Tag Archives: Hispanic

Desperately Seeking Latino Viewers

Desperately seeking Latino viewers” or “Yo quiero Latino viewers” or “Mi ABC es su ABC,” could have been more interesting and entertaining headlines for a recent New York Times article (“Networks struggle to appeal to Hispanics”) that is currently the talk of the town in the U.S. Latino advertising and public relations industry.

A quote from the article: “Despite her [Sofia Vergara's] popularity, ‘Modern Family’  is not a hit with Hispanic viewers. Out of its overall viewership of 12.9 million, ‘Modern Family’ drew an average of only about 798,000 Hispanic viewers in the season. That audience accounts for only about 6 percent of the show’s viewers — less than half of what you might expect given the 48 million Hispanic television viewers that Nielsen measures. “

The leading U.S. Spanish language TV networks are actively posting on Facebook and LinkedIN, Twitting, and even investing in costly email blasts and ad buys to ensure this story gets maximum visibility.

Univision, the “Lion King” of U.S. Hispanic media, not surprisingly, is roaring the loudest. The network purchased an email blast from HispanicAd, a leading Hispanic advertising marketing trade group, to ensure this message reaches Hispanic ad buyers and media planners.

In addition to that, Univision surely will buy ads in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and other mainstream publications reaching the country’s top marketing decision makers to, in essence say, the English language networks have big numbers, yes, but they have only a tiny fraction of the 50.5 Latino consumers in this country. We have them. To get them you must come to us.

As you know, Fox is not taking this sitting down on their manos. They are launching MundoFox soon to capture some of those marketing dollars. They also launched Fox News Latino, an online news web site. NBC launched NBC Latino. Univision will partner with ABC News to create a news channel. We have not heard from CBS, at least not yet.

Smaller players are getting in the game as well given that the market is too big and it is still being under-served. For example, former Univision and Telemundo executive, Carlos Barba, is about to launch BuenaVisionTV, a new channel designed to serve the NYC Latino community this fall.

Key Takeaways:

-        This market is too big. It has the critical mass needed to generate ROI from a dedicated marketing program. If it is big enough the warrant the creation of a new Fox network, is big enough to help anyone’s bottom line.

-        Yes, this market is bilingual and does consume English language media of all kinds. Se habla inglés, but…

-        These consumers -old and young, foreign-born and U.S. born- remain attached to the Spanish language and to Latin culture. Yes, carnitas, tacos and Salsa, both, the eating kind and dancing kind, are here to stay.

-        Therefore, any communications program that intends to reach them in a meaningful and impactful way must have a bicultural and bilingual component. Think communications program on chimichurri. Or go corporate and “Sazón Goya it!

-        In all seriousness, the influence of U.S. Latinos is strong now, and it will only get stronger and broader. The combined total of more than 100 million Latinos, African Americans, Asian Americans and other multicultural communities, has reached critical mass. The fact is that the United States has become a multicultural nation. Professional communications programs need to reflect that in order to optimize results.

Carlos G. Giron is a PR Newswire multicultural marketing consultant and an experienced U.S. Latino communications strategist.

Learn more about reaching multicultural audiences on our Multicultural PR resource page.

Reaching & Engaging US Hispanics Online

When it came to reaching U.S. Hispanics in the digital space, things were pretty tough early on.

In the 1990s, only 24 percent of Hispanics had Internet access, so there definitely was a digital and computer gap, said officials with Ogilvy who spoke during Social Media Week DC about reaching U.S. Hispanics online.

“Today, the Latino community is playing and engaging in social media,” said Kety Esquivel, vice president of digital influence at Ogilvy PR Worldwide.  Esquivel mentioned this provides a tremendous opportunity for those interested in reaching this growing audience.

Starting in 1997, things changed pretty quickly for the Hispanic audience with the popularization of instant messaging.  Two years later, Terra was launched and it became a very popular portal in Latin America, said Julio Valeriano, who oversees cause advocacy with Ogilvy.

Hispanics in the marketplace today represent $1.2 trillion in purchasing power. There are 6.4 million Hispanic homeowners, and Hispanics have the largest households with 3.6 people per home.

Contributing to this increasingly tech-savvy audience were huge milestones, including Friendster’s launch in 2002, MySpace and hi5 in Latin America in 2003, and Facebook in 2004.

