The World's Worst Marketing Challenge
Here's a business and marketing challenge for you: You have a product that's intangible and expensive. It requires monthly payments. If things go well, the money your customer spends on it will be wasted. Both the purchase process and every single payment moment require that your customer confront some of the most uncomfortable truths a person can face. There is no possibility that your customer will ever see any personal, direct benefit from your product.
Sounds a lot harder than selling soda, right?
If you haven't already guessed, the product is term life insuranceâthe stuff that has no cash value and evaporates once the term is over. Its benefits, however, are significant. It can provide a safety net to your beneficiaries in the event of your deathâa safety net that is much larger than you'd be able to afford via a whole life policy (the kind with a defined cash value).
But tens of millions of people in the United States have term lifeâso it can't be that hard to sell. Although this is true, those existing customers have a culturally mediated understanding of term life insurance and the disposable income needed to make it accessible. For them, it's a plus, not a trade-off.
Naturally, the life insurance industry has long targeted this segment. They're affluent and, for the most part, white. They're a great market, except for one major problem: Because they're already well served, the market isn't growing much now or in the future. This poses a problem for the growth-oriented, publically traded life insurance industry.
There is a woefully underserved market out there, one that has a real need for life insurance and is on a demographic growth spurt. But, naturally, there's a problem there, too. This market has little resemblance to the old stalwarts the industry has long relied on. It is less affluent, more ethnically diverse, and often unfamiliar withâeven intimidated byâthe concept of life insurance. Reaching this audience means staring that marketing challenge right in the face.
The costs of ignoring this audience are high and growing every day. The challenges in reaching them are vastâand expensive to solve. What's an insurer to do?
The answer is simple. To continue to thrive, life insurance companies must reframe their view of the market for their products, going from a narrow focus on the general market to a broad approach to the Total Market. One company, MetLife, did exactly that, and enjoyed extraordinary results. During the course of a one-year campaign, MetLife saw a 60 percent increase in premiums, fully 40 percent more than its already ambitious goal.
Impressive? Yes.
Easy? No.
Essential? Absolutely.
From the middle of the last century until now, advertising and marketing has divided itself into two big groupings: the general market and the multicultural market. Or, to be blunt, we split ourselves into white and nonwhite agencies. Sound familiar?
The white, general-market agencies (GMA) spoke to the mass marketâwhich was and still is predominantly white. The nonwhite, multicultural agencies focused on individual ethnic groups. Hispanic agencies spoke to the Hispanic population, black agencies spoke to the black population, Asian agencies spoke to the Asian populationâŚyou get the picture. Given that advertising and marketing is a business of emotional and rational understanding and persuasion, this approach made sense. If you imbue your advertising with a deep cultural understanding, you're likely to connect better to your audience.
For decades, the system worked to a certain extent. The multicultural agencies really did do a better job of selling to their target consumers than GMAs would have done. The whole system might have continued to thrive were it not for human nature. As you've probably noticed by now, this industry division was just another instance of the infamous separate but equal philosophyâonly applied to commercial enterprise instead of education. Predictably, GMAs worked with huge marketing budgets, while multicultural agencies divided up a small ethnic advertising pool. When they needed extra funds, they came out of another multicultural segment, not the overpowering general market. Distasteful though it may be, even that system made a certain degree of commercial (if not moral) sense when the white population really was equivalent to the mass market.
That's not going to be true for much longer. In fact, the era of the majority white population has already faded into history in many parts of the United States. Continuing with a fragmented general market/multicultural approach isn't just shortsighted; it's suicidal. The only way to see, appreciate, and sell to the full panoply of America's diverse new mass market is to do for advertising what we did for education five decades ago.
It's time to integrate. It's time to stop carving up our target markets into ethnic slices and time to start looking at the Total Market. When you do, the math changesâdramatically.
Consider the life insurance industry once more. It's known all along that everyone in the United States is a potential customer. After all, none of us gets out of here alive. But knowing that is one thing; learning how to act on it is something entirely different.
