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Lifestyles
of the Cultural Creatives (CCs)
Readers and radio listeners, much more
than TV watchers: Cultural
Creatives buy more books and magazines, listen to more radio, including
classical music and NPR, and watch less television, than any other groups.
About half of them are regular book buyers, which is far more than the
general public. They are literate and discriminating, and dislike most
of what is on TV. They demand good information, and have exceptionally
good deception-detectors for ads and for misleading corporate or political
claims in the media. They are particularly unhappy with the quality of
TV news.
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Arts
and culture: Most
CCs are aggressive consumers of the arts and culture. They actively
go out and
get involved in it. They are much more likely than most Americans
to be involved in the arts as amateurs or pros, and are more likely
to write books and articles, and to go to meetings and workshops about
creative endeavors.
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Stories, whole process and systems:
CCs
appreciate good stories, and want views of the "whole process"
of whatever they are reading, from cereal boxes to product descriptions
to magazine articles. They like a systems overview: they want to know
where a product came from, how it was made, who made it, and what will
happen to it when they are done with it. They hate to read mail or articles
that come in bullet points and race to the bottom line (unless they are
very time pressed and donŐt care much about the topic). They also want
symbols that go deep, and, more than most Americans, they actively dislike
advertising and children's TV.
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Desire for authenticity: CCs
are the ones who brought the criterion of "authenticity" to the
marketplace. They lead the consumer rebellion against things that
are "plastic", fake, imitation, poorly made, throwaway, cliche style
or high fashion. If they buy something in a traditional style they
want it to
be authentically traditional; Smith and Hawken garden tools speak
to this desire for authenticity, as does much of the natural foods
industry.
Careful
Consumers: CCs
are the kind of people who buy and use Consumer Reports on most
consumer durables goods, like appliances, cars, consumer electronics.
For the most part, they are the careful, well-informed shoppers
who do not buy on impulse. They are likely to research a purchase
first, and are practically the only consumers who regularly read
labels.
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Soft
innovation: They
are not the technology innovators who buy the latest and greatest in computers,
and many are just getting onto the Internet. But they are at the leading
edge of many cultural innovations: CCs tend to be innovators and opinion
leaders for some knowledge-intensive products, however, including magazines,
fine foods, wines and boutique beers.
The
Foodies: They're
the "foodies" - people who like to talk about food (before and after),
experiment with new kinds of food, cook food with friends, eat out a lot,
do gourmet and ethnic cooking, and try natural foods and health foods.
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Home is important, but
they buy fewer new houses than most people of their income level,
finding that new houses are not usually designed with them in mind.
So they buy resale houses and fix them up the way they want. They
don't like status-display homes with impressive entrances, columns,
gables: theirs are more inward-looking and hidden from the street
by fences, trees and shrubbery. They tend to prefer established neighborhoods
with a lot of trees and privacy, and want to stay far away from tract
houses in treeless suburbs. |
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Authentic
Styling in Homes: Their
notion of what's included in this category is all-embracing, including
authentic New England salt box, authentic Georgian, authentic Frank
Lloyd Wright, authentic desert adobe and authentic contemporary
Californian. "What's good," as far as CCs are concerned, is the
building that fits into its proper place on the land. They want
access to nature, walking and biking paths, ecological preservation,
historic preservation, and to live in master planned communities
that show a way to re-create community.
The
Nest: When
Cultural Creatives buy homes, they like homes that are "nests":
not only a lot of privacy externally, but private spaces within,
including the buffering of childrens' space from adult space, and
with lots of interesting nooks and niches. They are more likely
to live out of the living room and not bother with a family room.
They are far more likely to have an office in the home, and to have
converted a bedroom, den, or family room into that office.
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Interior decoration for CCs is
typically eclectic, with a lot of original art on the walls and crafts
pieces around the house. Many of them seem to think a house is not properly
decorated without a lot of books. The same house that vanishes from the
street should be personalized so that it shows on the inside who they
are. Status display happens inside the house not outside, though it is
not blatant: it is display of personal good taste and creative sense of
style. CCs would not buy a single decorator style that goes through the
whole house.
A
different kind of car, please: CCs
are far more likely to want safety and fuel economy in a mid-price car.
If they could also get an ecologically sound, high mileage, recyclable
car, they'd snap it up. If ever the auto industry were to provide the
car they want, it would be more like a gas-electric hybrid car, or one
with fuel cells. The Volvo appeals to many CCs, but so do well-made Japanese
cars. They loathe the process they go through at car dealerships even
more than most people do. A car like the Saturn with its fixed, no haggle
price, and top dealer service is designed for CCs.
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The leading edge of vacation travel:
CCs
define the leading edge of vacation travel that is exotic, adventuresome-without-(too
much)-danger, educational, experiential, authentic, altruistic and/or
spiritual. They like tours of temples in India, tours of the back
country where tourists don't go, eco-tourism, photo-safaris, fantasy
baseball camps, save-the-baby-seals vacations, help-rebuild-a-Mayan-village-vacations.
They don't go for package tours, fancy resorts or cruises. |
Experiential consumers:
Many CCs are the prototypical
consumers of the experience industry, which offers a more intense/enlightening/enlivening
experience rather than a particular product. Examples include weekend
workshops, spiritual gatherings, personal growth experiences, experiential
vacations, the vacation-as-spiritual-tour, or the vacation-as-self-discovery.
The providers of these services have to be CCs too, or they can't do it
authentically (the kiss of death), and so one sometimes gets the impression
that everyone is taking in everyone else's wash - or workshop.
Holistic
everything:
CCs are the prototypical
innovators in, and consumers of, personal growth psychotherapy, alternative
health care and natural foods. What ties these together is a belief in
holistic health: body-mind-spirit are to be unified. CCs are forever sorting
out the weird from the innovative. Some CCs are those whom unsympathetic
physicians describe as "the worried well," who monitor every twitch and
pain and bowel movement, in a minutely detailed attention to the body.
This tendency may be why CCs spend more on alternative health care and
regular health care even though most are fairly healthy. They may live
longer, because they do at least some kinds of preventive medicine - in
contrast to the Modernist executive pattern of treating the body like
a machine that you feed, exercise and vitaminize, and otherwise ignore
until it breaks down.
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