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Tobacco Research Seminar Series

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Smoking can be a form of stress relief especially during heavy study periods ... celebrity interviews, entertainment reviews, and pop culture photography. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tobacco Research Seminar Series


1
Counter-SpinMarketing of Tobacco to Young Adult
Albertans
  • Tobacco Research Seminar Series
  • Friday, January 9, 2004

2
Smoking Rates
  • 30 of 20-24 year old Albertans are smokers
    (Canadian Tobacco Use Monitoring Survey CTUMS,
    2003)
  • 26 of males age 20-24
  • 33 of females age 20-24 (only demographic to
    increase over last year)
  • 11.7 of Alberta smokers initiated smoking after
    the age of 20. (Canadian Community Health Survey
    CCHS, 2002)

3
Smoking Rates Among Post-Secondary Students
  • Cairney and Lawrances (2002) data analysis from
    the 1994-95 National Population Health Survey
    resulted in a smoking prevalence of 26.4 among
    post-secondary students across Canada
  • The study also concluded that 27 of Canadian
    post-secondary students started smoking age 18
    years and over

4
Factors that Impact Higher Smoking Rates Among
Young Adults
  • Young adults are often away from their parents
    for the first time and experimentation with a
    variety of substances and behaviours is high
    (Freeman, Hennessy, Marzullo, 2001)
  • Smoking restrictions are weak in young adult
    social and work environments (Weschler, Kelley,
    Seiberg, Rigotti, 2001 Naquin Gilbert, 1996)

5
Factors that impact higher smoking rates among
young adults
  • Students are under a great deal of stress and
    lack the skills to deal with this stress. Smoking
    can be a form of stress relief especially during
    heavy study periods (Everett et al., 1999
    Martinelli,1999)
  • Most tobacco prevention programming is aimed at
    youth and most cessation programming is aimed at
    middle-aged adults

6
Factors that impact higher smoking rates among
young adults
  • The tobacco industry markets heavily to this age
    group

7
Why smoking prevention limited to youth fails
8
Life Transitions and Smoking
  • A young adult is leaving childhood on his way to
    adulthood. He is leaving the security and
    regiment of high school and his home. He is
    taking a new job he is going to college he is
    enlisting in the military. He is out on his own,
    with less support from his friends and family.
    These situations will be true for all generations
    of younger adults as they go from a period of
    transition from one world to another

Harden, RJR Marketing Research Department, 1984,
Bates number 502034940/4943.
9
Life transitions, stress, and smoking
Dealing with these changes in his life will
create increased levels of uncertainty, stress
and anxietyduring this stage in life, some
younger adults will choose to smoke and will use
smoking as a means of addressing some of these
areas. RJR document Harden, A Perspective on
Appealing to Younger Adult Smokers Feb 2, 1984,
502034940 -4943.
10
How the tobacco industry sells cigarettes to
young adults
  • Targeting and Segmentation strategies
  • Staying current with core values
  • Reaching out through environments and lifestyle
  • Instant gratification, price, and free stuff
  • Using Peer influence
  • Reinforcing the social acceptability of smoking

11
Major Players
  • The three major tobacco companies operating in
    Alberta, in order of market share are
  • Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited
  • Rothmans, Benson Hedges Inc.
  • JTI-Macdonald Corporation
  • Additionally, Skoal Inc., the major spit tobacco
    manufacturer has a strong Alberta presence.

12
JTI-Macdonald Corporation
  • Alternative Channels
  • Promotional campaign that focuses on exclusive
    sales in adult establishments.
  • Vending machines display JTI brands near bar, bar
    receives remuneration.
  • Cigarette girls approach customers for direct
    sales on promotional evenings.

13
Rothmans, Benson Hedges Inc.
  • Gold Club Series
  • Special event bar promotion campaign.
  • This campaign used to include
  • a website and club events,
  • but is currently limited to
  • exclusive sales contracts with
  • adult venues.

14
Rothmans, Benson Hedges Inc.
  • University Partnerships
  • Entered into exclusivity deals with University of
    Calgary and University of Lethbridge students
    unions.
  • In addition to vending machines in campus bars,
    will also sponsor concerts and other student
    events at the university.

15
Skoal Inc.
  • Go Smokeless
  • Promotional campaign to position spit tobacco as
    an alternative to smoking.
  •  
  • Ads
  • Hospitality industry supply magazine encouraging
    club/bar/restaurant owners to install spit
    tobacco vending machines in order to keep you
    customers inside, buying food/drinks instead of
    outside smoking

16
Skoal Inc.
  • Point of Sale Promotion
  • Vending machines display
  • Skoal brands near bar,
  • bar receives remuneration.
  • Merchandise
  • T-shirts, backpacks, etc with the Go Smokeless
    tag line

17
Imperial Tobacco
  • Rumbling Walls Events and Channel 2
  • Subsidiaries of Imperial Tobacco Canada that
    leverages the company's marketing through
    sponsorship activities. In using brand names it
    owns, such as definiti and REV, Rumbling Walls
    Events provides integrated marketing services
    through its magazines, Web sites and through the
    organization of events.

