ARE YOU A LATINO LEADER WHO WOULD LIKE TO HOST A GRASSROOTS FUNDRAISING PARTY FOR PRESIDENT OBAMA?

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

In October of 2011, Obama for America launched the Futuro Fund so that supporters like you could make an investment our community’s future and own a piece of this campaign. You have stepped up in a VERY big way. With your leadership and generous contributions we have raised an unprecedented amount and proven that Latinos stand with President Obama.

Over the course of the last few months, we have worked with you to expand our movement. As we launch Latinos for Obama nationwide this month, the Futuro Fund is asking you to take the next step and bring the conversation into your living room.

“On Thursday April 26th, supporters across the country are hosting Futuro Fund House Parties to talk with their friends and neighbors about what’s at stake for our community between now and November.”

Hosting a house party is as simple as inviting folks to your home, chatting about why you decided to get involved and asking them to step up and own a piece of the campaign too.

As a leader of the Futuro Fund, can you host a grassroots fundraising party on Thursday April 26th? Sign up here to get started.

If you don’t normally do this sort of thing, don’t worry. We’ll help you every step of the way and provide you with all of the information and materials to make your party a success. During your party, you and your guests will join campaign leadership for an exciting National Call.

This effort is historic. This campaign will be won or lost in our community and you can make all the difference. Please help us build the best grassroots organization in American history!

Sign up today to host a grassroots fundraising party.

PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT THE HISPANIC BLOG POSTS RESOURCES FOR HISPANICS, AND IN THIS CASE I RECEIVED THIS INFORMATION FROM PRESIDENT OBAMA’S FUTURO FUND. THEREFORE IF THE REPUBLICANS SEND ME INFORMATION REGARDING ANYTHING THEY MAY BE DOING FOR LATINOS, I WOULD GLADLY POST FOR THEM AS WELL!!! THE IMPORTANT THING I WANT HISPANICS TO UNDERSTAND ABOUT MY BLOG IS THAT I’M NOT HERE TO TELL YOU WHO TO VOTE FOR, I’M SIMPLY HERE TO DO WHAT I CAN TO GET YOU INVOLVED IN OUR POLITICAL SYSTEM WHETHER REPUBLICAN OR DEMOCRAT. GOD BLESS!

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ARE LATINOS THE CONSUMER POWERHOUSE RESHAPING AMERICA?

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Studio Gang Architects + Joseph Lekas Photography

This Easter weekend I went to an exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York called “Foreclosure: Rehousing The American Dream,” a fascinating view into what the future of urban and suburban housing in America could look like. For this exhibit, five architectural teams proposed how they would re-invest the TARP money of 2008 to revitalize foreclosure-ravaged suburbs near five major cities in the United States.

I came away feeling most impressed about the transformational impact that Latinos are already having on this country and wondering if most companies are really prepared for what is around the corner. I was most impressed with how clearly they understood the demographic impact of both the rise of Hispanics as a mega buying force in the home-buyer market.

Photographs by Don Pollard.

While Hispanics were certainly not the focus of this exhibit, their impact on four of the five places featured could not be denied. From Rialto, Calif., to Cicero, Ill., where 88% of the population is Hispanic, Latino attitudes about homeownership were not only prominently featured and discussed by architects, but also helped frame the developing of what the exhibit calls the “national conversation on issues of housing, transportation, and public space.”

When I got home, I remembered that I had recently downloaded the latest report on the State of Hispanic Homeownership, published in March by The National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals and found that, in spite of also being hit by the housing crisis between 2007 and 2010, they too were predicting a new Latino housing mega trend.

“Over the next 10 years, Hispanics are expected to account for 40 percent of the estimated 12 million net new households, with minorities comprising 70 percent of total growth,” says Alejandro Becerra, author of the report. Unlike other groups, Latinos have not been big on saving for retirement. This is partly due to a cultural legacy that, hopefully, should change over the next few decades. Our American Dream has always mainly revolved around buying a home and depending on family to take care of us.
“An unrelenting drive to succeed combined with strong family values and larger family sizes fuel their yearning for a place to call home,” says Becerra. “This strong work ethic, often combined with a vibrant entrepreneurial spirit, adds up to major consumerism. The Hispanic market made up over 50 percent of real growth in the U.S. consumer economy from 2005 to 2008, with $52 billion in new spending.”

