|
The world is increasingly becoming
a complex place. Evershine Group takes a deep, and insightful
look at the US/Canadian society fibres and carefully
plans a media campaign which delivers. Our research
and PR expertise coupled with our strategic data on
consumer behavior patterns will ensure that your products
and services are targeted to Muslims in US and Canada
from all over the globe. Muslims make up a strong and
vibrant proportion in the West and have high disposable
incomes. Most Mulims immigrate to US and Canada from
the Middle-East, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Palestine, Turkey, Morocco, Lebanon,
India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Iran,
Iraq, Malaysia, Indonesia and other countries bringing
with them a high level of wealth which they invest in
businesses, homes, real estate, cars, investment products,
and other goods and services. With our experience in
catering to this market, your business will also reap
the benefits of this demographic.
Read the article below for more insight.
We invite you to contact us
for more information.
(download
PDF)
April 28, 2007
By LOUISE STORY
For
years, few advertisers in the United States have dared
to reach out to Muslims.
Either they did not see much potential
for sales or they feared a political backlash. And there
were practical reasons: American Muslims come from so
many ethnic backgrounds that their only common ground
is their religion, a subject most marketers avoid.
That is beginning to change. Consumer
companies and advertising executives are focusing on
ways to use the cultural aspects of the Muslim religion
to help sell their products.
Grocers and consumer product companies
are considering ways to adapt their goods to Muslim
rules, which forbid among other things, gelatin and
pig fat, which is often used in cosmetics and cleaning
products. Retailers are looking into providing more
conservative skirts, even during the summer months,
and mainstream advertisers are planning to place some
commercials on the satellite channels that Muslims often
watch.
Marketing to Muslims carries some
risks. But advertising executives, used to dividing
American consumers into every sort of category, say
that ignoring this group — estimated to be about
five million to eight million people, and growing fast
— would be like missing the Hispanic market in
the 1990s.
“I think Muslims have had to
draw into themselves,” said Marian Salzman, executive
vice president and chief marketing officer of JWT, a
large advertising agency in the WPP Group that plans
to encourage clients like Johnson & Johnson and
Unilever to market to American Muslims. “It puts
an increased burden on a marketer post-9/11 to say,
‘Look, we understand.’ ”
Companies in the Detroit area, where
there is a dense population of Muslims, are leading
the change. A McDonald’s there serves halal Chicken
McNuggets; Walgreens has Arabic signs in its aisles.
And now, Ikea, which recently opened a store in the
suburb of Canton, Mich., that has had trouble attracting
as many Muslim customers as it had hoped, has been touring
local homes and talking to Muslims to figure out their
needs.
The store there plans to sell decorations
for Ramadan next fall and is adding halal meat to its
restaurant menu, or meat that is prepared according
to Islamic law. Catalogs in Arabic are being planned,
and female Muslim employees are expected to be given
an Ikea-branded hijab, to wear over their head if they
wish.
Marketing to Muslims is, of course,
mostly intended to increase sales, but advertising has
also long been a mirror of changes in society.
Ms. Salzman pointed to ads in the
1960s that featured Jewish products like Levy’s
rye bread, which, she said, helped bring that group
more into mainstream advertising. She also noted that
ads from companies like McDonald’s in the early
1990s portrayed busy mothers who admitted that they
did not cook every night like their mothers did.
“Marketers have actually helped
us to rewrite the rules about what we’re comfortable
with,” she said.
Because the Census Bureau does not
ask about religion, there is no authoritative count
of Muslims in America. Some Muslim organizations provide
estimates as high as 10 million. Others say it could
be as low as three million.
Whatever the number, many Muslims
have clustered in areas that include Orange County,
Calif.; Houston; the state of Georgia; northern Virginia;
New York City and Long Island; and the Detroit area.
Over
the last few months, JWT conducted a large study of
Muslims in the United States and Britain to determine
whether they would be receptive to specialized advertising.
There were 835 people in the United States study. Muslim
Americans spend about $170 billion on consumer products,
JWT estimates; this figure is expected to grow rapidly
as the population expands and younger Muslims build
careers.
Ms. Salzman said the study found
that Muslims were buying many standard products but
that they felt excluded from mainstream advertising.
In particular, she said, they wanted companies to recognize
their holidays.
Ms. Salzman said JWT had little trouble
surveying Muslims in Britain, but found it had to clarify
at the start of each phone call in the United States
that it was not calling from a government agency.
Over the next few weeks, JWT plans
to reach out to the chief executives of all of its major
clients, including JetBlue, the Ford Motor Company and
HSBC, to encourage them to market to Muslims in the
United States and Britain.
“These advertisers have been
in the Middle East and in the Far East Muslim countries
for decades, so they’re already dealing with the
Muslim market,” said Tayyibah Taylor, publisher
and editor in chief of Azizah magazine, a Muslim-focused
magazine in Atlanta. “They just haven’t
been dealing with the Muslim marketer here at home.”
