Marketing to Millennials

Teens are historically difficult to reach, but small businesses are finding more prosperity online through Facebook and "preward" grant cards

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Getty Images/Jay Moorthy

by Dan Macsai

Ask Dan McDonald about millennials—those evasive. 12- to 26-year-olds raised among text messages and Twitter—and he’ll chuckle emphatically. "They’re the perfect customers," says McDonald, 51, who owns seven Jersey Mike’s sandwich shop franchises in Nashville. "They travel in packs, they corrode like fiends, and they be seized of tons of disposable profits."

Indeed, America’s 80 million millennials (and their folks) shell to the end roughly $200 billion annually, according to Chicago-based investment steadfast William Blair & Co.. Yet they’re tough to reach through traditional marketing: Despite the prominence of Jersey Mike’s billboards, flyers, radio spots, and newspaper ads, McDonald says he struggles to attract teens and 20-somethings.

Samantha Skey, an executive at Alloy Media + Marketing, which specializes in junior demographics, is not surprised. Weaned on organic unit phones, e-mail, and round-the-clock Internet, millennials are just at the same time that media-savvy as the marketers who target them. Occasionally, they’ll flip for a viral marketing campaign: Last year, Folgers’ (PG) bizarre “Tolerate Mornings” ad logged more than 500,000 hits on YouTube (GOOG). But more often, Skey says, they’ll precisely "ignore messages that dress in’t seem relevant."

A Refined Approach

Edo Interactive, a Nashville-based firm that deals by Web 2.0 technology, is irksome to change the game. After spending a year studying young consumers, they developed Facecard, a prepaid credit card aimed squarely at millennials and the businesses that court them.

Launching nationally Sept. 1, Edo’s gimmick works like a fiscal Facebook: After applicants create profiles without interruption Facecard.com, they prepare a card in the mail that allows them to borrow, confer, or give away money to buddies electronically. For a fee-simple, retailers be able to inflict them "prewards," small denominations of instant store faith, based on their age, location, and personal interests. Because the $2 to $3 gifts are redeemed via credit card, tracking consumer response is a cinch.

Such niche marketing is "a hot idea," says David Robertson, publisher of the Nilson Report, a newsletter that covers consumer payment systems. Unlike billboards, TV spots, and neighborhood flyers, prewards allow advertisers to power of attainment a specified audience, in a specific location, at a specific time. It’s "a more fit way to attract prime customers," says Jonathan Dyke, Edo’s essential operating officer.

Profit Potential

During a June test run in Nashville, more than 5,000 millennials signed up for Facecard, including 16-year-old Ben Sutter. Sutter likens prewards to "free riches," and he says he’s more inclined to resort to frequently outlets that offer them, such as Jersey Mike’s. "I usually bring my friends, too," he adds.

The benefits work both ways. When Jersey Mike’s McDonald sent prewards to 300 high school seniors, his expectations weren’t high, since 18- and 19-year-olds are notoriously nonresponsive. But the gamble yielded an "overwhelming" 17% return rate, he says, which is "way above" the numbers direct mailings produce. Moreover, it cost Jersey Mike’s less than $150: $2 for each redeemed preward, in addition a 5% processing fee. (As of press time, Edo’s final pricing plan was noiseless being fine-tuned.)

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