Ogilvy officials said these factors really led to a boom of Hispanics in online media – a social revolution that led to iconic meetings like Latism and Hispanicize.

Esquivel pointed to SXSW, which this year has added a new award to Latinos in technology that “honors this very revolution.”

Nowadays, the numbers are growing by leaps and bounds:

  • There are 30 million Hispanics online. By 2014, it’s expected that 39 million Hispanics will be online.
  • Hispanics spend an average 29 minutes per day in social networking activities.
  • Seventy percent of online Hispanics are using Facebook.
  • Fifty-nine percent of online Hispanics are on YouTube.
  • Eight million Hispanics are on Twitter.
  • There are more than 1,900 Latina bloggers, compared with just 159 in 2009. (Source: Mamiverse, blogs by Latinas.)

The digital divide now resides between native-born and foreign-born Hispanics.

“Engage with the community,” said Esquivel. “Don’t just send messages out or just find out who to contact … we need to understand where the opportunities are.”

Phones are among the critical points of access to the Hispanic community, they said. Seventy-six percent of Hispanics own a mobile phone.

Valeriano said that five years ago, the recommendation would have been to reach Hispanics in Spanish. Now, it’s important to reach them in both English and Spanish.

Christine Cube is a media relations manager for PR Newswire and freelance writer. You can follow her @cpcube.

Need help developing engaging multimedia content for your Latino audiences?  Multivu Latino is here to help offering broadcast and interactive services and media training designed for reaching the Hispanic marketplace.

ProfNet Connect Blog Roundup: Writing for Social Media, Growing Up Hispanic, Securing Mobile App Users

ProfNet Connect, our free online community for journalists, bloggers, PR pros, experts and communicators of all stripes, features blog section where members can write and post as their hearts desire.  The site is chockablock with interesting people and content.  Here are some of the most popular posts from last week. Enjoy!

PR meet SEO, SEO meet PR – Now play nice
Are public relations agencies prepared to help their clients be discovered in the search engines? Scott McIntosh, senior account supervisor of web strategy at Lovell Communications answers this question.
@LovellComm

Upcoming #ConnectChat: Legal Implications of Social Media
With the continued rapid growth of social networking sites, the legal implications of instant, online communication are becoming an issue for companies wanting to maintain control of their brands online. Maria Perez, director of news operations at ProfNet will host out next #ConnectChat on this topic.
@profnet

Writing for the (Social Media) Medium
As professional communicators, we’re taught to “write for the medium.” Tone, style and format change drastically from one context to the next, so the same should be true for social media. Jennifer Izzo, an account executive at Costa DeVault shares her advice on how to write for social media platforms.
@jenniizzo

Drive App Downloads Today – 4 Simple Ways to Secure Mobile App Users
For app marketers, your challenge is finding a way to make your app stand out in such a massive crowd. Viki Zabala, director of marketing at Fiksu addresses this issue and tells us how to get app lovers to use our particular app
@vickipierce

Being Hispanic Through My Eyes
Growing up Hispanic was a unique experience for Evelyn Tipacti, community editor at ProfNet Connect. This is her personal story.
@editorev

Stay abreast of conversations, trends and opportunities by joining us on ProfNet Connect, a free online community for journalists, bloggers and communications professionals to meet, connect and share their expertise. Creating a profile on ProfNet connect adds a search-engine friendly element to your digital resume, bolsters your online reputation and enables you to showcase your expertise to media and bloggers. Did we already mention that membership is free?  http://profnetconnect.com

The Power of Latina Voices

Author Margarita Hernandez

Kicking off Hispanic Heritage Month at the Hispana Leadership Summit in Aventura, Florida last week definitely impressed me with the strength and variety of the Latina voice. For any Latina woman in the business field –whether an entrepreneur or a corporate executive- this conference offered great advice and inspiration for how to succeed not only in your career but in your life.

The event was energizing, after all, fill a room with Latin business women and there is no doubt that the energy level will go through the roof.

We heard from an exceptional panel of Latina entrepreneurs titled Passions to Profits who shared their messages of success, which can be applicable for anyone in the business world – work hard, be authentic, learn from mistakes, take risks, find your voice, seek balance, and my favorite: love what you do, and do what you love. Easier said than done, but hearing from strong voices such as Ivette Mayo (@ivettemayo), President of Yo Soy I Am, tell her story of achievement truly had us all walking out the door feeling inspired to follow our dreams, break barriers and find passion in business. Ivette’s advice to finding balance as a career woman was to learn to say “No” – you can’t say yes to everybody – your own quality of life needs to come first. Alternatives to “No” for those who have a hard time: try “I can’t right now” or “Let me think about it.”

