The Unbranded Kid: Thoughts on Marketing to Children
Published on - November 5th, 2007 (Modified on - November 7th, 2007) (by J.D. Roth) Kris and I are childless by choice. We love our friends’ kids, but we’ve elected not to have any of our own. As a result, we’ve never had to face the financial challenges that come with parenting. One topic our friends often discuss is the marketing barrage children face from infancy onward.
“Even diapers are branded,” one friend told us recently.
“Especially diapers,” said her husband.
This is no accident. Marketers know that forging brand identity early can lead to enormous profits in decades to come. Dora the Explorer, Bob the Builder, and Thomas the Tank Engine may seem innocuous — and on their own they probably are — but as part of a larger marketing engine, they’re perfect tools for teaching kids to become consumers.
Andrea recently sent me an article from The Tyee, a newspaper out of British Columbia. In this piece, Colleen Kimmett writes about the challenges to raising a brand-free kid. Though the article seems to lack focus, Kimmett makes some good points:
Licensed characters are huge moneymakers for companies. In 2005, Winnie the Pooh earned Disney $6.2 billion in retail sales, according to Gregory Thomas, second only to the mouse.
[Mother Angela] Verbrugge believes all of this merchandising is the real problem, not necessarily the characters themselves. “They’re trying to sell kids other products, from clothing to bedding…there always needs to be something else that they’re striving to buy,” she says. “It scares me when I see advertisements that showcase all these different products that show the child being engaged with a toy,” she says.
Parents want their children to be happy. If a Thomas the Tank Engine playset is going to make your son beam, that can be difficult to resist.
Verbrugge says, “I think we’re seen as consumers…how much wallet share do kids have, and how much can they influence our spending.”
[...] Finding the balance between what their kids want, what they need and what’s available is difficult, say these parents. And they are the first to admit they are by no means perfect. “The only thing we can really do is in our home environments, in the environments we choose for our children,” says Verbrugge.
But as is so often the case, it can actually be more expensive for parents to follow their principles than to give in and embrace normalcy. In a way, the branded characters subsidize the products needed to raise children.
Resisting the urge to spend for the sake of convenience or pleasure is difficult for parents as well (especially when toting around a baby or toddler). And, as all the parents pointed out, often the “best” choices — natural wooden blocks or organic hemp clothing — are also the most expensive.
“The most challenging thing about making an effort to not brand your child in what they wear, or play with…is the fact that sometimes there aren’t choices and sometimes the choices are economically out of reach,” says [one mother].
Things become even more complicated once children enter school. There they are exposed to branding and advertising in the most insidious of ways: peer pressure. Older kids, especially, feel the need to identify with particular brands in order to fit in with a particular social group.
Ultimately, Kimmett’s article offers no solutions. What solutions are there? Unless you want to raise your kid in a cave, they’re eventually going to be exposed to marketing and branding. The best a parent can hope to do is raise their children to think independently, and to demonstrate through their own behavior that branded is not always better.
To learn more on this subject, I’ve borrowed Buy, Buy Baby: How Consumer Culture Manipulates Parents and Harms Young Minds by Susan Gregory Thomas from my public library. I hope to review it here soon.
This article is about Kids, Psychology, Shopping
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Would that controlling TV would be enough to limit kids’ exposure to marketing. Try taking them to a supermarket and shopping for cereal!
In Philadelphia, I gagged last time I went to the zoo with a borrowed 5 year old – all the various zoo areas are now sponsored by corporate companies! Sporting events are the same. You’d have to live in Walden Pond to avoid contact with consumer culture.
Tangential to this specific conversation about branded kids’ toys, but related – I just posted Part II – my list of well-intended gifts which drive parents nuts.
http://moneychangesthings.blogspot.com/2007/11/great-gifts-with-really-bad-unintended.html
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I read this when there were only a few responses and felt my blood pressure rising (only metaphorically!). The premise is reminiscent of Elizabeth Warren’s: poor middle-class parents helpless before consumer culture/need for this and that. I kept waiting for my children to get expensive; nineteen years into parenting it still hasn’t happened.
I could write a lengthy response, but will content myself with saying: don’t use shopping as a family activity! If you read books, your children will too! A set of maple unit blocks will cost $100 and will provide about 10 years of constant play!
If you have a contrarian attitude, your children will too.
