In From the Cool
The post-cool huntresses unleash a killer
database
December 12, 2000
DeeDee Gordon and Sharon Lee know what’s up. They
know what cool kids are listening to (Slipknot, Jurassic
5), what they’re wearing (aviator glasses, low-slung
jeans) and even what’s floating around their hipster
heads (paganism is cool right now, alienation is always
cool).
DeeDee and Sharon have made careers helping
corporations that court the youth market avoid looking
like clueless dorks. They met while scouting sneaker
designs at a shoe show in Las Vegas, then teamed up to
create the L Report, a quarterly journal that tracked
the preferences, purchases and hangouts of young
trend-setters. Subscribers paid $20,000 a year for the
benefit of knowing the precise moment when Hush Puppies
or goatees or Tai-Bo or were cool, and when those very
same things flagged you as hopelessly out-of-touch.
Their talent tracking such a slippery subject
resulted in a movie deal, a rash of imitators and even a
new addition to the English lexicon: coolhunting. As in,
“DeeDee went coolhunting in Tokyo and spotted a kid
wearing shower sandals.”
But these days, the mere mention of coolhunting
prompts the rolling of eyes. Leave it to the original
coolhunters to declare that coolhunting is uncool.
They’re over it.
“After we got all that attention, a lot of people
jumped on the bandwagon,” says Sharon. “People were
popping up all over saying, ‘I’m cool! I know all about
these things! It’s all about butterflies!’”
And if there’s one thing DeeDee and Sharon would be
pleased to avoid, it’s squabbling with other
self-anointed arbiters of cool over the new Limp Biscuit
CD or hoochie mama pumps. “When you go down that path,
it turns really frivolous really fast,” Sharon says. All
of which explains why DeeDee and Sharon sound as sober
as tax accountants when the topic turns to Look-Look,
the market research firm they opened last year. (They
won’t name names, but studios, car manufacturers and
cosmetic companies among their 30 clients.) The company
is designed, says DeeDee, as “a Reuters of youth
culture,” helping corporate clients learn about and fit
in with the coolie crowd ages 14-30. To get an accurate
picture of this swelling demographic – which boasted
$130 billion in purchasing power last year – DeeDee and
Sharon holed up for a year to build a web-based system
that allows corporate clients to interface with the
nation’s hipster elite in real time.
It’s a system that DeeDee describes as nothing less
than a machine that can calculate cool. They start with
a network of 10,000 respondents recruited for their
tastemaking cred –fashionistas, ravers, skatepunks and
other trendsetters whose tastes today will supposedly
spill over to the average Gap shopper tomorrow.
Participants are ranked in a sort of Mary Kay pyramid,
earning money and prizes by continually rating and
responding to bands, brands or whatever. Their opinions
are collected and sorted in an online database that
corporations pay a base fee of $20,000 a year to
access.
Say a record company exec wants to check the coolness
quotient of a new CD’s cover art. Rather than taking the
traditional route -- rounding up teens in suburban malls
or mailing out bundles of multiple-choice questionnaires
-- clients can schedule an online forum with Look-Look’s
entire database, or zero in on a target audience as
limited as, say, Latino girls in major markets who
bought the latest Christina Aguillara CD.
“It’s really fast and relatively cheap,” says DeeDee.
“You don’t have to recruit anyone, you don’t have to
rent any space and you don’t have to wait weeks to get
your answers.”
By digitizing the process of market research, Sharon
and DeeDee hope to get away from what they call
“old-school ways of looking at humans.” The traditional
approach is not only slower and costlier, says Sharon;
it encourages dumbed-down campaigns that only serve to
make kids snicker with superiority.
“You end up with all these commercials with
snowboarders jumping out of airplanes and shit like
that,” says DeeDee. “Or else kids saying, you know,
‘That’s dope!’ or ‘Awesome!’ Kids see right through
that.”
Competitors doubt the depth or reliability of
Look-Look’s web-obsessed system. “If you’re doing a
quick quantitative survey, that might be fine,” says
Danielle Craven, research manager for the Illinois
market research firm Teen Research Unlimited. “But
there’s no replacement for sitting down with kids,
establishing some trust and asking them questions face
to face. In-person contact is how you get to the core of
an issue.”
DeeDee and Sharon counter that they get better
responses because of the frequency of their contact,
enabling them to detect trends or fads that might
otherwise fly below the radar. A year ago, as goth and
metal acts were overtaking the charts, DeeDee and Sharon
detected a passionate fringe movement around twee
English folkies like Nick Drake and Belle &
Sebastian. Recently they’ve warned retailers that young
tastemakers are flocking to 99 Cent Stores, which have
captured their hearts by stocking such hidden treasures
as Jar Jar Binks underwear or “I love Jesus” hair clips.
Gathering such intelligence has meant obsessing a lot
less over conventionally mod stuff like Japanese
animation or French rappers and a lot more over
efficient business models and database retrieval
techniques. In her coolhunting days, DeeDee was known
for her yellow Trans Am and flamboyant hairstyles that
changed color every few weeks. Now she tools around town
in a late-model Caddilac, while her hair has settled
into a plain-girl brown. About the only thing out of the
ordinary in their offices is the yapping of DeeDee’s
miniature poodle Hot Lady. “Everything we’ve been doing
on the back end is not sexy at all,” admits DeeDee.
“We’re too busy right now to worry about being
cool.”