When Nati Soto, President of Ferguson Glasgow Schuster Soto, Inc. , a South Florida architecture firm, was asked how she can do it all – family, work, successful career – she said that she finds that the more you do, the more you can do – she feeds on it. “You figure it out, things do get easier, relationships with your family and your career change.”

These are women who have achieved what many may perceive as unachievable, who have surpassed multiple challenges and marched right past nonbelievers.
Maria Marin (@maria_marin), Motivational Speaker, Radio Personality and Bestselling Author, gave a fun and laugh-out-loud “charla” about the multiple roles Latinas play in life: wife, mother, friend, sister, career woman, nurse, chef, psychologist, accountant, teacher.  She talked about the beauty of living in a bicultural world, and how some of the key personality traits of Latina women are what make them stand with such pride – their independence, confidence, authenticity and passion give them a strong purpose and voice. She introduced the latest campaign by Procter & Gamble targeting Hispanic women titled “Orgullosa” (in English means “Proud”) (www.orgullosa.com), for which she is the spokesperson.  Orgullosa is a new initiative that celebrates the diverse collective beauty of Latina women. The movement encourages Latina women to promote not only their own beauty standard, but also their accomplishments as daughters of the new world.

In another session, Meet me Halfway, the Art of Negotiation, Dr. Yasmin Davidds (@YasminDavidds), Founder of the Women’s Negotiation Institute, gave useful tips on negotiating your way to achieving your goal, whether it be closing a deal, or getting a raise. She shared her insights on the important cultural differences you have to consider depending on who you’re negotiating with: what works with a male vs. female; Hispanic vs. Caucasian, etc. For instance, with women, it is important to connect on some level. With men, you must prove your professional competence to set the stage.

Eighty percent of the work in a negotiation is preplanning – set the systematic framework for the negotiation:
1)      Build a strong case – tie it in to the bottom line of what you’re asking for
2)      Conduct a barrier audit – every possible way they “won’t” or “can’t” do it
3)      Create a strategy to counter each barrier – in other words, solve their problem.

Another workshop consisted of Julie Stav (@tweetconjulie), financial guru, author and radio host, giving sound, practical and valuable financial advice on how to invest to set the stage for a financially stable present and future, for both young and old. Her advice on raising financially savvy children: “Teach kids it’s better to have a share of Nikes than a pair of Nikes.” Gotta love it – so true, talk about getting your kids started on the right foot when it comes to learning how to save!

The recurring message throughout the event was clear – Latina women have strong voices and are amazing business women.  The Hispana Leadership Summit was a great event to fuel your passions and creativity and gain inspiration and knowledge that help you at work and at home.  And as a corporation, marketer or small business owner, reaching this coveted demographic has never been more important – with the number of Hispanics in the US at 50.5 million and growing, and Latinas making up 48% of that number. Targeting this key demographic, who has disposable income, often makes the financial decisions at home, has larger than average household size, and loves to shop should undoubtedly be on your agenda.  Some of the top sponsors of the event, companies and organizations that truly embrace the Latina opportunity, were Yum! Brands, State Farm, Macy’s, Susan G. Komen, Walt Disney, and of course, PR Newswire.  How will your brand connect with the Latina market in the U.S.?

Author Margarita Hernandez is a bicultural & bilingual media and communications professional with over 12 years of experience in working with corporate clients in helping strategize their Multicultural Marketing and Public Relations campaigns. She is currently a Senior Account Manager for PR Newswire’s Multicultural Division.

The View from Hispanicize: Engaging Hispanic Consumers

Team CaliEnte, winners of the PR Newswire at Hispanicize Engagement Scavenger Hunt with their prizes, Sprint Hotspots and Flip Videos.

If the need to drive Social Media programs from a PR perspective wasn’t evident before, the Hispanic PR & Marketing community surely brought it center stage at the Hispanicize conference last week in Hollywood, CA. Engagement from creating new Hispanic communities via digital platforms including Twitter and Facebook to how broadcast network portals connect with their audiences from TV screen to online screen, were hot topics.

