The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Survey looks at blue state, red state buyers

Online marketplac­e studies consumers’ different traits.

- By Gene Marks Washington Post

Your business, like many businesses, has customers all across the country thanks to the internet. Your job is to find more of them and target your products to the demographi­cs that are most inclined to buy. The problem is that you have limited marketing resources and don’t want to waste money by targeting the wrong group. Should politics be a factor? You would think that the Trump supporter in Texas would share little in common with the Hillary fan from Chicago. A new survey may help you figure this out.

According to an infographi­c released Monday by Goodshop, an online marketplac­e that donates a portion of every sale to more than 114,000 nonprofits and schools, your potential customers in red and blue states are different in some ways, the same in others.

For example, red state people seem to shop travel sites more than their blue state counterpar­ts and favor brands like Tripadviso­r, Hotels.com and Orbitz. So if you’re selling travel-related products or services you may find more customers there. Not surprising­ly, people in red states consider themselves more independen­t (doesn’t Texas want to secede?) and want less help not only from the government, but, apparently, from contractor­s too. They prefer do-it-yourself projects and like arts and crafts stores as well as the big brand hardware outlets like Home Depot and Lowe’s more so than those in blue states. Again, if that’s the kind of product or service you provide ... well, now you know where to sell.

Regardless of these difference­s, there’s one thing that both Republican­s and Democrats can agree on: value. Kohl’s, Walmart, Target and Amazon were the favorite brand names in both red and blue states. Sure, they’re huge and dominating. But these are all brands that provide affordable products for daily use and emphasize convenienc­e over specializa­tion. Apparently, there are a lot of 99 percenters out there, regardless of their political affiliatio­n.

The Goodshop survey found a few other interestin­g facts. Amazon is not in the favorite top 10 brand of Washington Staters ... even though the company is headquarte­red there. In California, See’s Candies ranked in the top three of resident favorites even though the company is relatively unknown outside of the state (see what happens when you focus locally?).

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