MetLife wanted to try. It knew that over the past seven decades, the U.S. population has doubled to more than 300 million peopleâand that the number of life insurance policies purchased has dropped by 50 percent in that same time. The industry made up for the volume shortfall by selling ever-larger policies to more affluent customersâa strategy that can work only for so long. Rather than watch the industry grow even more elitist, MetLife wanted to see if it could serve a broader market. To do that, it sought out global advertising agency Ogilvy & Mather, where I led the Cross-Cultural Practice. The MetLife executives already knew the demographic realities. Metlife's core consumers were part of a slow-growing segment of the U.S. population. However, there were many people outside of that traditional segment who would benefit from life insurance. They just didn't have a history of purchasing life insurance or any companies marketing to them.
It seems obvious in this case; sell your product to anyone. Everyone dies, so why discriminate with life insurance? But the reality is more complex than that. Educating a new customer base about your product is a major task. It's expensive and time-consuming, but it is a walk in the park compared with educating that new customer base about your whole product category. And that's what MetLife had to do. When it looked at the size of the Asian, Hispanic, or black markets in isolation and through the lens of its current product offerings, that kind of investment didn't seem to pay off.
But we helped MetLife reframe how it looked at its market by showing it just how large its market could be. First we urged it to stop looking at the minority segments in isolation. They seem small when viewed on their own, but they become quite a powerhouse when you look at them all together. Now you're looking at a huge and growing demographic.
Second, we added another piece: There is no intrinsic reason why life insurance is affordable only for those who earn more than $100,000 a year. In fact, innovative life insurance policies are affordable even by those with household incomes less than $35,000 a year.
Once MetLife reframed the market that way, the true scope of the opportunity came into focus. There are more than 24 million uninsured or underserved minority households in the United States. That represents a $15 billion market opportunity.
Suddenly, a major investment in tapping that market seems worthwhile. But the old ways would not work. MetLife had sized the market as a whole. Now it had to sell to it that way, too.
We knew that selling life insurance had always been what we call a rational sell. Imagine your friendly life insurance salesperson saying to you, âAnd all this protection for your children is only $14 a month. Why, that's less than what you spend on coffee!â There's an emotional component there, tooâan appeal to familyâbut that part was an afterthought. The real meat of the message is the amount of the protection and the price it costs you. Moreover, most life insurance companies depicted white, nuclear families in their advertising.
Rational selling approaches work only when your market is already sold on the need for your product. Appeals to family work only when the family is relatable. Fourteen dollars a month for something vague, uncomfortable, and poorly understood to benefit a family that looks nothing like yours. No wonder life insurance hadn't connected.
If MetLife wanted to sell to today's families, it needed to understand how family looks and acts today. Norman Rockwell's famous illustrations will always be lovely, but they're no longer representative. Today's family is often multigenerational, multiethnic, and gay or straight. It's focused on strongly held traditions and radically new ideas, and it's reflective of culture. Hispanics may find that family obligations transcend generations and borders while blacks are often in female-led, multigenerational groupings of mutual support. Asians have held a firm grip on traditional marriage, the veneration of elders, and broad family interest.
As different as all those family traditions are, one thing unites them: a notion that family isn't some idealized, Norman Rockwellâlike concept. It is instead a broad circle of concern. The narrow circle of concern that defined the white, nuclear family has been replaced by an explosion of diversity. As Brian Powell, professor of sociology at Indiana University, has said, âAmericans are focusing less on the structure of family per se and insteadâŚfocusing on the functions of family. Families take care of each other. Families help each other. They love each other. As long as Americans have a signal out there that a living arrangement is doing that, then they accept it as a family.â1
The life insurance category hasn't caught up to this reality, though. The vast majority of life insurance advertising imagery still looks more like Father Knows Best than Modern Family. MetLife stepped out of that constraint, and like the family of today, it broadened its own circle of concern, speaking to all kind of familiesâall races, all incomes, and all sexual orientationsâat once. It focused most of its attention on the areas of greatest opportunityâthe middle market of households earning less than $75,000 a year and the multicultural marketâand set ambitious goals. And as stated previouslyâit blew those goals away.
The Total Market approach and industry has arrived. Unfortunately, most folks haven't g...