CNN en Español Planning Producer, Felipe Estefan, was awaiting live audience feedback on his Twitter account – while presenting at the Hispanic Media Trends panel – to illustrate how he is using social media to better produce segments that connect with the network’s viewers. Marcella Sarmiento, Partnerships Planning Manager for AOL Latino, discussed how the portal is specifically engaging Latina women through their specialized content area- “Tu Voz en Tu Vida” (website name translates to “your voice in your life”) which aims to enable Hispanic women to connect and help each other locally for positive change.

The engagement theme continued with strong conference focus on the rapidly expanding trend of Latino bloggers as potential “brand ambassadors.” Our PR Newswire Multicultural Markets team tested the Latino marketers’ content engagement interests by creating a Scavenger Hunt during the conference. Participating teams had to search for attendees, speakers and sponsors, take photos or videos and post content to a specially created Facebook fan page. We partnered with Sprint and Casa Cristina to ensure participants had fun prizes as a reward for their engagement. Here is the page link to view all the new content including postings of the Team photos on Reuters’ Times Square sign in New York: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/prnewswireathispanicize2011

The conference also provided us an opportunity to introduce our own Hispanic market engagement platform, ARC Latino. Here’s a peek at our latest client service – we’re pretty excited about it!

Click the image for a demo of ARC Latino

Latinos are online in stronger numbers than ever and driving digital attention. From a practical communications standpoint experts agree that organizational PR strategies will continue needing off and online programs in order to reach the broadest number among your targeted audiences. But the point has now clearly been presented that an actual strategy is needed for Hispanic online communications in Spanish, English, Spanglish or any cross between.

Cristy Clavijo-Kish is Senior Vice President of Multicultural Markets for PR Newswire. Follow her on Twitter via @latinomarketing, connect with her on LinkedIn or send an email to multicultural@prnewswire.com.

The Hispanic Perspective(s)

A weekend of immersed in the arts gave me a new perspective on Hispanic characterizations,  and a marketing “ahaa” moment of sorts.  First, I enjoyed the Broadway Across America Miami presentation of “In the Heights.”  My husband (a ‘Hispanicized’ Anglo) and I very much enjoyed the story and music, and I particularly was touched by some character similarities of my own family. Next it was a family outing with our tween (9 year old) twin daughters to see the new movie “Hop”- a story about how the Easter Bunny gets his job and delivers baskets of treats to children celebrating Easter Sunday. Aside from the obvious genre differences, the Hispanic perspectives presented in each where quite disparate.

In ‘Hop’ I was surprised to find among the lead characters is Carlos- the operations director and Top ‘Chic’ at the Easter production facilities on Easter Island. He’s the Number 2 on the island reporting directly to the current elder statesman, Easter Bunny, but turns out that he desperately wants to be the next ‘EB’ and designs an elaborate plan to overthrow the reigning Bunny family. Carlos has a heavy accent and acts like a dictator of sorts from a Central American nation. I suppose someone has to be the bad guy in a kids movie so why not a Carlos?

Moving on to the varying perspective of “Usnavy”-  the lead character from In the Heights. He’s a first-generation Dominican who lost his parents as a young child and is raised by his grandmother in NY’s Washington Heights ‘barrio.’ Initially Usnavy is searching for a way out of the barrio with a dream to return to his island roots, but in the end decides to stay and make his own mark and improve the barrio his own way.

What I take away from either characterization is that Hispanics are impacting American  culture and are really starting to be heard, felt, and counted. I believe that we’re not alone. The message of diversity and ethnic communities and their overall importance in changing or affecting American cultural change is being told in more creative ways than ever. We may not love all the story lines equally, as with my disappointment in Hop’s ‘Carlos’- but we are in the mix.

So where do we go next? This week in LA many experts are heading to the Hispanicize conference-  arguably among the marketing industry’s leading events which gathers communicators, marketers and media focused on reaching Hispanic communities nationally. Among the many planned topics, discussions and presentations will be the central theme of how the industry is addressing the changing patterns to reach Latinos online and beyond.

How are Hispanic bloggers driving change and helping brands connect, or not, with Latino audiences? How are Latina moms being reached? Considering that well known Latino actor and activist Edward James Olmos will keynote the Thursday morning session and Rosanna Fiske- the first Latina President and CEO of the Public Relations Society of America will address the luncheon session, the discussions surely will be lively and engaging.

