- Public Relations
and Marketing to
Asian American Consumers
When
marketing and employing public relations to reach Asian Americans, there are
many generational and in-culture psychographics that need to be known. While Asian immigrants are generally
best reached through in-language media, other Asian Americans are
effectively reached by marketing to them in English but in culture.
This differs markedly from attempting marketing campaigns which treat
acculturated Asian Americans as if they are members of the General
Population.
Native born Asian Americans have a complex history and over two centuries of
social and historical experiences that both bind them together
psychologically as a group. They also have shared experiences that
have different markers based upon ancestry, geographical locale, and
generational cohort. Reaching older generations is not done
through in-language marketing. Our marketing case studies discuss solutions for reaching one of
the nation's fastest growing populations. Whether you are Asian
Pacific American seeking to market to other Asian Americans, or you
are a company interested in increasing sales revenues and want to reach this
fast growing and youthful market, Cultural Marketing Public Relations can help you.
Why is marketing to Asian
Americans important for your business? Did you know that
according to the year 2000 Census Bureau
estimates, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States are
generally better educated, and more likely to fall into upper income
brackets than the average American? According to the Selig Center for
Economic Growth, Asian American buying power will more than quintuple from
2000 Census projections, climbing to an estimated $752 billion by 2013.
Asian
Americans have accounted for the fastest increase in buying power from 1990
to 2008, at 337 percent. At $509 billion in 2008, the Asian American market is larger than the entire
economies of all but thirteen nations, and is larger than the GDP of Sweden.
Asian Americans as a group are
better educated than the average Americans, and therefore Asians hold many
top level jobs in management or professional specialties. The Asian
population is growing more rapidly than the total population, also in part
due to immigration.
|