1. Reading the Fine Print
Product packaging hasn't just gotten harder to open; it's also harder to read, with instructions and ingredient lists that look
like mere ant tracks. According to AARP, CVS is dealing with this problem by attaching magnifying lenses to shelving units.
The pharmacy chain also has increased natural-light wattage by uncovering windows.
Target, in turn, heard concerns about prescription labeling and increased type fonts to help customers avoid mistakes.
2. Garden Center Redesigns
Baby Boomers are big on gardening, but aren't too crazy about gravel-covered paths and narrow greenhouse aisles. According to
Garden Center Magazine,
the industry is moving towards
friendlier access, including hard walking surfaces, wider aisles, tables
that make picking up plants easier and white signs printed
with black ink for clearer reading.
3. Accessible Online Shopping
The American Life Project found 69 percent of
older Boomers (ages 56 to 64) buy online, more than any other
generation. Merchants are catering to this by increasing website fonts
so
consumers with poor vision can more easily navigate online stores.
Updated text-to-speech technology helps those with more serious sight
problems by reading Web pages aloud.
Online shopping became more popular with aging Boomers when Amazon
started
the free shipping revolution in 2002. The trend has proven a boon to
shoppers who find it difficult to navigate between stores.
Free shipping codes bring prices as low, if not lower, than those for
brick-and-mortar retailers. Examples include Boomer favorites like
Coldwater Creek and
Lands' End, clothing giants who offer free shipping
on some, or all, orders.
4. More Online Reviews
According to a 2010 study by the Pew Center,
older Boomers tend to research purchases more thoroughly, with 40 percent saying they rate products online before buying.
User reviews are an electronic replacement for this word-of-mouth generation, so e-retailers are catering to their preferences by providing opportunities for customer testimonials and highlighting positive reviews on home pages.
Technology retailer Newegg.com particularly caters to this audience according to Vice President of
Marketing Bernard Luthi in an interview
with Internet Retailer.
"Older consumers called (customer support) more often than other age
groups in advance of a purchase. They'd say: 'I want to understand more
about the organization. Let me know who you are and what your return
policy is.' They're still not as comfortable as a person in his mid-20s
about shopping on the Web, but they are a smarter shopper. They ask for a
lot more information up front."
5. Hard Landings
To make sitting and rising more graceful, high-end hotels are switching from soft, deep seating to higher and firmer chairs and
couches. These same institutions, along with some banks, are replacing heavy, difficult-to-open doors with automatic ones.
6. Re-shelving
Stretching for the last-remaining box of bran and dipping down for a bulk bag are hard on the back and knees. According to the
AARP magazine, both
Walgreens and CVS have lowered shelving and reorganized items for easier access.
7. Urbanization of Rural Areas
As children flee the nest, more parents are migrating into rural areas. A 2009 study by the
Department of Agriculture,
however, indicated these Boomers will still want urban amenities, "such
as proximity to health care...and walkable, active communities."
Because many will prefer and eventually have to stop driving, they'll
likely seek more condensed shopping formats that are closer
to home.
As a result, areas like Colorado's Northern Front Range created land plans requiring developers include shopping and gas services within walking distance of each development. Retirement communities were also subject to the same regulations.
Walkability has become such an important factor that Zillow, an online real estate database,
now rates the walkability of properties to retail and transit infrastructure.
8. Home-alone Servings
Household size in the 50-plus age range is shrinking, according to
American Realty Advisors, leading manufacturers to reduce their
package portions. Single-size and two-person servings are more readily
available in drugstores and supermarkets. This is a move
away from the super-sizing of the 1990s and should benefit stores that
cater to this audience, including Trader Joe's and Whole
Foods, as opposed to Costco or Sam's Club.
9. Non-agist Marketing
Baby Boomers work full-time, travel, care for parents and are far more active than the preceding generation. According to
Nielsen,
they're turned off by advertising that markets to age and decrepitude,
so marketers
are creating ads with an appeal for all ages. Talbot's, for example,
traditionally sells clothing for older women, but their present
marketing has a more youthful look and message.
10. Brain Games
The generation that made physical fitness a must is now pumping-up brain
tissue to stave off the mental ills of aging. An entire
industry has grown around this desire for mental calisthenics, sweeping
major merchants like Target and Walmart into its wake.
While there's no end of controversy as to whether puzzles and brain games help slow down memory loss, Boomers are willing to give it a try. Much of this industry is related to board games, thought to slow the onset of dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
"Brain-fitness products generated $265 million in 2009, up from $225
million in 2008 and $100 million in 2005," said SharpBrains,
a San Francisco-based market research firm, in an AARP interview.
"Consumers account for about one-third of brain fitness industry sales,
or $95 million in 2009. By 2015, the brain fitness market
is projected to reach $1 billion."
Kate Forgach is a Baby Boomer consumer specialist for Kinoli Inc. She has written about senior issues for 11 years as a Cooperative Extension specialist and for a wide variety of newspapers and magazines. She has been featured in USA Today, Detroit News, New Orleans Times-Picayune, New Yorker magazine, "ABC World News," NBC's "TODAY" show and many other media outlets.
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