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Branding doesn’t bother me, but that’s mainly b/c my husband can usually tell whether a toy is going to get good use, and we just refuse to buy toys that aren’t going to be sufficiently used. If I was wasting a lot of money, I’d be a lot more irritated about this issue.
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[...] The Unbranded Kid: Thoughts on Marketing to Children After my recent review of Born to Buy, this topic has really been on my mind as of late. (@ get rich slowly) [...]
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The way I’ve managed to sidestep this issue with my 6 yo daughter is to help her analyze commercials. On the rare occasion when she watches commercial tv, I ask her what the commercial is selling, and how the commercial wants viewers to think the product will make them feel. Then we talk about whether that might be true, or untrue. To me, this is a more effective method which helps her critical thinking skills.
My younger dd just turned 5. This hasn’t been so effective with her. Her personality seems to be more easily swayed by commercials and peer pressure. I still try, though.
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I’ve been following this thread for a while now – and honestly, I think you need to pick your battles.
If my daughter sees a cartoony commercial and she asks for a toy, I don’t think it’s the end of the world. I would rather focus on if that particular ad is telling my daughter to buy a doll that looks like a tramp or is violent and trying to steer her away from that.
Marketing itself is not a bad thing. It’s how companies let people know what stuff is out there for them to purchase. I bet 99% of the people on here work somehow for a company that sells something. They need marketing for the company that they work for to make money to pay their employees.
And yes, most of these things are luxury items. But asking grandma and grandma not to buy any presents and put money towards a college fund? Come on! Think of how much that would suck for a little kid on Christmas morning! Don’t take away every single fun thing from your kid just because you want to force them into some sort of anti-corporation stand when they are only 7 and can even understand the concept you are trying to get them to believe.
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This is a terrific topic. J.D., you might want to read Juliet Schor’s *Born to Buy* if you haven’t.
We’ve done the TV-free thing with our nearly-three-year-old and she doesn’t have branded apparel, books, toys, etc., as a conscious choice. We bought diapers by price, so sometimes those were branded, but she didn’t have the “right” names for most of them (she called the Luvs Blue’s Clues ones “doggie diapers”) and we were in no hurry to correct her. I also volunteer at a toy lending library, so most of the toys that come into our house are temporary anyhow.
You do cut back a lot on that if you avoid TV and books and stuff. Most, but not all, of her friends are TV-free households too, although she has picked up on a bit of it. We do talk in stores about how we buy things based on what things are made of, not the pictures on the box. (I have a restricted diet, so she sees a lot of label reading).
I do think that parents do the best they can no matter whether they choose to go with the branding or not. And some people have very fond memories of certain companies — Disney and McDonald’s being two obvious examples — and of getting and having stuff. A lot of people get a lot of their *adult* pleasures from stuff. I can’t fault anyone in the slightest for being into it, or for wanting “the best” for their kids and wanting it in that way, but I’m not personally comfortable with it myself.
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I find it interesting that this article is followed by an article about buying brand name clothing for children and how it saved money.
Huh? Ever heard of goodwill or a resale shop?
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Advertisers know how to get into the wallets of parents: though their children. And, it today’s world of working several jobs, spending less time with their children, parents feel that buying their kids useless crap will make it all OK. Marketing has gotten out of control, they know how to insert brands into the most inocent of items. As one coment stated, charicter shaped macaroni? I’m glad I’m not a parent, these are issues that were nonexistent many years ago. The TV has become the baby sitter. They even have infant video’s to keep baby busy. The sad thing, many don’t realize or choose to ignore, is that TV is really bad for the developing brain.
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I’ve read Buy, Buy, Baby and it gives good points. My kids are both toddlers (1 and 3) and I’m working hard to make them unbranded.
We, as parents, are the ones who have to make the choices. Find the diapers without the character. Buy the cereal that isn’t tied into Spongebob. Most of all, pay attention to the television. Your children are learning these brands somewhere.
It is hard, but I’m happy to hear that other people out there are interested in this topic. I was thrilled recently to learn that the “Target” brand of diapers switched from Care Bears to a generic bug print.
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Just a heads-up that the link to “Buy, Buy Baby” leads to a different book (something sci-fi).
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I truly believe the best gift you can give your child is your undivided attention. I have very fond memories of eating at McDonald’s as a kid, but it’s not the food I remember. I wouldn’t eat at McDonald’s now if you paid me. It was the time with my dad, who worked all the time and was never around, that stuck with me.
