Download - Consumers who care
1CONSUMERS WHO CARE Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen Company
C o n s u m e r s W h o C a r eAnd SAy They’ll RewARd CompAnieS wiTh TheiR wAlleTS August 2013
3Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen Company
Do Consumers Care about soCial impaCt?In the year and a half since Nielsen first published “The Global, Socially-
Conscious Consumer” report, which examined consumer interest in
corporate social impact, models of corporate responsibility have continued
to evolve. The concept of creating shared value, introduced by Michael
Porter and Mark Kramer, has caught on as companies emphasize their
ability to make an impact through their core operations, in some ways
de-emphasizing a separate “social responsibility” agenda. John Mackey
and Raj Sisodia made a similar case for companies in their 2012 book
Conscious Capitalism, which celebrated the “innate potential of business
to make a positive impact on the world.”
These concepts, which can be viewed as part of a broader sustainable
development agenda, aim to integrate social impact into the heart of
corporate strategy. Meanwhile, traditional corporate philanthropy—gifts
of cash, goods and services to non-profit organizations—also continues
to grow.1 Somewhere between traditional corporate philanthropy and
the emerging shared-value ideal, brands continue to align business and
social interests through cause-marketing opportunities: using social
and environmental efforts to increase consumer engagement. IEG, a
sponsorship consultancy, estimates that cause-marketing sponsorships
reached $1.7 billion in 2012 in North America alone, and this investment
will increase in 2013.2
Nielsen recently surveyed more than 29,000 online respondents in 58
countries to see whether any of this matters to consumers. As in 2011,
we used stated willingness to spend more on goods and services from
companies that have implemented programs to give back to society as a
proxy for how much consumers care about brand investments in social
impact. The results provide one simple gauge for whether consumers
care—about cause marketing, shared value, conscious capitalism or
other pursuits of corporate social impact—and they help to quantify the
growing desire among consumers to reward those companies they view
as socially responsible.
AbouT The GlobAl Survey MeThodoloGy
The findings in this survey
are based on respondents
with online access across
58 countries. While an
online survey methodology
allows for tremendous
scale and global reach,
it provides a perspective
only on the habits of
existing Internet users,
not total populations. In
developing markets where
online penetration has not
reached majority potential,
audiences may be younger
and more affluent than
the general population of
that country. Additionally,
survey responses about
purchasing habits
are based on claimed
behavior, rather than
actual metered data.
1 Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, “A Sneak Peak at Corporate Giving Trends,” June 2013
2 IEG, “2013 Sponsorship Outlook,” January 2013
4 CoNSuMerS Who CAre
Consumers inCreasingly CareIn the latest survey, half of all respondents (50%) said they would be
willing to reward companies that give back to society by paying more for
their goods and services—up from 45 percent in 2011. The percentage
of respondents who agreed increased among both males and females
and all age breaks covered. While respondents under age 30 are still the
most likely to say they’d spend more, the attitudes among respondents
ages 40 to 54 are shifting most rapidly. Among consumers ages 40-44,
for instance, 50 percent agreed that they would spend extra for goods and
services from companies giving back to society, up from just 38 percent
two years ago.
“While cause-marketing programs seem to resonate most strongly among
younger respondents, the rapid change in sentiment among middle-aged
consumers expands the cause opportunity for brands,” said Nic Covey,
vice president of corporate social responsibility at Nielsen. “Today, brands
can confidently focus purpose messaging on both younger and older
consumers.”
5Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen CompanyCoNSuMerS Who CAre
Willing to spend more by demographic group
Source: Nielsen Global Survey on Corporate Social Responsibility, Q3 2011 and Q1 2013
Percent who agree and strongly agree
2011
UNDER 2021 TO 2425 TO 2930 TO 3435 TO 39
40 TO 4445 TO 4950 TO 5455 TO 5960 TO 64
65 AND OVER
AGES
44%53%52%49%51%38%39%37%38%33%32%
49%55%56%53%53%50%47%48%43%42%34%
2013 CHANGE FROM 2011 / 2013 100%
GLOBAL AVERAGE - 50%FEMALE - 47%
MALE - 53%GLOBAL AVERAGE - 45%
FEMALE - 43%MALE - 47%
20132011
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geography mattersCompanies will have an easier time finding consumers willing to pay
extra in India and the Philippines than in Russia, Belgium or Estonia. The
density of respondents willing to spend more on products and services
from companies that give back varies considerably across the 58 countries
Nielsen examined. Broadly speaking, European respondents were less
likely to pay more for goods and services from companies that “give
back”—just 36 percent of consumers in the region said they would do
so. Meanwhile in India, the Philippines, Thailand, and Indonesia, more
than two-thirds of respondents said they’d pay extra. A significant three-
quarters of respondents in India agreed that they would do so.