According to the Census, Hispanics are already a significant segment of the workforce. “The role of Latinos in the nation’s labor force in the manufacturing, construction, real estate and service industries is both monumental and crucial. For well over a decade, Hispanics have also had the highest labor force participation in the nation. Currently, 66.7% of all working-age Latinos are employed, nearly three percentage points higher than the rest of the U.S. population,” adds Becerra.

And while many Baby Boomers are expected to age in place, the NAHREP report says that “current mobility rates suggest that 3.8 million baby boomers could downsize over the coming decade, adding further to the demand for compact, lower-cost homes.” As a result, smart start-ups like Boomerator,Southeast Discovery and GetawayStyle are all setting up to cater to the needs of this huge demographic shift.

But I don’t see the same kind of focus and innovation reaching and catering to Hispanics. In spite of the Hispanic demographic tsunami that everyone agrees is upon us, many companies still dedicate only 3% to 5% of their budgets to marketing to Latinos. If that’s your strategy to win in this economy.

READ MORE: AD AGE

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DOES KRAFT FOODS ENGAGE WITH HISPANICS: THEIR COMIDA KRAFT FACEBOOK IS UP TO 90,000 FANS

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

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Comida Kraft, an 11-year-old online initiative aimed at Latina moms, has become increasingly centered on social marketing in recent years. Facebook‘s Timeline for brands has only added to that focus, said Tania Cameron, associate director of CRM for Kraft Foods. She said Timeline’s historical nature creates an opportunity for her team to better tackle the sub-cultural issues of marketing to U.S. Latinos from numerous countries of origin.


On Comida Kraft’s Timeline, for instance, her team highlights when the U.S. officially recognized Cinco de Mayo as a holiday. In 2006, President George W. Bush proclaimed an observance of the day, which commemorates Mexico’s 19th century military victory over France. Another Comida Kraft post heralds how immigrants brought shaved ice treats to the U.S. in 1926 from Puerto Rico and Peru.

With Timeline, Cameron explained, “We took the approach to be interesting and give our viewers a little bit of education. It’s a way to celebrate who are here in the United States.”

Facebook Audience Gets 4X Lift In One Year

Comida Kraft’s Facebook page quickly gathered 3,000 fans/likes after launching two years ago, but has since grown to 90,000, jumping more than 4X in the last year, according to the Northfield, IL-based brand. Consistent with the larger initiative, the page is aimed at Latina moms.

When asked how Kraft Comida’s audience compares to other Spanish-language Facebook brand pages, Andy Hasselwander, VP of projects and research at Hispanic-focused agency Latinum Network, said, “It’s pretty big.” Comida Kraft’s social media team typically authors one Facebook post a day, including coupons, recipes, timely food-oriented questions, and other conversational messages.

Hispanics are very engaged [on Facebook],” Cameron said. “Social channels provide them a chance to create their own content.”But according to new research from Latinum, out of 200 brands, roughly 17 percent address Spanish speakers on Facebook. Eighty-three percent of the Facebook pages are English-only, Hasselwander said, while 14 percent included a Spanish language option. And approximately 3 percent were dually English and Spanish, he said. Bethesda, MD-based Latinum plans to release its full findings in the coming days.

Hasselwander said marketing to Hispanics by language can be tricky. “When you are talking about acculturated Millennials, for instance, they are going to speak both Spanish and English,” he said.

Comida Kraft Mobile Grows “Exponentially”

With the help of digital agency 360i, Cameron’s team has created a hub-and-spoke online marketing model for the brand. Facebook, mobile, Latina mommy blogs, and email feed into ComidaKraft.com, she explained. All told, Cameron said, the Spanish-language initiative has an online audience of 1 million consumers.

Mobile, the marketing director added, “has grown exponentially. Hispanics are getting into mobile very rapidly. And we have grown with that.”

360i Report: Target Hispanics By Subset

Meanwhile, 360i is about to release a report that, among many key points, addresses Comida Kraft’s challenge in terms of marketing to U.S. Latino subsets. Latinos have varying levels of acculturation, psychographics, and English proficiency, the report says. 360i says it’s important to determine what subset marketers want to target before tailoring a campaign.

comidakraft.com

Another key takeaway: Too many brands are not optimizing their Spanish-language web pages for SEO. 360i recommends marketers optimize not only for keywords in Spanish, but also commonly misspelled in English by Spanish speakers.

