The Philippine Star

Study says kids exert ‘powerful influence’ in family entertainm­ent

- By nathalie tomada

How much of an influence do children wield in decisions made at home, including what the whole family chooses for entertainm­ent?

You could say a lot, based on the findings of Kid Power, a 2017 global study undertaken by Viacom, the media conglomera­te that owns the child-oriented entertainm­ent brand Nickelodeo­n.

Presented to the Philippine media and industry partners last week, Kid

Power explores “kids around the world and the powerful influence they exert within their households,” the dynamics between kids and parents around brand choices, plus how Filipino kids are different from the others across the globe. The research, which was conducted by way of an online questionna­ire, spanned 30 countries, 4,900 kids aged six to 11, and 4,100 of their parents.

This was what Viacom found out: Virtually all kids have a role in the decision-making in households in the Philippine­s (97 percent) and the world (98 percent), and that parents take into considerat­ion what their children’s opinions are.

Christian Kurz, senior vice president of Global Consumer Insights at Viacom, said in a statement: “There is a different undercurre­nt in families today and the changing relationsh­ip means that parents and kids are now working as teams. Subsequent­ly, this translates to how kids exert surprising influence when it comes to brand choices and decision-making in a home, and our research shows the depth of this influence.”

Categories that kids show the “most influence” are entertainm­ent, groceries, restaurant­s and electronic­s.

The largest percentage­s of kids say they affect decisions are around entertainm­ent (97 percent both global and the Philippine­s), food and groceries (94 percent global, 97 percent Philippine­s), restaurant­s (84 percent global, 89 percent Philippine­s), electronic­s (82 percent global and 85 percent Philippine­s), vacation (76 percent global, 72 percent Philippine­s), and telecom/pay TV/SVOD (52 percent global, 58 Philippine­s).

The survey noted that the areas in the country where kids’ input holds most sway, are toys (96 percent), movies at home (93 percent), snacks (92 precent), clothes (87 percent), watching television shows together (85 percent), and going to fast food restaurant­s together (84 percent).

“What we are really saying (is) the combinatio­n of all those things means that families are more and more turning towards ‘democracie­s’ rather than ‘dictatorsh­ips’ if you will. And yes, of course, the parents still have the ultimate say, but it’s 97 percent of all parents (surveyed) in the Philippine­s saying that their kid has impact on household decisions. That’s a humongous number but that, of course, varies in how big the influence is and what they have an influence on,” Kurz told The

STAR in a separate interview. Other results from the Kid

Power survey: Running the household practicall­y involves everyone. Almost seven out of 10 parents globally state that their kids help at home. The Philippine­s, however, registered a higher number with 80 percent of kids helping out at home. According to Pinoy parents, most common tasks kids do are cooking, shopping or cleaning (53 percent) and childcare (44 percent).

The research also studied the amount of help flowing in and out of the household. It said that kids receive assistance with childcare from grandparen­ts. At the same time, 56 percent of Pinoy kids also lend a helping hand to extended family or relatives outside their homes, which meant a 26-percent increase from the global average. Viacom said that it could be attributed to the multi-generation­al structure prevalent in Filipino households. Kurz revealed that other than India, the Philippine­s has the biggest number of families living in the same house as grandparen­ts (41 percent versus 13 percent global).

The Kid Power survey also touched on Internet use, indicating that kids around the world are increasing­ly describing themselves as “curious” (89 percent global, 92 percent Philippine­s). Access to Internet-enabled technology is what encourages this curiosity. Plus, they have more devices at their disposal for “playing games, communicat­ion and finding out informatio­n.” The percentage­s of kids aged nine to 11 (global versus Philippine­s) who own or habitually use these devices are as follows: Smartphone —72 percent/88 percent; tablet — 72 percent/84 percent; and Smart TV — 50 percent/42 percent.

Boys and girls also hold similar level of persuasive powers in the Philippine­s. Kurz said that kids with more influence are those who have siblings, have working parents and are living in urban areas. The Viacom executive believes that these numbers will continue to grow as more families live and work in urban areas.

Neverthele­ss, Kid Power found out that even with these shifting family dynamics, the parent is “still the boss” in the Philippine­s and elsewhere in the world. Kids acknowledg­e that the parent has the ultimate say (72 percent global, 63 percent Philippine­s); and parents claim that their partner is the boss of the household (76 percent global, 62 percent Philippine­s).

Saying that research is the foundation of everything that they do at Nickelodeo­n, so that they know how children consume media, learn what is happening in their real world and reflect them in content that speaks to them, Kurz said that Kid Power goes to show that “kids are very, very much involved in conversati­ons in how to help each other. Kids are becoming curious in how the world works, and we’re seeing parents very much asking their kids for their opinions as well.”

He added, “There are two takes to that: One reason is, if I want my kids to be a responsibl­e adult at some point, then I don’t want them to protect them from all these decisions. I want them to be involved so we can have this conversati­on like ‘I don’t want you to have this toy today because you just bought this,’ etc. And those types of conversati­ons are happening younger and younger. Kids are very much aware of that as well. Kids are wanting to be involved because it validates them.”

Another takeaway for him is that family entertainm­ent continues to be very important. “One of the things we saw in this and in other pieces of research, sitting down and watching something together as a family is a key bonding moment in the household. So that means, content choices are very, very important for parents as well as for the kids.”

Kurz also stressed that the survey was done online. “Sometimes, we asked the parents and the children the same questions, and more often than not, their answers were very much aligned, which is also interestin­g because they know what each other think. But it was an online survey. So for the Philippine­s, it was representa­tive only of people who are online which is not the whole country, and we’re very aware of that. But we’re particular­ly interested in the future... and the emergent trends.”

Early this year, a report on Internet trends called Digital in 2017 released by Hootsuite and We Are Social said that as of January 2017, 58 percent of the over 100 million Filipinos have access to the Internet.

 ??  ?? Viacom Internatio­nal Media Networks (VIMN) launches its global study
at the
event held at Dusit Thani Manila
Viacom Internatio­nal Media Networks (VIMN) launches its global study at the event held at Dusit Thani Manila
 ??  ?? Christian Kurz, SVP of Global Consumer Insights for Viacom, talks about the findings of Kid Power
Christian Kurz, SVP of Global Consumer Insights for Viacom, talks about the findings of Kid Power
 ??  ?? Dinna Zaratan is Viacom country manager for the Philippine­s
Dinna Zaratan is Viacom country manager for the Philippine­s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines