We’ve already pointed out that not all lesbians are the same, with different experiences and history. Business should also apply this to seeing the LGBT market as a whole.
This is because the LGBT community as a market is as diverse as their rainbow flag and businesses would do better knowing that.
As Sean Howell of Business2community noted, the LGBT market as a demographic is not monolithic.
The LGBT market as a demographic myth
Since the late ’70s, Howell said the LGBT market had been seen as having “hyper education, higher income, more management positions, more influencers, and more spending compared to straight peers.”
“The common (and incorrect) ‘wisdom’ goes that gay people get higher educational degrees and work harder at their jobs to offset societal homophobia, and when they partner up, they become DINKs (that is, Double Income couples with No Kids),” Howell said.
“But this popular wisdom is a lie– it has many holes and leads advertisers astray when marketing to LGBT consumers. By exploring the causes and facts behind the myth, we get a more complete picture of LGBT affluence and a stronger idea of how to navigate the LGBT market,” he added.
Howell said the problem with this view is that most data comes from out gay and lesbian individuals, and this ignores bisexual, transgender, and closeted people.
Likewise, it doesn’t take into consideration of people who experience same-sex attraction and gender non-conformity but don’t identify as LGBT.
As such, he said, “those willing to disclose their LGBT identity may be more financially secure than those who refrain for fear of worsened poverty or discrimination.” This may have affected the data of previous studies, he said.
The state of the LGBT market
Instead of the above common view, here’s a snapshot of the LGBT community now.
Currently, DINK LGBT couples are less common given that same-sex marriage and adoption rights have become legal nationwide.
In a 2010 U.S. Census, an estimated 22 percent of cohabitating lesbian couples are raising kids while there are 10 percent of cohabitating gay couples doing the same.
Likewise, a 2013 Williams Institute study noted that lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals and couples continue to face higher levels of poverty than heterosexuals.
The study noted that a child in a same-sex household is “twice as likely to be poor than one in a mixed-sex household.”
More importantly, poverty rates go up when you consider “non-white and transgender people as well as residence within states lacking employment, housing, and other LGBT non-discrimination protections.”
Any further study of the LGBT affluence should also look at the economic impact of anti-LGBT discrimination.
These range from employees airing anti-gay sentiment and discomfort when faced with the possibility of having an LGT superior.
There are also the effects on LGBT physical and mental health due to social stigma and discrimination, and the corresponding economic toll because of this.
The wide range of the LGBT market
Though there is an income and equality gap between LGBT and straight people, the gay and lesbian income also falls across its own wide spectrum.
In a Prudential study that ran from 2012 to 2013 that covered 1,401 LGBT Americans of a variety of ages and “outness,” 22 percent said they were “upscale or doing well” while 47 percent said they were “paying their bills and staying independent.”
Meanwhile, an important 31 percent said they felt they were “on the edge or falling behind.”
“Far from being monolithic, the LGBT population reflects an array of income, race/ethnicity, geographic locations and political opinions,” Howell wrote.
“Nevertheless, it collectively has an estimated buying power of $884 billion, and companies are spending an estimated $370 million to connect with that power through online, print, live event and television advertising, particularly in LGBT-specific spaces,” he added.
After decades of political demonization and media exclusion, Howell said: “The LGBT market has become a highly responsive one that exhibits brand loyalty, especially when media feature LGBT people or champion LGBT sociopolitical causes like employment rights, adoption rights, and HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment.”