National Survey Says 9/11 Defined Decade for Influential ‘Alpha’ Women
Branding Firm Ginger
Consulting Releases Second Annual Alpha Panel™ ‘What Women Want’ Survey
Influential Women to U.S. Administration: It’s Still The
Economy Plus Jobs, Healthcare
Leading-Edge Women More Optimistic About 2010; Focused on
Health, Not Success
MINNEAPOLIS (FEB. 10, 2010) — America’s “Alpha
females” — influential
women who provide a preview of what others will be
thinking and
doing six months to two years from now — say their aught
decade was defined by one event: 9/11, according to a
survey released
today by Ginger Consulting, a branding and custom research
firm
based in Minneapolis.
Ginger’s second annual Alpha Panel™ “What Women
Want” Survey gives marketers, retailers and the
administration
a current snapshot of what’s on the minds of America’s
most influential, ahead-of-the-curve women. The mega niche
of “women” influences
more than 80 percent of all products and services sold in
the U.S.,
fueling two-thirds of the U.S. Gross National Product.
Seventy percent of Alphas surveyed said 9/11 was the
transformational
event of the decade and will have the most far-reaching
effect
on their lives over the next 10 years. Other
decade-defining events
for Alphas were the global recession (61 percent), the
election
of the first African American president (41 percent) and
the digital
revolution (40 percent).
Alphas Cautiously Optimistic On 2010
The overall mood of Alphas entering 2010 is a bit more
optimistic
than 2009, but caution is still her guide, according to
Ginger
Principals Mary Van Note and Beth Perro-Jarvis. “What
Alpha
women want is to close the door on a rough decade and
exhale,” said
Van Note. “While half our Alpha panel continues to be
optimistic
but realistic, about the same as 2009, the number of
women who
are entering 2010 ‘filled with hope’ has doubled
from 6 percent to 12 percent, signaling a positive
shift.”
Personal Health Is Priority, Success Ranked Last
Health and family ranked as the most important personal
priorities
for Alphas for the second year in a row, according to Ginger’s
Import-O-Meter™ (JPG). Success again ranked dead last.
“Creating
fun, new experiences is trending way up for these gals,”
said
Perro-Jarvis. “2009 was the year to ‘strip down’ and
live more in line with their personal values. Alphas will
take
the same pragmatic approach in 2010.”
For marketers and retailers, that means this mega niche of
women
is making clear choices about what they’ll be doing More
Of /Less Of (JPG) in the year ahead. With 67 percent
of Alphas saying
they’ll be seeking more fun, new experiences in 2010,
brands
that market travel, events and sports could see the start
of an
upward trend, according to Van Note and Perro-Jarvis.
The majority of Alphas will continue to shop value brands
and stores
(68 percent), buy on sale (64 percent) and sell their
unneeded
stuff (63 percent). “Equally as significant is that Alphas
aren’t willing to sacrifice more than they already have,
signaling they’re settling into a long-term adjustment in
lifestyle and priorities,” added Perro-Jarvis.
Alphas To The Administration: It’s Jobs and
Healthcare
in 2010
Alpha women’s top priorities for the Obama Administration
continue to be focused on the economy, specifically
high-quality
healthcare and job creation.
“The administration is on message for Alphas so far this year,” said
Van Note. “These influential women want to see action on high-quality,
affordable health care and job creation.” Thirty-five percent of Alpha
survey respondents ranked “stabilizing the economy” as the
administration’s
top priority in 2010, compared to 66 percent in 2009. Healthcare as a
top political
priority increased from 8 percent in 2009 to 21 percent in 2010, and
job creation
increased from 4 percent in 2009 to 15 percent in 2010.
Ginger’s Alpha Panel Survey was conducted online the first
two weeks of January among 400 members of Ginger’s
proprietary
Alpha Panel from 10 U.S. markets, including New York,
Chicago,
Los Angeles and San Francisco. More than 150 Alpha Panel
members,
or 38 percent, responded to the 2010 survey.
MULTIMEDIA ELEMENTS
Ginger
logo (JPG)
Ginger
Principals Mary Van Note and Beth Perro-Jarvis (JPG)
Source:
Ginger
Ginger Principals Beth Perro-Jarvis and Mary Van Note are
experts
on “Alpha Females,” ahead-of-the-curve women who are
six months to two years in front of market trends.
Ginger’s
Import-O-Meter™ (JPG) Source: Ginger’s Alpha
Panel™,
2010
According to Ginger’s 2010 Import-O-Meter™, Alpha women rank personal health as the most important personal priority for 2010. Surprisingly, success ranked dead last, farther down than achievement, signaling that wallet size continues to be less of a priority.
More
of/Less of Chart (JPG) Source: Ginger’s Alpha Panel™,
2010
Alpha women in 2010 are settling into “the new normal” and
focusing more on personal health, staying active and new
experiences.
The pragmatic sacrifices they made in 2009 will carry over
into
2010, so retailers beware. These ladies are hyper
value-conscious
and control the family wallet
January
2010 Ginger’s Alpha Panel™ Survey Executive
summary (PDF)
MORE INFORMATION
Ginger Consulting
Topic Expertise (PDF)
Web: gingerminneapolis.com
Contact: Lisa Hannum / lhannum@beehivepr.biz /
O: 651.789.2233; C: 612.272.0544
BOILERPLATE
Ginger is a boutique branding and custom research consultancy with a national reputation for its fast and creative solutions to the most vexing marketing problems. Ginger has worked in more than 20 industry categories and collaborated with brands like Nordstrom, Best Buy, Kimberly Clark, Capital One, Starbucks, OfficeMax and The Ritz-Carlton. Ginger Principals Mary Van Note and Beth Perro-Jarvis were tapped in 2009 to participate as marketing mentors in the U.S. State Department’s Pathways to Prosperity women entrepreneur initiative, a mentoring program between successful U.S. women business owners and aspiring women entrepreneurs in Latin America, Canada and the United States. On the Web at gingerminneapolis.com.
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