What makes consumers in India nearly three times more likely to reward
companies that give back than those in Estonia and Belgium? Existing
high citizen expectations of corporate social responsibly (CSR) may be
the reason. Expectations in India are so great that a bill working its way
through parliament contains a clause mandating CSR investments from
certain companies3. Conversely, a broader cynicism toward business
seems to prevail in Europe. A study released by the European Commission
earlier this year showed that 41 percent of citizens in European Union
member countries felt that the overall influence of companies on society
was negative, more than citizens in other major economies4.
“In countries where skepticism toward corporate social responsibility runs
high, cause-marketers face an uphill battle,” said Covey. “In these markets,
especially, social impact programs must be incontestably authentic to a
company’s business objectives, vision and values.”
3 Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Government of India, “The Companies Bill, 2012,” December 2012
4 European Commission, “How Companies Influence Our Society: Citizens’ View,” April 2013
7CONSUMERS WHO CARE Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen Company
INDIAPHILIPPINES
THAILANDINDONESIA
EGYPTVIETNAM
PERUPAKISTAN
VENEZUELACOLOMBIA
MALAYSIACHINA
SOUTH AFRICABRAZIL
MEXICOBULGARIA
CHILEHONG KONG
SAUDI ARABIASINGAPORE
GREECESLOVAKIA
ARGENTINAAUSTRIA
UNITED ARAB EMIRATESPORTUGAL
SWITZERLANDISRAEL
ITALYUNITED STATES
TAIWANTURKEY
ROMANIAIRELAND
LATVIAHUNGARY
SWEDENNEW ZEALANDSOUTH KOREA
SPAINGERMANY
CANADADENMARK
NORWAYPOLAND
AUSTRALIALITHUANIA
UKRAINECZECH REPUBLIC
UNITED KINGDOMJAPAN
FRANCENETHERLANDS
FINLANDCROATIA
RUSSIABELGIUMESTONIA
56%68%60%56%57%64%51%60%54%59%56%64%34%46%54%NA54%50%47%40%31%NA42%41%49%38%39%36%38%36%43%48%38%36%25%32%34%32%44%31%32%33%30%37%30%31%28%28%28%27%25%27%20%31%36%29%26%31%
75%71%68%66%64%64%62%61%60%60%60%59%55%55%54%53%53%52%52%52%52%50%50%50%49%46%46%44%44%44%43%43%42%42%42%42%41%41%41%40%38%38%37%37%37%37%36%35%32%32%31%31%31%31%31%29%28%27%
2011 2013 CHANGE FROM 2011 / 2013 100%
groWing Willingness to spend more on products
from socially-responsible companies
Source: Nielsen Global Survey on Corporate Social Responsibility, Q3 2011 and Q1 2013
Percent who agree and strongly agree
8 CoNSuMerS Who CAre
What they’ll say anD What they’ll DoOf course it’s unlikely that all respondents who said they will spend more
money on goods and services from companies that implement programs
to give back actually will spend more. This is why we look at this metric
as a broader proxy. For starters, it’s unclear how many opportunities
consumers actually have to make this choice, today. At the moment of
truth—at the store, online and elsewhere—consumers have little clarity
around which companies have programs to give back and which ones
don’t. In the aforementioned European Commission study, just 36 percent
of citizens felt they were informed about what companies do to behave
responsibly toward society in their country.
Still, about four out of 10 global respondents in Nielsen’s survey reported
that they have rewarded companies that give back. Forty-three percent of
respondents globally agreed they spent more on products and services
from companies that have implemented programs to give back to society
(just 7 percent fewer than said they would be willing). Men were slightly
more likely to have done so than women (45 percent compared to 41
percent), and—as with willingness—younger respondents were more
likely than older respondents to say that they have done so.
9CoNSuMerS Who CAre Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen Company
self-reported purchasing from socially-responsible companies
UNDER 2021 TO 2425 TO 2930 TO 3435 TO 39
40 TO 4445 TO 4950 TO 5455 TO 5960 TO 64
65 AND OVER
AGES
45%48%52%48%45%41%36%37%33%33%20%
2013 100%
GLOBAL AVERAGE - 43%FEMALE - 41%
MALE - 45%
Percent who agree and strongly agree
(Spent More in the Past 6 Months)
Source: Nielsen Global Survey on Corporate Social Responsibility, Q1 2013
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Source: Nielsen Global Survey on Corporate Social Responsibility, Q1 2013
Looking at different rates of claimed purchase behavior by country, we
again see Asia-Pacific countries such as Indonesia (56%), Thailand (66%),
and the Philippines (64%) demonstrating commitment to products and
services from socially-responsible companies. Interestingly, a look at the
countries with a high willingness to pay more, but lower rates of actually
paying more for products and services from companies that give back,
reveals countries that are uniquely ripe for cause marketing programs.