I’m trying to replicate that with my toddler. We go to the library 2-3 times a week and I sit on the floor in the children’s section and read him whatever books he picks out. We watch 1-2 episodes of Sesame Street a week and I don’t watch TV when he’s awake. My teenaged stepson is another matter, though. He grew up with the TV always on, and is pretty well branded. Sigh…
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Thanks JD and Susy (post #15) for courageously mentioning your choice to be childless.
My DH and I have also chosen this path for reasons that have to do primarily with living simply and doing our part to minimize our impact on the environment.
I’ve grown used to seeming like an oddity to my peers and colleagues for my choice. It would be great to read a piece on this site about the many reasons – financial and otherwise – of being childless by choice.
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[...] marketing to children over at Get Rich Slowly. I love JD’s comment (#29) – so do check it out. » Filed under My media (sideblog [...]
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[...] the commercials and their marketing messages remain, even when the TV is off. This article at Get Rich Slowly talks about raising an “unbranded” [...]
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Love this post! We included it in this week’s web wrap at http://www.thenestbaby.com
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[...] I reviewed the book Born to Buy and, almost simultaneously, Get Rich Slowly posted an article about the challenge of unbranded children. Both the book and the article focus on almost the same issue: the challenge of minimizing [...]
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I remember reading “Why They Whine” back in 1999 when my first was born:
“Cheryl Idell … tells her clients that nagging spurs about a third of a family’s trips to a fast-food restaurant, to buy children’s clothing or a video … Idell, who is chief strategic officer for Western Initiative Media Worldwide, … advises Chuck E. Cheese and numerous other corporations, that getting kids to whine is even better. Better yet is to give them ‘a specific reason to ask for the product.’ She even rates brands according to their ‘nag factor’–that is, their capacity to make your children badger you–and companies toil mightily to rate high on her list. Some of the most successful are McDonald’s, Levi’s, Discovery Zone, Burger King, Pizza Hut, Disney, and OshKosh.”
The crazy part is not how much marketing is targeted to children, the crazy part is how soulless the marketing is. The individuals who consider children to be, as James McNeal calls them, “economic resources to be mined” should be considered a credible threat to a healthy childhood and, therefore, a healthy civilization.
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I don’t see how it is unrealistic to avoid exposing your child to commercialism from a young age, or how it might be better to “inoculate” them by letting them be exposed to a little here, a little there. Children learn best by example. They’re not going to listen to you saying, “Now, Britney, I know that commercial tells you you have to have that Bratz doll, but Bratz dolls are a waste of money.” They’re going to look at the little girl in the TV ad having the time of her life and want to be like her. That’s what small children do. It is in their nature to imitate; it’s how they learn best. My three-year-old daughter says Please and Thank You more often than not, not because we told her to, but because we say those things to her at the appropriate times. So she thinks that is the appropriate way to behave in that situation.
If you don’t want your child ruled by commercialism then keep it out of your child’s life. Show your child–not tell–another way of living. Lead your child by example. Mere words are never going to be enough.
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Yes, sad to say, branding is almost inevitable in a child’s life. As you say, diapers are even heavily branded, and I also had never noticed this because I do not have a child either, but once I began to study marketing there were so many different commercials and ads that are geared toward children that I had never noticed and it was a real eye opening experience. Branding by companies is done in a way that if they can not directly catch you with it, they have other ways to get you exposed. Using an example from your post where you explain that peer pressure at school is one way that branding can be forced upon children is an excellent example of how a company can reach a child who may have never seen television their whole life. Because branding is somewhat unavoidable, I agree with your statement that the only real defense to aggressive branding and advertising is for a parent to “raise their children to think independently”. Responsible spending and knowledge of the marketplace are key to parents when it comes to raising not only a responsible child but a smart consumer. Children are geared toward consumerism at a younger and younger age as marketers constantly come up with new products to fit a need that young children have. And because they are put in the position of a consumer as a young age, product and purchase education has to be taught by parents as soon as children are able to watch a television ad. Most children, even with extensive knowledge of the market and products, are not going to be willing to actively recognize what products they need in relation to those that they want because of issues such as peer pressure as you indicated. It cant be expected that a child is capable of completely responsible spending because the majority of parents aren’t able to block out ads for things that they don’t really need, so in the end it must be accepted that children are going to be somewhat branded, but as long as a parent does their part in educating their child about good spending habits and gives them a general product knowledge, then kids should be okay.
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