Read More: CLICK Z

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God Bless and make it a fabulous day!

powered by Influential Access – “Transforming the Ordinary to EXTRAordinary!” – CEO – Jessica Marie Gutierrez – Creator of The Hispanic Blog #thehispanicblog

WHO IS THE LATINO VP AT TAMPICO BEVERAGES: MEET PEDRO DE JESUS THE DOMINICANO IN CHICAGO MAKING A DIFFERENCE

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Pedro DeJesús Jr. isn’t afraid to knock on doors—or to get knocked down. In his early years, he would cold-call executives for everything from jobs to advice. His intrepidness has led him to the top of one of the world’s leading juice companies, Tampico Beverages, Inc. As senior vice president, general counsel, and corporate secretary, DeJesús Jr. brings order to Tampico’s global brand and pushes it into new territories.

The son of Dominican immigrants, DeJesús Jr. graduated from high school in his hometown of Chicago at 16. He got an associate degree in radiologic technology, working to help his mother with bills after his father’s passing. He quickly realized that life as an X-ray tech wouldn’t get him far financially. So he looked to where the money flowed: the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

“I walked into the Merc’s administrative office and said, ‘Give me a list of every company in this building,’” DeJesús Jr. recalls. “Then I walked over to a telephone booth, and went down the list, starting with A.” By “G,” he had landed a job as a runner.

For two years, DeJesús Jr. worked days at the “Merc” and nights at the hospital, until he landed a strong opportunity that warranted hanging up his lab coat. But four years later, with little long-term job security, he decided to become an attorney. By 29, he had earned a political science degree from Roosevelt University and entered Northwestern University School of Law. During his first summer, he heard that a Northwestern alum, Ruben Castillo, had just been appointed the first Latino federal judge in Illinois. Though the two had never met, DeJesús Jr. rang his chambers, and within a few weeks, Castillo granted him a meeting. When DeJesús Jr. told Castillo he hoped to work in public-interest law, Castillo advised him to consider joining a big firm first.

“If you don’t do it,” DeJesús Jr. recalls Castillo saying, “people assume that it’s because you couldn’t do it. If you still want to work in public interest, a firm can help subsidize those interests for you.”

The Big Law Firm Track

Although DeJesús Jr. took the big-law-firm track, the pecking order frustrated him. Big decisions, and often the big picture, weren’t privy to him as a junior associate. In 2000, he made a risky leap to a tech firm. Soon after, the dot-com bubble burst, sending DeJesús Jr. back to law-firm life, but with a clear advantage.

“Just to see how business operates, it was a world of learning compressed in a very short time period,” he says. “It’s very difficult at a big law firm to learn that.” In 2010, De Jesus was appointed to the Industry Trade Advisory Committee on Consumer Goods, whose members advise the US Commerce Department on trade agreements impacting the consumer-goods industry.

In 2004, DeJesús Jr. became vice president and corporate counsel for Information Resources, Inc., a consumer data company. DeJesús Jr.’s experience at IRI prepped him for his current post with Tampico Beverages, which sells its brand in more than 50 world markets.

Since 2007, DeJesús Jr. has helped CEO Scott Miller steer Tampico’s culture away from complacency. “When the senior management team came into this business, there was a lack of discipline in legal and business matters,” he says. “Instilling that level of discipline in the organization was one of our big challenges.” Over time, DeJesús Jr. has revamped the legal department, building a new team with “a stronger sense of accountability.” He issued a new employee handbook, business ethics and conduct policy, crisis-management plan, and a first-ever contract-approval procedure. He also redrafted Tampico’s bottling-and-licensing agreement and centralized the company’s trademark database, enabling him to manage the trademark portfolio globally.

(In 2008, Tampico was acquired by Houchens Industries, Inc., the largest employee-owned company in the United States and, according to Forbes, among the largest privately held companies in North America.)

Next up for Tampico is expansion into other Latino food-and-beverage categories. DeJesús Jr. and Miller spent much of 2011 mapping out a growth strategy and evaluating potential acquisitions in “synergistic” industries. As usual, DeJesús Jr. is ready to pounce on a winning opportunity. “More often than not, in both business and life, those who take advantage of change and embrace it—rather than run from it or ignore it—almost always beat out those who do not,” he says.

What’s more, DeJesús Jr. believes it’s his duty to create positive change. He serves as a trustee of Roosevelt University, works for government transparency and accountability with the Better Government Association, and serves on the board of Chicago-based Mujeres Latinas en Acción, which offers culturally sensitive services to Hispanic women.

