Freud famously wondered, "What does a woman want?" He
never figured it out, but many business owners have-and are making
money in the process. What women want right now is attention to
detail in product design and service; the right choices, not
endless choices; and a nuanced, longer selling process that
respects their desire to understand what they're buying before
they take it home.
This prevailing wisdom doesn't just apply to the obvious
categories like clothes, kids' stuff and cosmetics. Marketers
of any product or service can adopt a service philosophy that
delivers what women want. Once you translate these expectations to
your market niche, you'll win the hearts and pocketbooks of
women.
That pocketbook is big and carries plenty of cash. Trend
watchers say the escalating economic power of women is emerging as
one of the biggest business stories of this decade.
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Management guru Tom Peters discovered the importance of women in
1996 when a colleague dragged him to a meeting of high-powered
women. Listening to their stories of how businesses brushed aside
their requests was a shock. "The more I talked, the more
people brought me stories," says Peters. "I thought, How
weird is [it] that nobody talks about this?" Peters made the
economic power of women a central point in his new book, Re-imagine! Business Excellence in a Disruptive
Age.
Women have been ignored because they're in plain sight.
It's standard marketing wisdom that women control 80 percent of
all household purchases. That's why marketers of household
supplies, kids' gear, food, cosmetics and clothes are good at
reaching women. But women buy gender-neutral stuff, too: cars, auto
services, technology-the list includes everything but Viagra.
Women's earning power is escalating: They comprise over half
of all college students and about 38 percent of small-business
owners, according to 2002 figures from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. A February 2002 study by Prudential Financial found
that, of the 400 American women surveyed, 37 percent live in
households with incomes of $50,000 to $100,000, and 12 percent live
in households with more than $100,000 in annual income. Nearly half
of adult women are solely responsible for saving money for their
households.
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Margaret Gardner of marketing consulting firm Yankelovich
reports that 60 percent of women 16 and older are working. In
nearly two-thirds of households, women are the primary shoppers,
but 72 percent of married women who work full time are the primary
shoppers. No business owner can afford to ignore women, and few
would admit to doing so. But not ignoring them is not the same as
attracting them, and attracting them is not the same as winning
their loyalty.
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