18
definiti
  • Imperials campaign for its flagship brand, Du
    Maurier.
  • Includes
  • Website http//www.definiti.ca/
  • Contains information on upcoming events,
    downloadable music, and lifestyle articles.

19
(No Transcript)
20
definiti
  • Live Events
  • Rum Jungle Grand Re-opening October 26-
    Edmonton
  • De La Soul December 11 Edmonton
  • Wayne Wonder September 9 Edmonton
  • Jimmy Van M October 22 Edmonton
  • Tall Paul December 2 Calgary
  • Armand Van Helden December 21 Calgary
  • Sponsored the premiere of The Company at the
    Toronto International Film Festival Sept 2003

21
definiti
  • Exclusive Venues
  • Coyotes Calgary
  • RubySkyeBar Edmonton
  • Rum Jungle Edmonton

22
definiti
  • Magazine
  • Direct mail to young adults (18-35 is the target
    population) that contains lifestyle articles,
    celebrity interviews, entertainment reviews, and
    pop culture photography.

23
definiti
  • Ads
  • Radio ads on top 40 stations promoting the live
    events
  • Print ads in alternative weeklies, including See,
    Vue, and FFWD, that promote the event, website
    and magazine

24
Imperial Tobacco Canada Artistic Development Board
  • Forty-four individuals in their final year of
    study at 14 different universities across Canada
    have been donations for the public presentation
    of their finished work in the
  • visual arts, cinema, video and animation,
    multimedia and new technologies.
  • This year's donations total 450,000 in funding.

25
AADAC Consultation with Young Adults
  • In the fall of 2003, 10 focus groups with 18 to
    24 year olds (smokers and non-smokers).
  • Full report is available on the AADAC website at

26
Young Adult Focus Groups
  • Focus Groups were comprised of the following
  • 82 young adults
  • 8 groups of smokers and 2 groups of non-smokers
  • Focus groups in Edmonton (2), Calgary (2), Red
    Deer, Medicine Hat, Rocky Mountain House,
    Lethbridge, Fort McMurray and Slave Lake

27
Factors Impacting Young Adults Smoking Rates
  • Stakeholders consulted found that many factors
    were impacting the smoking rates of this age
    group
  • Of legal age to purchase cigarettes for the
    first time
  • Many have been smoking for a few years and are
    now addicted
  • Less parental supervision and increased degree
    of independence
  • May have disposable income
  • It is a transition period a lot of
    experimentation
  • This group does not factor in the long-term
    health effects of actions. Young adults have
    not felt many of the health effects of smoking
    (see themselves as invincible)

28
Factors Impacting Young Adults Smoking Rates
contd
  • Very social age, very influenced by group
    behavior. Smoking is seen as a way for group
    bonding
  • Spend a lot of time in bars, nightclubs, and are
    often in places supportive of smoking
  • Smoking is seen as a break, or a way to ease
    stress
  • Often in repetitive and/or laborious job
    situations favorable to smoking
  • This age were not as targeted by anti-smoking
    ads when younger
  • Tobacco companies have been targeting this group

29
Young Adult Focus Groups Positive Aspects of
Smoking
  • That it went well with alcohol or coffee
  • The buzz or physical sensation
  • Relieved stress
  • A good way to ease uncomfortable social
    situations
  • Acted as a hunger suppressant or kept weight down
  • Allowed for a break in the stresses or routine of
    the day (common with young mothers)
  • Allowed for a break from work (common with those
    in service and hospitality industries)

30
Young Adult Focus Groups Negative Aspects of
Smoking
  • Most focus group participants concentrated on
    immediate/short-term effects of smoking smell,
    shortness of breath, coughing
  • Next most mentioned were long-term effects like
    possible cancer, emphysema, etc.
  • Price
  • Lack of control over addiction, behaviours
  • Judgments of non-smokers, and disappointing
    family members.

31
Young Adult Focus Groups Negative Consequences
of Smoking
  • Feeling that they were being negatively judged by
    others (especially those with children)
  • Made to feel like outcasts
  • Smoking had kept them from achieving sports
    goals, jobs, apartments

32
Young Adult Focus Groups Quitting Smoking
  • Smokers said that the positive influences to
    quitting would include
  • Further increase in the price of cigarettes
  • Further ban on smoking in public places such as
    bars
  • Pressure from significant others
  • Their new role as parents

33
Young Adult Focus Groups Barriers to Quitting
Smoking
  • Most focus group participants had tried to quit
    in the past.
  • They felt unable to quit due to
  • Social situations, especially those including
    alcohol
  • Being influenced by friends or significant
    others who smoked.

34
Young Adult Focus Groups Perception of the
Tobacco Industry- Sponsorship
  • Some participants had seen advertising at
    sporting or cultural events, such as car races
    and electronic music events.
  • There was ambivalence about sponsorship. Even
    some non-smokers felt that it was positive that
    tobacco companies sponsored events. There was a
    low overall recognition of corporate sponsorship
    as advertising.

35
Questions?
  • Becky Freeman
  • Program Consultant
  • AADAC, Tobacco Reduction Unit
  • 2nd Floor, 10909 Jasper Avenue
  • Edmonton AB
  • T5J 3M9
  • Phone (780) 415-0179
  • Fax (780) 427-2352
  • www.aadac.com/tobacco
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