"Tweens - so named for their status between early childhood
and the teenage years -- are not developed enough psychologically to know how
to be skeptical about advertising," said Elizabeth Moore, assistant professor
of marketing at the University of Notre Dame.
"Children have television in their rooms, phones, computers," Moore
said. "From a marketer's point of view, the range of products these children
are consuming is expanding. And there's a lot of evidence that they have a lot
of influence over what their parents buy." The advertising directed at this
age group encourages them to want to be like teenagers, with the emphasis on being
cool." (Los Angeles Times, June 27, 2002)
Let's go shopping together! "That togetherness makes the [mother
/ daughter] pair a new type of marketing target. In an age when many tweens
- the demographic once defined as 8-to-12-year-olds but today often pushed down
to 6 or younger - might feel inclined to follow the acts of cute kids turned edgy
young adults (think Lindsay Lohan), some entertainment promoters and product marketers
are directing more of their pitches at both parents and children."
Pitches to tweens target parents, too