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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

‘Tony el Tigre’ makes mark


Buyers from around the world who visit Kellogg's display at the Food Marketing Institute's annual show in Chicago see the cereal king's commitment to advancing its market share into the Hispanic community.  
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

CHICAGO — From “Tony el Tigre” on Frosted Flakes boxes to a Latin-dance exercise video, Kellogg’s is in hot pursuit of Hispanic grocery shoppers.

It’s not alone.

With young families and growing numbers, Hispanics are among the food industry’s most coveted customers. Kellogg Co., the nation’s dominant cereal maker, says it’s boosting marketing to Hispanics by 60 percent.

“Obviously, we care about kids — lots of our products are focused on children and the whole family,” said Sandra Uridge, senior director multicultural business. “Hispanics actually do what we call “event’ shopping. They go as a family to the store.”

Kellogg’s took the unusual step of focusing solely on Hispanic marketing at this week’s Food Marketing Institute Show, the annual trade show for supermarkets in Chicago.

And the company is just one example.

Unilever PLC, maker of Hellmann’s, Lipton and Skippy, among other brands, released results at the show of a study on how Hispanic customers shop for food.

Unilever had about 800 Hispanic households keep diaries and receipts from 3,621 trips to the store. The survey found that Hispanic shoppers tend to plan their shopping ahead, more so than shoppers generally, with an eye toward discount specials.

“Many retailers today don’t have a large percentage of Hispanics in the marketplace, and yet everybody will as time goes on,” said Mike Twitty, a senior group research manager for Unilever.

Hispanics are the youngest, fastest-growing segment of the American population, according to the Census Bureau.

They were 14 percent of the population in 2004 but made up nearly half the nation’s growth from 2000 to 2004. Their median age, just under 27 years, is younger than the general population. The median age is just over 31 years for blacks and just over 40 years for white non-Hispanics.

Hispanics are driving what little growth there is in supermarket shopping, said Libbey Paul, a senior vice president of marketing at ACNielsen, the marketing information company.

ACNielsen has begun measuring sales to Hispanics by looking at demographics and sales at individual stores.

Tony the Tiger, who says, “They’re g-r-r-reat!” in Kellogg’s ads, says, “G-r-r-riquisimos!” in Spanish-language promotions.

However, marketing by stores and food companies goes far beyond Spanish-language packages and ads.

Supermarkets are looking at the categories that Hispanics seem to buy more of — things that large, young families need, such as toothpaste, and products that younger adults want to buy, such as beer, Paul said.