So on the heels of the 2010 Census findings that finally confirmed what Hispanic marketing experts have been saying for several years- the Hispanic community now represents more than 16% of the US population and are 50 million+ strong and growing. How will your brands authentically connect with these consumers and build long lasting relationships?

Follow me and the conference Twitter and Facebook feeds for some good insights this week:  @latinomarketing and #hispz and #hispz11 on Twitter and the Hispanicize and PR Newswire special conference sponsorship page on Facebook.

Author Cristy Clavijo-Kish is PR Newswire’s senior VP of multicultural markets.

Pitching to the Hispanic Media Market

Reaching out to Hispanic media and knowing how to appropriately get their attention is incredibly important these days. Spanish-language news outlets, whether print, broadcast, or on-line, are high up there in circulation numbers and in audience figures, with many becoming equally as or even more popular than their English-language counterparts. Spanish-language outlets are always looking for news they can use to help inform their audience, so make sure you’re armed with what you need to help you get you on their radar. Here are some suggestions for you to follow:

  • If you’re looking to reach a consumer/investigative producer or reporter, they look for stories that are out of the ordinary, have new elements that make them extraordinary or affect a large number of people. Stories that involve fraud, scams and illegal activity tend to be on the top of their list because part of the job is to expose that and show others how to avoid becoming victims. Aside from the Hispanic angle, they like to know how the story affects other people and if it doesn’t, they want to know why. Journalists should have as many other angles as possible, in order to put things in perspective.
  • Stories which directly impact consumers’ pockets are a big hit, as are immigration-related issues.
  • Every press release should include information about all the subjects/elements that are part of the story, and whether or not they are available for interviews. For Hispanic media, it helps to know if any of them speak Spanish fluently. Obviously, the overall impact of the event or story is also a key element.
  • All news releases need to have a news hook. Make sure it is at the top of the release.  Journalists don’t have much patience for marketing events/stories. If it is not newsworthy content, it should be an advertisement, not a press release. If you want your story covered it needs to have a news angle.
  • The story should be translated into Spanish. It seems like such a common sense thing to do when trying to get the attention of a Spanish-language media outlet, but many fail to do this and only send it in English. A Spanish version of the press release is needed because a lot of time is lost in translation, and journalists don’t have time to lose. If the topic is timely, you lose coverage when you don’t provide a translation.  If  the item is going to take too long to translate, it’s likely to not be used unless the release is not evergreen and time isn’t a factor.
  • One of the most important things is providing a Spanish speaking spokesperson that will be available for interviews. This person needs to be well versed on the subject and should speak Spanish fluently. What good is it to have a press release in Spanish if there are no elements to produce an effective story for the audience? In addition, they must be available other than the usual 9-5 hours. Media is 24/7. It would also help if this person has some TV experience.
  • Some journalists like a combination of bullet points and a couple of paragraphs that summarize the story because it is less time consuming to read those first and read on if those catch their attention. That means that those who fill pages with small text end up wasting their time. Make the release easy to read.
  • Know your market–not all Latinos are Mexican. Mexicans are not the only Latino ethnic group. For example, a story regarding tortillas might attract more Latinos on the West Coast or the Southwest than in Florida or New York. The same goes for music. Los Tigres del Norte (popular Mexican norteño ensemble) might be huge stars in the Mid West, Texas and West Coast, but they may not have the same reception in a place like New York.

Pitching to Hispanic media really isn’t all that different than pitching to the general market outlets.The same standards and the same rules apply, with only some fine tuning necessary. Just remember to have your press releases or your promotional materials in Spanish, have a spokesperson or representative who speaks fluent Spanish, and understand the differences between the ethnicities so you can pitch accordingly. ‘Latino’ and ‘Hispanic’ are used to group everyone together, but your biggest mistake could be thinking Latinos/Hispanics are all the same.

Suerte!

(Good luck!)

Authored by Evelyn Tipacti, Community Editor, Profnet.

Do you love ProfNet?  Are you focusing increasingly on Hispanic media?  Then ProfNet en Espanol is for you! Like its English counterpart, ProfNet en Español allows you to respond to media requests for expert spokespersons through a subject matter expert database powered by Hispanic PR Wire. You can also send Expert Alerts with commentary on hot topics.  Learn more about ProfNet en Espanol and PR Newswire’s other multicultural services, and fine tune your Hispanic media relations strategy.

