A little snarky, but also fascinating.
http://news.yahoo.com/why-the-soul-of-mitt-romney%E2%80%99s-america-can-be-found-at-williams-sonoma.html
Every bright-eyed presidential candidate deserves some
top-shelf data at the start of the campaign. Alone in his hotel room,
hoarse and exhausted, he lays it like a bridal trousseau: a portrait of
just the kind of voter he?s courting.
For Mitt Romney, the
acquisition and cultivation of data was time and money well spent.
Having all but clinched the Republican nomination with his win in
Wisconsin this week, the ludicrously handsome Mormon chief executive has
coalesced something that might credibly be called Romney?s America. And
he did it with data?digital, hypergranular data, not mere polling. Back
in January when Gingrich and Santorum were still on his heels, Romney
set loose a team of metadata-crunchers to find out who was persuadable.
Who belonged to his righter-wing rivals. Who was sticking with Barack
Obama.
That?s how he came to learn about his people?s online browsing habits. As The New York Times reported this week, would-be Romniacs evidently like to take online quizzes.
They also poke around the Internet looking for lore on technology,
literature, home repair and child care. To find out still more, the
campaign brought on board a private company that uses data about
browsing habits to craft advertising tailored to individual Web users.
[Related: GOP voter
reaction: Is Romney 'the guy' after winning Wisconsin, Maryland and D.C.?]
But for its capacity to sum up the vibe of the Romney voter, no data
point has been more resonant than the one that surfaced back in January,
when the L.A. Times cited it:
Williams-Sonoma.
That?s the housewares emporium that Romney people seem to favor. With
that bit of information came the invaluable concept of ?Williams-Sonoma
Republicans??a handy way to envision the well-heeled, home-owning
families who are unhappy with Obama, amenable to Romney?s message and
eager to keep shopping for, you know, Williams-Sonoma stuff.
Tortilla warmers. Walnut muddlers. Four-person raclettes.
Williams-Sonoma
Republicans?what a phrase! Snatching consumerism back from the
?latte-drinking, sushi-eating, Volvo-driving? Howard Dean liberals who
drew disdain for their spending habits back in 2004, the
Williams-Sonoma Republicans are rich, pro-business and tasteful. Not bad.
Certainly
the actual Williams-Sonoma has quietly convened a big, proud set of
Americans who strongly identify with the brand. If Williams-Sonoma
people were also Romney people, a canny campaigner could?in part?ride
the Williams-Sonoma research wave, and designate in the brand?s
consumers a silent majority?silent, this time, because they?re busy
shopping for tumblers and wedding gifts.
When Romney?s iPhone-wielding team started mining and sluicing the data,
the campaign figured out that potential Romney voters were flush. The
people they went on to micro-target with special phone calls had
household incomes of between $75,000 and $150,000.
Romney?s team
leveraged this info with what the L.A. Times called a ?sophisticated
and relentless? voter contact program. In other words, they called the
heck out of rich people. Still more microtargeting was made possible
when the research zeroed in on Williams-Sonoma.
It?s a reasonable
guess that Romney?s America is in possession of unforeclosed
houses?those non-condo, non-trailer, non-apartment things with big
kitchens?into which they plow a goodly amount of their nice annual
incomes.
And they don?t just pay the mortgage. Romney people
seem to be devotees of the ideology of foodie-ism?the peculiar
institution of the modern high-middle class that combines hedonism,
sanctimony and hand-over-fist consumerism. How else to cover the vast
smooth granite plains of American countertops except with juicers and
Panini presses and Beaba Babycook baby food makers from Williams-Sonoma?
Williams-Sonoma
caters to married people and people getting married. Its customers like
personal property. They own real estate. Unlike latte-drinkers and
sushi-eaters, they take their entertainments mostly at home. They?re
exceptionally house proud. And they?re also concerned with health, to
the extent that food preparation is implicated. (Joe Cross, of the
popular weight-loss documentary ?Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead,? preaches
juicing in a lavish video franchise called ?Reboot Your Life? on
Williams-Sonoma.com.)
A passion for Williams-Sonoma might even
speak to a religious affiliation, associated with family gatherings and
non-urban spaces. Lately the Williams-Sonoma site has an Easter cover.
