The past 10 years has seen a chorus of companies, big and small, attempting to tap the ‘pink dollar’.
Brands like Volkswagen, Absolut and Levis have all invested heavily in attracting consumers from the LGBTIQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and questioning) community, constructing advertising campaigns with rainbow colours, flamboyant music and costumes.
Start-ups are now looking to cash in, too. August saw the launch of QueerDeals, which claims to be Australia’s first daily deals site for the gay community.
This followed the creation of Pink Media Group, a Sydney-based business that aims to connect brands with the “pink dollar” via advertising.
Pink Media Group founder and managing director Ben Mulcahy says the gay market consists of 2.2 million people, with an annual disposable income of $20 billion. These are numbers that no small business owner will sniff at.
But what is the right way to do it? Does targeting your marketing to focus on sexual orientation mean you’re being mindful of the community’s interests or adding to the ‘pinkwashing’ clutter?
Token marketing sends an empty message
Take Fabiano Nigro for example. He’s a mid-20s sales professional with a disposable income: a prime target for marketing departments everywhere. Does it matter if he’s gay?
Is your marketing message meant to change to appeal to his sexuality or to his age?
Fabiano believe that a brand’s reluctance to market to the LGBTI community is a sign that there’s still fear in acknowledging it.
“I think companies fail to take it further than marketing – it needs to go from the little rainbow flag to customer service, and made inherent in policies and procedures and organisational culture; ending discrimination,” he says.
“I do agree that there is still ‘pinkwashing’ occurring, but in a country whose left wing leader can’t even come out and support same sex marriage, how can there not be?”
Fabiano points to his local yoga studio, Bikram Yoga, in the Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy, as a prime example of providing customer service alongside marketing to local residents, including the LGBTI community.
It’s not over the top and acknowledges the interests in the community.
He says: “Companies that advertise on JoyFM, such as MyMac, live up to [my] expectations. I think it comes down to the culture within the organisation, not just the marketing.”
“I think most companies are still afraid to start marketing campaigns that show support to the LGBTI community.”
A growing and diverse market
The LGBTI community is a demographic that governments and social researchers believe has huge growth potential.
Take tourism – a 2009 Roy Morgan report estimated the LGBTI travel market alone is estimated to be worth $965 million per year.
Michael Snell, co-founder and owner at Gay Travel and Best Gay Cities.com Online Publishing, is hardly surprised – this estimation is typical of LGBTI travel markets throughout the western world.
The problem, explains Snell, is that too many ‘straight’ companies use gauche techniques in a bid to attract the ‘pink dollar’.
“[The term] ‘Gay friendly’ is way overused. Just because a straight-owned business wants to take the pink dollar, does not make them gay friendly,” he says.
“But walk down the streets in some big cities and you will see rainbow flags on straight businesses.”
“What does that mean really? What have they done for the gay community to demonstrate they are truly gay friendly? To me the term ‘gay friendly’ must be earned. [It] must be awarded.”
While it is easy to chastise brands for superficial attempts at courting the LGBTI community, Snell gives credit to the difficulty ‘straight’ companies have in identifying how to best tailor their marketing message to the community.
For Snell, being a part of the community makes it easier to understand its needs.
He says: “Because I am gay, I am very in touch with the gay community and see lots of marketing fails, [but] also successes.”
“It’s easier for me to market my services to ‘my people’ because I am more in touch with them – and many gay people like to support other LGBTI business owners.”
In the entrepreneurial world, a lot can be learned from the current crop of ‘queerpreneurs’ who know their audience better than those outside the LGBTI community.
This inside knowledge may give them a perceivable upper hand, but it doesn’t mean that your business has to be out of the loop. But if you’re going to do it, you need to do your research and consult your audience.
Take the Pink Dollar app released in August 2012 – an iPhone app that connects retailers and service providers who are supportive of LGBTI consumers, featuring a list of gay-friendly retailers searchable by category and location.
That it was produced in Hong Kong says much about its necessity in a country that traditionally doesn’t readily accept the LGBTI community. But is it needed in Australia?
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