DeJesús Jr. hopes more Latinos follow the path of doing good—and doing well. “We tell people to go to school and get an education, but we also have to instill the importance of being strong corporate leaders and building wealth,” he says, matter-of-factly. “Because it puts you in the room with people that are making decisions affecting positions of power.”

READ MORE: HISPANIC EXECUTIVE

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God Bless and make it a fabulous day!

powered by Influential Access – “Transforming the Ordinary to EXTRAordinary!” – CEO – Jessica Marie Gutierrez – Creator of The Hispanic Blog #thehispanicblog

NIELSEN RATINGS’ DORA NUNEZ RECEIVES MUJERES DESCATADA AWARD FOR ONGOING SUPPORT IN THE LATINO COMMUNITY

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Teresa Samaniego from KABC7, Dora Carias, Dora Nunez Mujeres Descatada 2012 Award Winner, Corina Villaraigosa from the Montebello School District

“My professional and personal objective is to inform, support, and motivate people to progress, to be successful with perseverance and by being loyal to their values and culture. This award pushes me to continue my passion of outreach to multicultural communities.  It serves as a reminder that closing the digital divide remains a top priority.” -Dora Nunez, Public Affairs Manager Nielsen

La Opinión – ImpreMedia 

Dora Nuñez, manager of public affairs for Nielsen, received the Mujeres Destacadas Award in the category of Business and Technology. impreMedia, the leading Hispanic news and information company, continued tradition of honoring remarkable Latinas in its signature editorial series and awards luncheon, Mujeres Destacadas/Exceptional Women. La Opinión, one of impreMedia’s leading publications, created the award in 2007, as part of its goal to recognize and celebrate the diverse accomplishments and contributions of Latinas in Los Angeles and surrounding communities. In celebration of International Women’s History Month, 30 remarkable Southern California Latina women who are making outstanding contributions in the fields of Health, Leadership, Education, Business/Technology and Arts and Culture were honored at a luncheon at The Millennium Biltmore Hotel.

ImpreMedia is the number one Hispanic news and information company in the U.S. in online and print. Its leading publications include La Opinión in Los Angeles and El Diario and La Prensa in New York. The Chief Executive officer of impreMedia is Mónica Lozano.  She is also the chair of the National Council of La Raza (NCLR). She is one of the most prominent Latinas in the Nation.

Mujeres Destacadas/Exceptional Women Awards 2012

ImpreMedia honors Latina women in the month of March his national celebration is comprised of their respected brands in 4 local markets to validate these extraordinary women (in New York, Los Angeles, Orlando, and Chicago). In Los Angeles, La Opiniópresented their Annual Mujeres Destacadas/Exceptional Women’s Awards on Tuesday, March 27, 2012, 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. PST at The Millennium Biltmore Hotel, 506 S. Grand Avenue, LA, CA 90071 in Celebration of the extraordinary women who are making a difference in our communities”

Receiving the award Dora Nunez

Nielsen: Why were they there?

Nielsen Holdings N.V. (NYSE: NLSN) is a global information and measurement company with leading market positions in marketing and consumer information, television and other media measurement, online intelligence, mobile measurement, trade shows and related properties. Nielsen has a presence in approximately 100 countries, with headquarters in New York, USA and Diemen, the Netherlands. For more information, visit www.nielsen.com.

With Keynote Speaker - Media mogul Nelly Galan and Dora Nunez

Nielsen continues to focus on building awareness about the company to the Latino community. In the past, Nielsen has participated in the Los Angeles and New York events.  This would be Nielsen’s fifth year participating with La Opinióin Los Angeles.  In previous years Nielsen’s Senior Vice President of Public Affairs, Mónica Gil was honored in 2010 in the category of Business and Technology and this year Dora Nuñez receiving the same award. The Business/Technology Award is given to women who have played a significant role in the economic development or technological advancement for the Latino community.

Rosemary Portillo (l), public affairs event manager, gives a Homescan and Local People Meter (LPM) demonstrations.

This year approximately 400 people were in attendance and Nielsen was represented on stage by Event Manager Rosemery Portillo who shared some fun fact on Latinos and Latinas.  She also presented the Leadership category.

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God Bless and may you have a fabulous day!

powered by Influential Access – “Transforming the Ordinary to EXTRAordinary!” – CEO – Jessica Marie Gutierrez – Creator of The Hispanic Blog #thehispanicblog