Image courtesy of Flickr user Oquendo

SEO en Espanol: Integrating SEO and PR to Reach the US Hispanic Audience

How do you reach the Hispanic audience in the US?  The same way you reach your other constituents – online, with social media and search engine optimization.  PRSA Miami held a webinar this week focused on how PR pros can use SEO tactics to raise the visibility of their messages targeting the fast-growing US Hispanic audience.

Source: eMarketer, Hispanics Online: Demographics & Media Usage, 5/10

The vast majority of Hispanic households in the US have internet access – upward of 70%.  Not surprisingly, search engine marketing is the most effective – and cost effective – means of marketing to this group.    There are a few key differences, however, to which we need to pay attention:

  • Google is the search engine of choice, and is the engine upon which you should focus your efforts.
  • Mobile devices are hugely popular in Latin America, and among Hispanics in the US, and search is a popular activity.  Developing mobile content is important.
  • There are real difference in search behavior, which should inform SEO tactics.

Another important opportunity for communicators is the simple fact that there isn’t as much content out there in Spanish, which may explain why the US Hispanic audience tends to spend more time on web sites than internet users as a whole.    Developing robust content – and deep linking to it from blog posts, press releases and other information you post online will not only help your SEO, but will be appreciated by your audience.

Spanish SEO basics:

As is the case with SEO generally, keywords play a central role in targeting the US Hispanic market, but with a caveat. “When choosing keywords never rely solely on straightforward translation of English words to their Spanish counterparts,” writes Jose Villa, founder and CEO of the digital ad firm, Sensis, in a recent blog post about Hispanic search. “Think about acculturation levels of your target Hispanic audience and adapt your keywords and ad copy appropriately. Your ultimate goal should be cultural relevance—reaching your audience on a personal level.”

Villa also notes that Hispanic search behavior is different, with many searchers preferring to employ longer, more specific search term strings.  Part of this is due to the fact that Spanish is “wordier” than English – it’s been estimated that Spanish sentences are approximately 20% longer than English sentences, on average.  However, Villa emphasizes the fact that the search strings employed by US Hispanics tend to be much more focused and targeted when compared to search terms used by English-speaking US searchers.

So what does this mean for the PR pro needing to build visibility with Spanish speakers in the US?   As is the case with any PR effort that integrates SEO, the content is the starting point, and it needs to be focused.  Given the specificity of search terms used, rigorous attention to subject matter is even more important when optimizing content for the Hispanic audience.

Once you’ve identified your keywords/phrases, using them properly in order to optimize your press release and inform search engines correctly about the content is important.  Don’t stick important words down at the bottom of the page.

“Things like headlines, subheadings, bold face type and lead paragraphs are all important places to put keywords,” advises Sebastian Aroca of Hispanic Market Advisors. Writing naturally and remembering to use the words within the text of the release are also important.  Another tip: don’t try to optimize a single document for more than one or two keywords/phrases. You’ll only end up diluting your message and confusing your online audiences.

Linking is always important, and basic SEO rules apply here, too.  Use anchor text links within press releases and other online content to take readers (and search engines) to relevant pages on your web site.  Deep links to specific product or information pages are best – don’t just link to the home page.  And remember to link from specific keywords or phrases.

Villa also cautions communicators to expect a higher number of new visitors to the web site.   “Design the web site for people who have never been there before, and think about how you’ll get them to come back,” he notes, adding that linking through to a Spanish-language landing page is also essential.

Finally, it’s important to realize that SEO is limited to a single process or one campaign.   Optimizing content to develop high visibility in search engines requires ongoing effort.  The good news is that the results are easy enough to measure – work with your web team to get access to your web site analytics, so you can understand how much traffic different press releases and other content generated.  You can also keep an eye on search rankings to gauge your success, too. Staying on top of search results and referring traffic will enable you to determine what tactics worked well – so you can continue to fine tune your efforts and develop lasting interaction with the US Hispanic market.

Want more information on Hispanic SEO, digital PR and other online communication tactics? Follow the panelists on Twitter!

Ann Marie Herrera, Fleishman-Hillard: @FHHispania

Silvia Prado, Logos PR : @LOGOSPR

Sebastian Aroca, Hispanic Market Advisors: @HispanicMarkets

Jose Villa, Sensis Agency: @jrvilla

PR Newswire: @LatinoMarketing , @prnewswire

Authored by Sarah Skerik, vice-president, social media, PR Newswire