Tobacco industry marketing aimed at women

Tobacco industry documents about marketing to females:


 * The Female Smoker Market (Lorillard, 1973)
 * Virginia Slims Opinion Poll Public Relations Plan (Philip Morris, 1996)
 * Images of feminine cigarette brands (Results of focus group testing, Philip Morris 1994)
 * CONCLUSIONS - Creative/Positioning Strategy (Brown & Williamson, 1982, targeting women as only growth market)
 * Project YW (R.J. Reynolds project to design a cigarette for women, c. 1989)

Cigarette marketing to women in China
Tobacco industry activity in Hong Kong provides a good example of an attempt by a tobacco company to create a market, and reveals the faultiness of the industry's oft-used argument that brand-switching is the only intended function of tobacco advertising. In 1984, Philip Morris launched the Virginia Slims brand in the Hong Kong market. The ads were clearly targeted at young women, and showed images of beauty, slimness and the promotion of Western cultural images, and with clear messages of emancipation. Television advertisements first showed an old-style black and white movie of a young woman controlled by her father then switched images of a young, chic woman of today. "But things are different now" was the theme of this advertisement. According to government statistics at the time, only about 1% of women under the age of 40 years smoked in Hong Kong, so the number who could be targeted by this expensive advertising blitz simply for brand-switching alone was negligible. Instead, the advertising effort seemed to be a clear attempt to create a market.