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Target Woman Blog

Women still like social networking sites better

29/07/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Internet marketing research company comScore released Women on the Web: How Women are Shaping the Internet. The report elaborates on many different factors related to women in general. Key findings:

  • Social networking sites reach a higher percentage of women than men globally: 75.8 percent of all women online visiting a social networking site in May 2010 versus 69.7 percent of men
  • women spend 30 percent more time on social networking sites than men
  • women spend 8 percent more time online
  • women spend 20 percent more time on Retail sites overall than men

Further reading:

Virtual goods: women are biggest spenders

22/07/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Although males are playing significantly more games and are the primary drivers of total digital goods sales, North American women 25 and older are spending disproportionately large sums of money on digital goods.

This is, at least, one of the conclusions of the 2010 Digital Goods Report recently published by market research firm VGMarket and global leader in monetization solutions for online games PlaySpan.

Highlights from the report include:
  • median spent on first-party purchases within Social Network games: the average female spent $55 dollars (compared to only $30 for males).
  • purchases of in-game currency: females spent twice as much ($50 compared to $25)
  • median overall expenditure was higher for females ($80) than males ($60)

Further reading:

Sanoma Magazines iPhone survey: Women and their iPhone

19/07/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Sanoma Magazines Belgium recently conducted a national study to better understand the attitudes of the iPhone usage by women.

During the investigation Sanoma Magazines Belgium analysed who among them owned the popular Apple smart phone, where and how they have purchased it, how women are using the applications and how popular social networks such as Facebook are.

Key highlights from the report:
  • 2.9% of the Belgian population 15+ owns an iPhone. This equals 257.000 users.
  • 1.7% of women owns an iPhone, which equals 78.000 women in the North and 55.000 in the South.
  • The prototype iPhone owner is male, between 15 and 44 years and is part of the higher social classes.
  • Women get an iPhone relatively more often as a gift. They are relatively recent onwers.
  • 6 on 10 female iPhone owners accesses at least once a week the internet thru the iPhone. 4 on 10 almost never does this.
  • The most popular sites that are visited on the iPhone are Facebook, Google and newspaper sites.
  • 77% of the female iPhone owners has a Facebook account.
  • 36% of women have ever installed an app on their iPhone. Only 19% of them has actually paid for it (= 7% of the female iPhone users) Women prefer free apps with ads above paying apps.





Blogging mothers wooed by big brands

07/07/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Women with children have long been an attractive target group. The main reasons:
  • the enormous influence members of this demographic have over household purchase decisions
  • the wide variety of goods they generally require

Here are three cases of brand owners who try to stimulate positive word of mouth on the web by engaging with female bloggers with children.

UK: P&G Fairy Liquid bottle relaunch
P&G partnered with "mummy bloggers" to spread the news that its traditional white Fairy Liquid bottle was being reintroduced to celebrate the brand's 50th birthday. The thinking behind this was that good feedback from these bloggers can make a real impact, because they carry significant weight among their peer group.

US: Specialist ad networks for female bloggers
In the US, female bloggers are already being actively courted by specialist ad networks such as Glam Media.

South Korea: "Coke Friends" to create word of mouth for Coca-Cola
In Seoul, bloggers are introduced to Coca-Cola and probed about ways Coke can better communicate with local bloggers, especially young mothers, as a way to get Korean families talking about more Coke.

Further reading:

Mothers on Twitter are looking for information, deals

07/07/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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According to the study by Lucid and Lisa Finn the top two reasons why women with children use Twitter are:
  1. networking/meeting new people (77%)
  2. keeping up with news (60%)

If they follow a business on Twitter, their expectations are:
  • that the business provides useful information in its Twitter feed (68%)
  • a desire to find out about the company's products or services (67%)
  • to get good deals (60%).
  • because they're already customers. (67%)
  • to follow up on a retweet (41%)

Further reading:

Are young women addicted to Facebook?

07/07/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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According to a new study released earlier today by Oxygen Media and Lightspeed Research, young women are becoming more and more dependent on social media and checking on their social networks.

Key highlights from the report:
  • 21% of women age 18-34 check Facebook in the middle of the night
  • 63% use Facebook as a networking tool
  • 42% think it’s okay to post photos of themselves intoxicated
  • 79% are fine with kissing in photos
  • 58% use Facebook to keep tabs on “frenemies”
  • 50% are fine with being Facebook friends with complete strangers

Further reading:

Field Experts, Lifecasters and other Social Media Moms

24/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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BabyCenter's 2010 Mom Social Influencer segmentation study recognises 5 unique segments of social moms, broken down in 2 categories: Influencers, and the Influenced.