In Slovakia, for instance, 50 percent of respondents said they would be
willing to spend more, but just 22 percent said they had actually done so
(a 28-point gap). Similar spreads existed in Bulgaria (53 percent willing,
but 31 percent who had), Peru (62 percent willing, and 42 percent who
had), and Hong Kong (52 percent willing, but just 32 percent who had).
largest gap betWeen Willingness to spend more
and self-reported purchasing
SLOVAKIABULGARIA
PERUHONG KONG
ARGENTINAEGYPT
DENMARKCZECH REPUBLIC
ISRAELVENEZUELA
50%53%62%52%50%64%37%32%44%60%
22%31%42%32%31%46%19%15%27%44%
SPENT MORE IN PAST 6 MONTHS
65%
WILLING TO SPEND MORE
Percent who agree and strongly agree
11CONSUMERS WHO CARE Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen Company
engaging soCially-ConsCious ConsumersGlobally, Nielsen information shows that the share of consumers
interested in companies that have implemented programs to give back
to society is growing. Willingness to spend more on products and
services from companies that have given back increased in 43 out of the
58 countries Nielsen measured. Across demographic groups, too, social-
consciousness is a growing factor in the purchase process.
“Today, the question is not whether consumers care about social impact,
but which ones, how much and how to appeal to them,” said Covey. “The
answer isn’t necessarily a traditional cause-marketing campaign—general
responsibility, sustainable innovation and purpose messaging might
also engage these consumers. No matter the approach, savvy brands are
figuring out how to hit this nerve.”
To get started, first compare your brand’s consumer segments and
markets against the rates of social-consciousness found in this report.
Are your customers more or less likely to care? Next, determine whether
traditional modes of cause-marketing or “transactional philanthropy”
can and should be authentically executed by your brand. Alternatively or
in addition, are there messages of core purpose and shared value that
the brand could more deliberately communicate to consumers? When
effectively conveyed, a powerful purpose demonstrating shared value
ought to be more effective and sustainable than a stand-alone cause effort
any day, but this approach will not work for every brand and category.
Find ways to appeal to this segment of consumers and your brand is
bound to reap rewards and feel good about it along the way.
12 CONSUMERS WHO CARE
Argentina 66%
Australia 89%
Austria 80%
Belgium 81%
Brazil 46%
Bulgaria 51%
Canada 83%
Chile 59%
China 40%
Colombia 60%
Croatia 71%
Czech Republic 73%
Denmark 90%
Egypt 36%
Estonia 78%
Finland 89%
France 80%
Germany 83%
Greece 53%
Hong Kong 75%
Hungary 65%
India 11%
Indonesia 22%
Ireland 77%
Israel 70%
Italy 58%
Japan 80%
Latvia 72%
Lithuania 65%
Malaysia 61%
Mexico 37%Netherlands 93%
New Zealand 88%
Norway 97%
Pakistan 15%
Peru 37%
Philippines 32%
Poland 65%
Portugal 55%
Romania 44%
Russia 48%
Saudi Arabia 49%
Singapore 75%
Slovakia 79%
South Africa 17%
South Korea 83%
Spain 67%
Sweden 93%
Switzerland 82%
Taiwan 75%
Thailand 30%
Turkey 46%
United Arab
Emirates 71%
United Kingdom 84%
Ukraine 34%
United States 78%
Venezuela 41%
Vietnam 34%
AbouT The NielSeN GlobAl Survey
The Nielsen Global Survey on Corporate Social Responsibility was
conducted between February 18 and March 8, 2013 and polled more
than 29,000 online consumers in 58 countries throughout Asia-Pacific,
Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa and North America. The
sample has quotas based on age and sex for each country based on their
Internet users, and is weighted to be representative of Internet consumers
and has a maximum margin of error of ±0.6%. This Nielsen survey is
based on the behavior of respondents with online access only. Internet
penetration rates vary by country. Nielsen uses a minimum reporting
standard of 60 percent Internet penetration or 10M online population for
survey inclusion. The Nielsen Global Survey, which includes the Global
Consumer Confidence Index, was established in 2005.
iNTerNeT PeNeTrATioN
Source: Internet World Stats, June 30, 2012
13CONSUMERS WHO CARE Copyright © 2013 The Nielsen Company
AbouT NielSeN Nielsen Holdings N.V. (NYSE: NLSN) is a global information and
measurement company with leading market positions in marketing
and consumer information, television and other media measurement,
online intelligence and mobile measurement. Nielsen has a presence in
approximately 100 countries, with headquarters in New York, USA and
Diemen, the Netherlands.
For more information, visit www.nielsen.com.
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14 CONSUMERS WHO CARE