"Word fusion" is infiltrating cosmetic, drug, personal
care and food packages as much as Asian fusion is infiltrating the
restaurant business. Marketers' success in wowing targeted shoppers
with creative product descriptions is confusing many shoppers who
aren't near the target.
One shopper told us she was attracted to a foaming latte body care
product but didn't buy it because she didn't understand what a
foaming latte has to do with body care. If the package language and
graphics aren't targeting her demographic, she probably won't
understand the product or the selling proposition without some
explanation--just like she won't understand instructions written in
English if she only speaks Spanish.
Not getting it often means tuning out in the same way that millions
of consumers tune out advertising.
Not getting whole groups of packages leads shoppers to see only
those products that speak right to them and to tune out products and
categories that don't.
Oscar Mayer's new line of "Mess With Your Mouth"
nachos, pizza and chicken-dunk Lunchables messes with your mind, too,
thanks to their confusing marketing message. To mess with your mouth,
the consumer is instructed to "Pour Sour Tongue Teasing Fizz packet
into sauce or over top of your favorite foods." Shoppers are
supposed to know that mouth-messing is shorthand for having fun with
your food. Would a simple line of translation such as "Fun with
Fizzy Sauce" help out-of-target shoppers get it without losing the
catchy lingo?
Trying to cater to everybody with targeted products and packages
gives "demographic outsiders" blind spots while they shop.
Blind spots make whole categories invisible, because the only message
shoppers in the blind spot get is that they don't get the message
or the merchandise. Clothing retailers have approached age differences
by developing age-specific stores or departments. Now, even Wal-Mart is
going to divide its stores into demographic as well as regional groups.
This word-fusion invasion is old news for advertisers, but packages
are quickly following suit. Pantene shampoo comes in blonde bottles for
"Blonde Expressions," brown and gold bottles for
"Brunette Expressions," deep red bottles for "Auburn to
Burgundy Expressions," and bronze bottles for "Women of Color
Expressions." Shoppers in the target demographic can easily find
their color. People outside of the target are given the impression that
they should look elsewhere.
As more ads become unintelligible to non-target viewers, the
viewers start tuning out advertising altogether. This explosion of word
fusion is making it more confusing for shoppers to navigate through
stores.
* Who wants to browse when what's new is incomprehensible?
* What are foaming lattes, dark chocolates, fresh baked apple pies,
and sea salt doing in the skin-care section?
* Sea salt is in the news for being healthier and more gourmet than
old-fashioned table salt. Does that mean customers in their 40s, 50s,
and 60s should use it both for healthier skin and lower-sodium soup?
Many shoppers don't know the answers to these simple questions
and don't want to be left behind. By leaving them in the dark, both
vendors and mass retailers risk losing them from more and more aisles.
One solution is to follow the path of fashion retailers to more
stores with narrower demographics; e.g., Old Navy targets younger
shoppers and less affluent shoppers than the Gap, which targets younger
and less affluent shoppers than Banana Republic.
Another solution is packaging, like Tide's Simple Pleasures
laundry detergent, which targets a sensory-pleasure lifestyle with
luminous lavender bottles of vanilla and lavender-scented Tide and
"matching scents available in Downy." Even shoppers who think
this is silly are able to read that it's laundry detergent.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.