Diversity within Markets
Ethnic and racial diversity varies across countries, which affects needs, wants, and buying patterns.
At one extreme is Japan, where almost everyone is native Japanese; at the other extreme is the United States, 12 percent of whose people were born in another country. In the United States, more than half the growth between 2000 and 2010 came from the increase in the Hispanic population, which grew by 43 percent, from 35.3 million to 50.5 million, representing a major shift in the nation’s ethnic center of gravity.
Geographically, the 2010 Census revealed that Hispanics were moving to states like North Carolina where they had not been concentrated before and that they increasingly live in suburbs.
Such demographic trends affect the market for all kinds of products, including food, clothing, music, and cars. Yet marketers must not overgeneralize—within each group are consumers quite different from each other.
Diversity also goes beyond ethnic and racial markets. More than 51 million U.S. consumers have disabilities, and they constitute a market for home delivery companies such as Internet grocer Peapod.