?Celebrate the best of Spring with an elegant sit down dinner,? reads
the cover line to a photo of a trussed roast. The Williams-Sonoma site,
in April anyway, is for Christians who prize tradition (leg of lamb) as
well as the finer things (?sea salt? and ?shallot butter? are
recommended as accompaniments). Deeper in the Easter supplement is a
girl who looks to be African-American and a sandy-haired boy exclaiming
over a table set with handmade chick dolls and mint-green Easter eggs in
egg cups.
A search for ?Passover,? which starts Saturday, turns up two wan, small-print menus with recipes for matzoh-ball soup. Some observers have read ?Williams-Sonoma Republicans? as nothing
more than ?Republican women,? but that misses the fact that
Williams-Sonoma explicitly targets men, too, with barware and barbecue
paraphernalia. The Votaggio brothers?manly ?Top Chef? winners Michael
and Bryan?have been brought to Williams-Sonoma.com by an ?entertainment
marketing? firm, explicitly to attract bachelors thought to be enchanted
by the current trend for smoke-and-fire tough-guy cooking. Might the
same bait be used to lure voting bros to the Romney table? Maybe one day
soon the company can bring Romney to the site, where his platform can
be turned into special content, like the videos by Joe Cross and the
Voltaggio brothers.
In any case, something is working. The
Williams-Sonoma factor might even be predictive. Yahoo News has turned
up an astonishing correlation between number of Williams-Sonoma stores
in a given state and Romney?s performance there in the Republican
primaries. In short, Romney has won every state that boasts at least one
Williams-Sonoma store for every 1 million residents. If the correlation
holds, Romney will take the Williams-Sonoma-heavy states of California,
Delaware, New Jersey, Connecticut and Rhode Island.
But what about Rick Santorum?s home state of Pennsylvania? Will it go
to Romney? Well, it just misses the mark. Pennsylvania has one
Williams-Sonoma store for every 1,059,000 residents. Which means it?s
not in the bag yet.
[Related:
Poll shows Romney leading in Santorum?s home state]
Thinking of the cross-branding potential, I put in a call this week
to the Williams-Sonoma store in Madison, Wisc. I asked the manager if
she had seen Romney supporters out in force in the store on primary day,
or if the store would consider creating Romney casserole dishes. She
hung up on me.


I am a runner, knitter, scientist, DE-IVF veteran, and stage III colon cancer survivor.
Re: Romney's key demographic: Williams Sonoma shoppers
I am a runner, knitter, scientist, DE-IVF veteran, and stage III colon cancer survivor.
Above Us Only Sky
$75,000 is flush? Okaaaay....
If the outlet 40 minutes from my house is accurate, William-Sonoma, Pottery Barn, Pottery Barn Kids, PBTeen, and West Elm are all the same store.
they are owned by the same parent company.
Above Us Only Sky
If I could outfit my entire kitchen with Williams-Sonoma products, I would.
#personalanecdote=proof
my sisters did. One worked at W-S one Christmas season and my other sister bought a lot then too... The discount if you work there is amazing.
Above Us Only Sky
They should be able to offer amazing discounts because their stuff is ridiculously overpriced. This doesn't make it any less awesome, though.
And thinking this through, much of my kitchen IS Williams Sonoma because we registered there for our wedding. Wheeee!
bite your tongue. i love me some willie-so. if i could bathe in their meyer lemon soaps and lotions every day, i would.
i still have $550 in GCs burning a hole in my pocket.
Mine too..and they're in Rhode Island where it's apparently even more of a slam dunk!
Anecdote alert.
MH may vote for Romney, but I'm definitely going Obama. What does this say about us and all of our WS stuff we got for the wedding? Are we just a household divided? How does that figure into his data, I wonder?
Although thinking about it, most of the stuff on that registry was his idea. It never occurred to me that knives could cost over 1,000 dollars and that someone would buy that ish for you for a wedding.
I know - but the arugula eating elitists are just as likely to shop at West Elm as they are their local antique/thrift shop, IME.
I am a runner, knitter, scientist, DE-IVF veteran, and stage III colon cancer survivor.