In her book RenGen: The Rise of the Cultural Consumer -- and What It Means to Your Business (Platinum Press/Adams Media), Chicago marketing maven Patricia Martin, president of LitLamp Communications Group, argues that America is entering a renaissance phase equal to the European original, in which “a new social order is emerging based on a more enlightened sensibility.” But while Da Vinci and Michelangelo were more concerned with culture than with the marketplace, today’s renaissance generation -- or “RenGen,” as Martin calls it -- is focused on both: They want their aesthetic tastes and personal values reflected in the things they buy and the companies they work at. All that high design at cheap prices that Target hawks? That’s the RenGen in action, Martin says. Starbucks’s Make Your Mark program, which gives employees time off to do volunteer work? RenGen principles too. It’s a recent trend, to be sure, but Martin credits Absolut, a company that pioneered marketing to gay consumers beginning in the 1980s, with helping to plant the seeds. Indeed, as she discusses here, gay people have been on the leading edge of the RenGen all along.
You call Absolut an early adopter of RenGen ideas
because of a breakthrough 1985 ad that Andy Warhol
designed. But the company was already targeting
the gay market, right?
Absolut embraced the “other” as an exotic.
They embraced Warhol as an exotic, and they embraced
the gay community as sort of the exotic, and if you
sell vodka -- it’s just clear liquid -- you need to
wrap the brand in something. They became the number
1–selling vodka in this country not just
through their embrace of art and design; the gay community
had a lot to do with it. Absolut became such heavy
sponsors of everything from gay beach volleyball to
Christmas choruses. After they’d made their mark,
they moved to expand their market.
We’ve seen that strategy time and time again,
most recently with the flurry of style shows on Bravo --
Queer Eye, Project Runway,
Top Design -- that first hit with gay
viewers before reaching a broader audience.
It’s a whole new set of values around the
way we’ve segmented ourselves in our society.
The embrace of the gay community is, for the RenGen, not
only practical, it’s about survival. The RenGen
believes that the more diverse their teams are, their
communities are, the more likely they are to survive.
We’re not talking about tolerance here. I think
tolerance is a very old-school concept.
You write about “fusion,” the
“coming together of two unlikely
pairings” that yields fresh ideas. The
metrosexual trend seemed to be an example of that,
even if people now disavow it.
If we’re going to be rigorous, for all these
trends, there’s a countertrend -- that’s
the paradox of a shift as profound as the one
we’re in. So as you see the feminization of the
American male, you also see this countertrend in the
rise of interest in martial arts, the “fight
club” cult. The younger generation of RenGen males is
not sure what their roles are as straight males, and
so you’re going to see a lot of
experimentation, a lot of contradictions, playing out in the
marketplace. They will absolutely refuse to be
marketed to in a way that’s monolithic. So if
I’m a student of kung fu, I lift weights, and I
consider myself a standard heterosexual male,
don’t tell me that I can’t also buy hair gel
and be fashionable and wear scarves.
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