The Influencers are:
  1. Field Experts: stay-at-home moms with a topical focus on parenting.
  2. Lifecasters: Millennial moms who live their life in public.
  3. Pros: mom bloggers who have turned their passion for social into a profession.

The Influenced are:
  1. Butterflies: young professionals who put the social in social networking.
  2. The Audience: the largest group of social moms who listen and take it all in.

Also interesting:
  • Pregnancy and birth triggered 94% of moms to seek out information and share opinions with others online.
  • 18% of social moms wield 78% of the overall influence.
  • Field Experts and Lifecasters make up 16% of audience and wield 67% of the influence.
  • 91% of social moms use Facebook for socializing.

Further reading:

Facebook and Twitter are chick magnets

22/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Or at least, according to this YouTube video made by Porter Novelli Atlanta:

Found at I heart social media.

By the way: if you want to keep posted about the latest trends in social media for businesses,


What women plan to do online this summer

22/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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For its"What Women Want From the Web" Summer 2010 report, Unicast polled 516 adult U.S. female residents.

Highlights from this report:
  • 95% of women plan to go online this summer
  • 62% notice and/or interact with online advertising.
  • 53% (vs 67% overall) of the women aged 18-24 use the web more than other age groups for all activities except keeping up with news



The ads that resonate with women:
  • 46% include sales, discount codes
  • 31%  feature creating/submitting an entry to win a prize
  • 24%  provide customized local information
  • 22%  offer interactive surveys/quizzes


Further reading:

Moms actively supervise their children's use of social networking and gaming sites

10/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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From Parenting And The Internet at mediapost.com:
  • Most children who spend time on social networking or gaming sites do not play unsupervised. Nearly 70% of Moms retain control of where and when their 8-13-year-old children play.
  • The majority of Moms know their children's passwords and nearly all have established appropriate and clear online rules and guidelines for them.
  • The majority of Moms indicate their children may not join a social networking site unless a parent joins as well

Marketing to mothers: 8 things that changed in the last 5 years

05/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Maria Bailey, author of "Marketing to Moms," "Trillion Dollar Moms" and "Mom 3.0: Marketing With Today's Mothers" wrote down eight changes she's seen in the past five years that have impacted marketing. In short:
  1. Marketing "with" Moms rather than "to" moms
  2. Motherhood as a brand
  3. Customization: yoday's new mothers expect to customize products, media and even the lifestyle of motherhood
  4. Frugalista Mom: moms have discovered that saving money is empowering, fun and a badge of honor among her peers
  5. Emergence of the virtual playground
  6. Sphere of influence on steroids: word of mouth marketing has been the most powerful form of marketing in the world of mothers
  7. It's a small world after all: moms have gone global
  8. Boomers are becoming grandparents

Further reading:

Half of the bloggers is female

05/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Toronto-based social media analytics company Sysomos analyzed more than 100 million blog posts that provided information about their age, gender and location information. One of the key findings is the almost perfect gender balance in blogging demographics:



The split between women and men is nearly even with women accounting for 50.9% and men 49.1%.

Further reading:

Father’s Day gifts less cliche, more often bought online

04/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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Blog author Debra Miller has analysed data from Compete.com's latest Online Shopper Intelligence.  
Key takeaways:
  • Consumers buy more Mother’s Day gifts.
  • Consumers buy Mother’s Day gifts for a wider audience, including grandmothers, daughters, sisters, and aunts.
  • Online plays a larger role in gifts for dad than for mom.



Further reading:

Women get talked to more on Facebook

03/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
Category : women
HubSpot's Inbound Internet Marketing Blog just published an infographic on the differences between male and female user behaviour on Facebook.



Full infograph:

Location services for moms on the go

03/06/2010 | by clo willaerts | 0reactions | Send
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With a significant percentage of moms using smartphones, location services offer a rare opportunity to interact with moms while they’re on the go.
Internet news blog Mashable published some innovative ways that companies are applying location-based technologies to target moms.



One example: the babymate iPhone app that's been designed to help parents keep track of the main aspects of their babies’ growth and development. One of the new features involves geo-awareness:
Geo-tag and share your babies' events, milestones or measures. Find out on a map what other parents are doing around you. Check out other people's comments on similar baby development aspects. Integrate with Facebook, Twitter and Flickr.


Further reading:

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