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The New Mainstream Podcast

The New Mainstream Podcast

著者: The New Mainstream Podcast
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The New Mainstream podcast features real conversations about the cultural nuances impacting multicultural communities in the U.S. and its influence on brand marketing and the importance of DEI in strategic marketing conversations.The New Mainstream Podcast 経済学
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  • What Latin Music’s Global Rise Teaches Us About Culture, Consumers, and the Future of Marketing with Jose Abreu
    2025/05/14

    Latin music is no longer a niche. It’s a global phenomenon reshaping how brands navigate an increasingly digital and culturally diverse landscape. Streaming platforms are breaking down barriers to discovery, giving artists instant access to global audiences and perpetuating cultural diffusion across borders. But with that access comes disruption and a need to rethink how value is created and shared. For marketers, this means looking beyond conventional metrics and focusing on where and how people engage with content.

    Technology also accelerates creativity, but with it comes new challenges. While artificial intelligence now makes it possible to generate music with a prompt, it also raises seriousethical questions around authorship, ownership, and compensation. As AI becomes more embedded into creative workflows, the industry is grappling with how to protect the integrity and livelihoods of human creators.

    The ethical use of AI is also closely tied to cultural resonance, especially with Gen Z, an audience that values authenticityand resists being confined to traditional genre boxes. Their listening habits are shaped more by mood, context, and cultural nuance than by conventional categories, challenging marketers to meet them with content that feels personaland real.

    Ultimately, music rooted in cultural truth, even when fused with other sounds, has the power to bring people together regardless of background or geography. The consumershapes what’s popular, and technology amplifies that influence, making it easier for audiences to discover, share, and champion the music that speaks to them.

    In this episode of The New Mainstream podcast, Jose Abreu, Vice President of Digital Marketing & Streaming, Latin Iberia Region, at Sony Music Entertainment, explores how technology, culture, and consumer behavior are reshaping the future of music and what brands can learn from it.

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    50 分
  • Language Out, Culture In: Reframing Multicultural Marketing with Randy Gudiel
    2025/05/01

    Despite America’s growing diversity, multicultural marketing continues to face persistent underinvestment andinconsistency. While Black and Latino consumers make up approximately 30% of the U.S. population, early multicultural campaigns received less than 5% of national advertising budgets, a gap that has improved slightly but remains amajor challenge today. Even now, multicultural efforts are often the first budgets cut when financial pressures arise, undermining brand loyalty and growth opportunities.

    There has been a shift from language-driven strategies to culture-driven ones. In the past, Spanish-language media buys were often seen as enough. Today, success demands deeper cultural insight, recognizing that diverse consumers live multigenerational, multiracial, and bilingual realities. Authentic connection, not just language, is now the key to meaningful engagement.

    Brands like Honda offer a blueprint through initiatives like Honda Stage, which uses music as a universal passionpoint to unite diverse audiences organically without forcing segmentation. Meanwhile, missteps like Target’s recent DEI pullback show how quickly consumer trust can erode when companies abandon their multicultural commitments.

    Another critical takeaway is the growing importance of first-party data and minority-owned media partnerships.As privacy regulations limit traditional targeting methods, collaborating with platforms that genuinely understand their audiences becomes even more valuable.

    Ultimately, brands must shift away from chasing fleeting viral moments and instead focus on building real, lasting community relationships.

    In this episode of The New Mainstream podcast, Randy Gudiel, SVP, Media Director at Orci, shares valuable insights on why consistency, cultural authenticity, and sustained investment are now essential for brands that want to thrive in an increasingly diverse marketplace.


    Meet Our Guest:


    Randy Gudiel is a media strategist with over 15 years of experience in media planning, buying, and integrated marketing. He began his career in General Market advertising, supporting automotive and hospitality brands. Early in his career, he transitioned into multicultural marketing—where he led media strategy for clients in financial services, tech, government, CPG, and gaming, helping them better connect with Hispanic, Asian, and African American audiences.

    Today, as SVP, Media Director at Orci, Randy leads cross-channel, performance-focused media strategies rooted in cultural relevance, consumer insight, and a Hispanic-first perspective. His work reflects the understanding that effective multicultural marketing starts with intention, not adaptation. His current portfolio spans categories includingentertainment, automotive, and grocery, with a focus on building media plans that center Hispanic audiences while thoughtfully engaging the broader multicultural landscape.

    Over the course of his career, Randy has also supported clients in healthcare, nonprofit, QSR, and entertainment—bringing a thoughtful, data-informed approach to every challenge.

    A first-generation Guatemalan-American, Randy brings a valuable blend of lived experience and strategic expertise to the work, ensuring that every plan is inclusive, intentional, and built for impact.

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    40 分
  • Multicultural Marketing Isn’t Optional, It’s a Business Imperative with Hernan Tagliani
    2025/04/15

    Despite the U.S. being home to the second-largest Spanish-speaking population in the world, investment in multicultural marketing, particularly Hispanic marketing, remains disproportionately low, representing just 6–7% of total ad spend. This is a missed opportunity and a risk for brands looking to stay relevant in an increasingly diverse marketplace. Ignoring this reality isn’t just shortsighted,it’s bad business. To stay competitive, brands must reflect the communities they serve. Today’s consumers, especially Millennials and Gen Z, more than half of whom are multicultural, demand more than generic messaging. They value authenticity,cultural relevance, and purpose. These digital natives engage with brands across social media, streaming, and other digital platforms. For them, it's not just about what brands sell but the stories they tell on these platforms.

    Telling those stores, however, has become increasingly difficult. Some brands may revert to “total market” approaches for short-term gains amid political tensionand economic uncertainty. But playing it safe often results in diluted messaging that fails to connect meaningfully with any audience. Multicultural marketing isn’t going away. Itis central to business strategy and, perhaps more importantly, business longevity. And here’s why.

    Demographic shifts aren’t coming; they’re already here. The U.S. is on the fast track to becoming a multicultural majority. Even as some companies quietly rebrand or downplay DEI efforts, multiculturalism is moving forward. “Inclusive growth,” which links diversity to tangible business outcomes, is emerging as a competitive advantage for forward-thinking brands.

    Others, however, treat multicultural marketing as an add-on rather than a strategic priority, often due to a lack of leadership, education, or long-term vision. Change must start at the top. Executives need to empower their teams, invest in insights, and reimagine how they engage because doing so pays off.

    In this episode of The New Mainstream podcast, Hernan Tagliani, President and Founder of Tagliani Multicultural, explores how shifting demographics are redefining marketing and explains why brands that fail to invest in multicultural marketing risk being left behind.

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    36 分

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