left
right
CHART CLOSE-UP FROM THE STORY:
GLBT Consumers Don't See Financial Services as Others Do »
scroll down to read the full story
harris-glbt-finance-financial-information-sources.jpg

GLBT Consumers Don't See Financial Services as Others Do

Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender adults are less comfortable with financial services providers than heterosexual consumers, according to a recent national survey conducted online by Harris Interactive and Witeck-Combs Communications.

Though over half (54%) of GLBT adults report they are very or somewhat comfortable in the environment created by their current financial services provider, two-thirds of heterosexuals (67%) say they are very or somewhat comfortable.

harris-glbt-finance-comfort-with-financial-services-provider.jpg

GLBT adults also report slightly higher tendencies to seek financial information from internet sources, their friends and from television sources than do heterosexuals:

harris-glbt-finance-financial-information-sources.jpg

  • One-third (33%) of GLBT consumers cite the internet as a source for financial information they use often, compared with 26% of heterosexuals.
  • One-fifth (20%) of GLBT adults turn to their friends often, compared with 13% of heterosexual adults.
  • Some 11% of GLBT consumers say television is a source they turn to often, compared with 6% of heterosexuals.

“There are few occasions when consumers must share such intimate aspects of their family and household than when talking with financial services representatives,” said Bob Witeck, CEO of Witeck-Combs Communications. “These findings reflect that intimacy, and suggest that financial providers still have work to do to make all their customers feel comfortable and fully respected.”

The new survey also identified several gaps in the ways that GLBT consumers appear to save and invest assets (i.e., in slightly lower proportion to non-GLBT counterparts):

harris-glbt-finance-financial-account-ownership.jpg

  • Three-quarters (75%) of heterosexuals state that they have savings accounts, but only 67% of GLBT adults say so.
  • Some 32% of heterosexuals say they have investment accounts, but just 24% of GLBT adults say they have one.
  • 13% of heterosexuals report having neither savings nor investment accounts, compared with 18% of GLBT adults.

“Financial services marketers should see these gaps as invitations to reach out to same-sex households and their families sensitively in the future,” Witeck said. “All families have the need to invest, save and protect their assets, especially when weathering tough economic times like those we face now.”

About the study: The new nationwide survey of 2,637 U. adults, (age 18+), of whom 343 self-identified as gay or lesbian (which includes an oversample of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender adults), was conducted online between June 9 and 16, 2008 by Harris Interactive in conjunction with Witeck-Combs Communications, Inc., which has expertise in the GLBT market. Figures for age, sex, race, education, region and income were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population. Propensity score weighting also was used to adjust for respondents’ propensity to be online.

TODAY'S MARKETINGCHARTS STORIES

Marketers Adopt Emerging Channels

More than eight in 10 marketers plan to leverage at least one emerging marketing channel in the next...

Digital, Cable News Audiences Only Media to Grow in 2009

For the third consecutive year, only digital and cable news saw audiences grow among the key sectors that...

Private Label CPG Dollar, Unit Sales Continue Growth

For the second straight month, private label CPG dollar and unit sales both rose in February 2010. According...

Behind the Curve: Week Ended March 19, 2010

Below are some links to recent research news, studies and lists from the collection of items that MarketingCharts...

Top 10 House and Garden Websites - February 2010

Note: The Hitwise data featured is based on US market share of visits as defined by the IAB,...

Renewable Energy Report - Click Here!
advertisement