Almas Abbasi, a radiologist in Long
Island who was one of the people interviewed by JWT,
said she would be grateful for advertising that included
Muslims.
“If Ramadan starts, and you
see an ad in the newspaper saying, ‘Happy Ramadan,
here’s a special in our store,’ everyone
will run to that store,” she said.
Her daughter, Shaheen Magsi, a senior
at the New York Institute of Technology in Old Westbury,
N.Y., said her family turned off their cable television
three years ago after seeing too many negative stereotypes
about Muslims. She said she quickly grew tired of telling
people at school that, no, she did not agree with Osama
bin Laden.
“It’d be really good
to say, ‘Oh, there’s a Muslim on TV, and
they’re portraying something good other than Muslims
killing people,’ ” she said.
Just what approach companies should
take to reach Muslims is far from clear. The market
is diverse, including African-Americans, South Asians,
Caucasians and people from the Middle East, as well
as people who are more or less conservative in their
religious views. American Muslims disagree about whether
the Muslim women in ads should wear the hijab, for instance.
Nationwide Financial Services has
already been advertising to people from Pakistan and
India, who are often Muslim. But it prefers to focus
on their country of origin, said Tariq Khan, Nationwide’s
vice president of market development and diversity.
Still, religion is culturally relevant
at times, he said, and Nationwide may run ads in print
publications in June that feature Hindu and Muslim weddings.
Rizwan
Jamil, director of beverages at Unilever in Pakistan,
said Unilever often ran promotions there for Lipton
tea and custard powders during Muslim holidays, using
bright and festive packaging, and discounts. These sorts
of gestures would appeal to a broad swath of Muslims
in the United States, he said, without setting off discussions
about religion.
“It’s just like when
you’re advertising something for Christmas,”
Mr. Jamil said. “You’re not talking about
Christians or Christianity. You’re talking about
Christmas, the event. I would be careful — to
the extent that I used religion. I wouldn’t shout
it out. I wouldn’t shout out to the world that
‘I’m talking to Muslims.’ ”
There is a genuine fear about how
to market to Muslims — and whether to do so —
at many big companies, executives at Muslim-focused
media outlets and organizations said.
“United States companies don’t
want to risk alienating their domestic consumers,”
said Nasser Beydoun, chairman of the American Arab Chamber
of Commerce in Dearborn, Mich., which is working with
Ikea, Wal-Mart and Comcast to develop strategies to
reach Muslim consumers. Other companies like Frito-Lay
and Kodak have recently considered marketing to Muslims.
Publishers of Muslim women’s
magazines, like Azizah and Muslim Girl Magazine, said
they had to dispel advertisers’ concerns that
they would feature articles that were radical or political.
Bridges TV, a cable and satellite
network, has changed its sales pitch to make advertisers
more comfortable. When it was introduced in 2004, Bridges
TV presented itself as a Muslim television network,
but lately the network has been having better luck labeling
itself as “bridging the West and East,”
said Mohamed Numan-Ali, the network’s advertising
manager. Brands like Ford, Lunesta and Lincoln have
signed on as advertisers, he said.
On the other hand, some Muslim-focused
media companies that are courting advertisers highlight
religion as their strength. Executives at QTV, a new
satellite network centered around the Koran, tell advertisers
that the focus on religion is what keeps its viewers
tuning in, often five times a day for prayer calls.
Companies that advertise on QTV should
not worry about backlash, said Mahmood Ahmad, president
of Digital Broadcasting Network Inc., which produces
QTV, because “Fox News viewers are not watching
QTV anyway.” He added, “QTV is the safest
place to be because they won’t know.”
Advertising
on satellite channels popular with Muslims and in the
publications that focus on them would be inexpensive
compared with mainstream media and might be highly effective
because so few companies reach out to this group.
“People would flock to it,”
said Daisy Khan, executive director of the American
Society for Muslim Advancement, a nonprofit group based
in New York. “They would say ‘I can’t
believe I’m being validated by Macy’s. I
can’t believe I’m being validated by Whole
Foods.’ ”
Even in mainstream advertising, companies
may win over customers by including Muslims in some
ads, said Razaq Baloch, a partner in Spicy Banana, an
ad agency specializing in reaching customers from India
and Pakistan.
Alia Fouz, a Palestinian-American
who lives near the Ikea in Canton, said she never felt
that ads were addressing her as a Muslim when she was
growing up in Virginia. Sitting in the Ikea snack bar
with her young son, she said ads that included American
Muslims would grab her — and her son’s —
attention.
“We should be included,”
Ms. Fouz said. “We live here.”
Evershine Group is a full-service
advertising and communications agency dedicated to research,
consumer behavior, and media buying for ethnic and multicultural
markets, especially Asian, Indian, Pakistani, South-Asian,
and Muslim consumers in the US, Canada, UK and western
markets.
|