Transcript Slide 1

How One Good Marketing Idea Can Lead
to Millions of Premature Deaths:
The Battle for Market Share Among
Adolescent Smokers
Joseph R DiFranza, MD
Department of Family Medicine and
Community Health
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Adolescent Developmental Tasks
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Establish masculine/feminine identity
Establish individuality
Establish independence
Feel accepted by peers
• Tobacco companies commissioned research to
discover the psychological vulnerabilities of children.
• Young males are “going through a stage where they
are seeking to express their independence and
individuality under constant pressure of being
accepted by their peers.” –Imperial Tobacco
• Cigarette ads were designed to exploit adolescents’
psychological vulnerabilities to foster addiction.
The Tempo brand is targeted at…
• Individuals who are “extremely influenced by
their peer group.” –RJR MacDonald
• “Export smokers will be perceived as…
characterized by their self-confidence,
strength of character and individuality that
makes them popular and admired by their
peers.” –RJR MacDonald
• “Very young starter smokers chose Export A
because it provides them with an instant
badge of masculinity, appeals to their
rebellious nature, and establishes their
position amongst their peers.”- RJR
MacDonald
Peer acceptance
Only smooth characters allowed
Independence
Independence
Individuality
Feminine Identity
Masculine Identity
Research shows
• Children as young as age 3 can match cigarettes
with ads for cigarettes. -Richards
• Kids understand the message of advertising
before they understand the purpose of
advertising. -Aitken
• Children who like cigarette ads are more likely to
intend to smoke when they are older. -Aitken
• Children who approve of cigarette advertising are
twice as likely to begin smoking in the coming
year. – Alexander
Children get their positive images of
smoking from advertising
• British experience
• Children who had favorite cigarette ads were
twice as likely to believe there are benefits to
smoking.
• Children who believe that smoking will make
them more popular are 4.7 times more likely
to smoke.
1988
RJ Reynolds internal documents
“The 81 documents contrast
sharply with the company's
repeated public declarations that
it does not target young people,
collectively sketching a picture of
a company that seemed decades
ago to determine that its financial
future depended on recruiting a
new generation of smokers.” –
The Washington Post
What was the impact of this
competition for the youth market?
What was the impact of this
competition for the youth market?
<18 sales worth $476 million /year
My complaint to the Federal Trade Commission
• RJ Reynolds was reaping profits from illegal
underage sales amounting to $476
million/year
FTC decision May 29, 1997
• The agency asserted in an administrative
complaint that the company violated Federal
fair trade practice laws by promoting a lethal
and addictive product to children and
adolescents who could not legally purchase or
use it.
Joe Camel 1988 - 1997
Percent
Recognize "Reg" Character
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Kids
Adults
• In England smoking among 14-15 year old
boys went up only in regions of the country
where “Reg” advertisements were posted.
How many people will die from this
marketing war?
• 1988: 1 million 16-17 yr old daily smokers
• 1997: 1.5 million 16-17 yr old daily smokers
• 0.5 million additional daily smokers
Joe Camel 1988 - 1997
How many people will die from this
marketing war?
• 300,000 extra smokers/year over 15 years = an
increase of 4.5 million smokers
• About half of smokers die from smoking
• 2.25 million premature deaths due to the
youth market battle.
How One Good Marketing Idea Can Lead
to Millions of Premature Deaths:
The Battle for Market Share Among
Adolescent Smokers
Joseph R DiFranza, MD
Department of Family Medicine and
Community Health
University of Massachusetts Medical School