecticut, and Director of Advertising for Volkswagen of America in Culver City, California. His many notable professional achievements include inventing the Jean Machine, a highly profitable retail jean vending system; creating the catalyst for a downtown renaissance in Middletown, CT by revitalizing a derelict inner city 1860s department store; convincing Tyson Foods to back out of a $16 billion acquisition of a red-meat processing business, on the strength of Generation Ys trend away from red-meat consumption; and implemented the introduction of a new line of Honda scooters into major metropolitan markets in the Northeast United States. He has authored one previous book, Common Census (2005), and his ongoing market research is often quoted. Gronbach is a graduate of a California State University at Long Beach, with a degree in Communication and Public Speaking. He lives in Haddam, Connecticut, with his wife and two teenage daughters. A member of the Baby Boom Generation, he considers himself hip at age 60 and far from ready for retirement. I am convinced that Boomers simply are not going to get old the way our parents got old, he states. Resources: The Age Curve BlogKGC Direct Technorati Tags: Kenneth Gronbach, demographics, The Age Curve, Generational Marketing, podcast, Total Picture Radio, KGC Direct, marketing strategies, Peter Clayton, Success Strategies
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