Youth Marketing in Cosmetics and Toiletries
Published By: Business Insights
November 1999
r162-072
Online Download $1,140.00 Global Site License $4,275.00
Description

| Youth Marketing in Cosmetics and Toiletries identifies the opportunities for both manufacturers and retailers in targeting young consumers of cosmetics and toiletries. It explains the key factors underpinning growth, segments the youth market, quantifies the revenue opportunities and establishes a set of marketing mix tools for exploiting growth. From Reuters Business Insight.
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Table of Contents
Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Market overview
- Industry opinion survey
Chapter 2 Introduction
- Introduction
- Report Structure
- Definitions
- Chapter 3 Market overview
- Chapter 4 Segmenting the youth market
- Chapter 5 Marketing mix
- Chapter 6 Children, the 3 to 9 year old age category
- Chapter 7 Teenagers, the 10 to 13 year old age category
- Chapter 8 Teenagers, the 14 to 17 year old age category
- Chapter 9 Industry Opinion Survey
Chapter 3 Market Overview
- Introduction: The rise in youth marketing
- Market size and growth
- Market size by product category
- Population data and potential markets
- Youth spending power
- Pocket money levels
- Youth earnings from employment
- Future outlook
Chapter 4 Segmenting The Youth Market
- Introduction
- Children, the 3 to 9 year old category
- Tweenagers, the 10 to 13 year old category
- Teenagers, the 14 to 17 year old category
- Ethnic segmentation
- The purchasing decision
- The purchasing decision of children
- The purchasing decision of tweenagers
- The purchasing decision of teenagers
- The pester power factor
- Pester power and young consumers
Chapter 5 Marketing Mix: The Key Variables
- Product innovation
- Packaging
- Brand development
- Media advertising
- In-store marketing
Chapter 6 children, the 3 to 9 year old age
Category
- Targeting child consumer characteristics
- Bipartite purchasing decisions
- No personal income
- Different interpretation of brands
- Willing to learn but have short attention spans
- Lack of self-awareness
- The pester power factor
- Marketing mix: The key variables
- New Product Development (NPD)
- Media advertising
- In-store marketing
- Future outlook
- Case study: L'Oréal Kids
Chapter 7 teenagers, the 10 to 13 year old age
Category
- Targeting teenage consumer characteristics
- The growing ability to understand brand image and advertising
- Bipartite purchasing decisions
- Limited disposable income available
- Self image and self-awareness developing
- Desire to grow up quickly
- Willing to experiment but not comfortable with entirely new products
- Marketing mix: The key variables
- New Product Development (NPD)
- Media advertising
- In-store marketing
- Future outlook
- Case study: Brendon Cologne
Chapter 8 teenagers, the 14 to 17 year old age
Category
- Targeting teenage consumer characteristics
- High degree of consumer knowledge
- Ability to work gives degree of financial independence
- Decision making is mostly independent but can be constrained by parents
- Trends are adopted and discarded quickly
- Access to large amounts of information and interest in new media
- Marketing mix: The key variables
- New product development
- Media advertising
- In-store marketing
- Future outlook
Chapter 9 Industry Opinion Survey
- Introduction
- The rate of growth of the youth cosmetics and toiletries market
- Growth opportunity by product category
- The key growth drivers for the youth market
- Key drivers for the child age group
- Key drivers for the tween age group
- Key drivers for the teen age group
- Manufacturers or brands targeting the youth market
- The most important features of New Product Development
- The most important features of NPD for children
- The most important features of NPD for tweenagers
- The most important features of NPD for teenagers
- The most effective advertising media
- The most effective advertising media for children
- The most effective advertising media for tweenagers
- The most effective advertising media for teenagers
- The most important distribution channels
- The countries that lead youth marketing in cosmetics and toiletries
List of Tables
- Table 3.1: Overall cosmetics and toiletries sales by country (US$m), 1994-98
- Table 3.2: Cosmetics and toiletries sales by category (US$m), 1998
- Table 3.3: US youth expenditure spend on cosmetics and toiletries by age group
(US$/head), 1998
- Table 3.4: Youth spending on cosmetics and toiletries (US$m), in 1998
- Table 3.5: Future youth spending on cosmetics and toiletries in (US$)
- Table 3.6: Population (0-4 years), by country (millions)
- Table 3.7: Population (5-9 years), by country (millions)
- Table 3.8: Population (10-14 years), by country (millions)
- Table 3.9: Population (15-19 years), by country (millions)
- Table 3.10: Pocket money for 4 to 14 year olds and total pocket money of 4 to
14 year olds per country, 1998
- Table 3.11: Average weekly pocket money in the UK(£m), 1994-98
- Table 3.12: Spending on toys and games per capita (US$m), 1998
- Table 4.13: Divorce rate as a % of marriages by country, 1998
- Table 4.14: Household sizes in per capita per house 1994-1998
- Table 5.15: Global cinema admissions per country in millions, 1993 -1997
- Table 5.16: PC households by country 1998-2003
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