growing up online by Carolyn Jabs
Hardwire Your Kids to
Resist the Ad “Cold”
Online Marketing is Cunningly Infectious
Before the holidays, many kids make wish lists. But how do they know
what they want? Sometimes parents can trace a child’s desires back to a
TV show, a friend or even a celebrity. Today, it’s likely that the
longings of your child or teen are being shaped by experiences they have
online in settings parents rarely visit.
Online, where content is usually free, ads are ubiquitous. Because
companies know people pay little attention to pop ups and banner ads,
they’ve become creative about inserting their messages into content.
As a result, in a process much like catching a cold, children develop an
awareness of and even a craving for various foods, clothes and other
products without knowing how or why. Here are some of the tactics being
used to influence your kids:
Advergames
It’s easy to insert product logos and mascots into arcade style games.
The more the child plays, the more he or she is exposed to the brand.
Freebies
Websites routinely offer kids free wallpaper, ringtones, smilies and
other goodies that just happen to incorporate the company’s name or
logos. Many companies also harvest information about kids and their
interests by getting them to sign up for sweepstakes and other contests.
Social networks
The square hamburger sold by Wendy’s has its own MySpace page where
people actually post comments about what they eat at Wendy’s and why.
So, for that matter, does Coors Lite. Advertisers believe getting young
people to interact with a brand as a personality makes them gravitate
towards that product when it’s time to buy.
Mobile marketing
More and more companies are sending text ads to cell phones. Soon these
will be triggered by specific places, so a teen walking past a record
store will get a message about a CD that’s on sale.
Virtual worlds
In virtual worlds, kids can create alter egos called avatars and then
wander around having virtual experiences. Even on kid-friendly sites
like Whyville, many of these experiences are designed by corporations
eager to sell things either to the avatar or the person behind it.
Vulnerable to the Ad Virus
This kind of advertising isn’t easily supervised by parents. The fact
that parents are “dis-intermediated” is one of the reasons these
settings are so appealing to advertisers. They know they can sell
directly with kids who don’t have the skepticism or critical thinking
capabilities of adults.
Unfortunately, this early immersion in commercial messages isn’t good
for our kids, our culture or even our planet.
Without adult intervention, children may find themselves craving things
that are unnecessary or even unhealthy. They begin to define themselves
in terms of what they have rather than what they can do or what kind of
people they are. And they are drawn into a wastefulness that consumes
energy and creates garbage and pollution at unsustainable levels.
So what can parents do to inoculate their children?
Create True Contentment
First, think about your own values. The premise of advertising is that
life will be better (or even perfect) if only you buy this product. Wise
adults know happiness can’t be purchased. Genuine human contentment
comes not from consuming, but from creating, communicating, competing
and connecting.
Make those activities the focus of life in your family, especially
during the holidays. Instead of one-trick toys and gadgets they won’t
use, consider giving your child materials that stimulate creativity and
imagination or experiences that enrich his or her sense of life’s
possibilities.
Expose the Wizard of Ads
Second, encourage skepticism and critical thinking. Most kids now know
the person on the other end of online communication could be a sexual
predator. They are less likely to suspect a shill who is being paid to
tell them how cool a particular product is.
Ask kids to track back how they heard about a new product. Where did
their positive feelings come from? Why do they believe the promises
about the product?
Learn from Mistakes
Third, talk about consuming mistakes. Many kids have rooms crammed with
stuff that once seemed urgently important. When products don’t live up
to expectation, talk about the discrepancy between promise and reality.
This lesson is, perhaps, best learned when children spend their own
money on something that seems oh-so-cool—until they actually own it.
Find Allies
Fourth, get involved. It can feel lonely when you seem to be the only
parent on the planet saying “No” to a child’s fervent wishes. To find
allies, head to the website for the Campaign For a Commercial Free
Childhood (www.commercialexploitation.org), an organization that
supports “the rights of children to grow up—and the rights of parents to
raise them—without being undermined by rampant commercialism.”
Indiscriminate consuming can make kids greedy, fat and vulnerable to
debt when they are adults. More importantly, it blinds them to more
rewarding ways of spending time and money.
Most parents vaccinate kids so they won’t get physically sick. Today,
inoculating kids so they recognize and resist viral marketing is also
part of raising healthy kids.
Carolyn Jabs is a former contributing editor for
Family PC and mother of three computer-savvy kids. She can be reached on
her website
www.growing-up-online.com or by e-mail at
carolynjabs@carolynjabs.com.
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