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Half Rock 'n' Roll, Half Flat Cap: Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation

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 DIGITAS  PERSPECTIVE "#$%&'( )*+, Half Rock ‘n’ Roll, Half Flat Cap: Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation He is 65. He wears a flat cap. He is the lead singer of AC/DC. The trip I had in mind was not ! well, you could guess what may be part of a rock star’s "rider". What I meant is the journey, the packaged holiday of a sort. Because, it seems, a very few mainstream travel companies can envisage that anyone over 60 could be anything else than a flat cap, pipes and slippers person, happy to go anywhere as far as it is not more than a hundred yards away from a toilet. The way the mainstream travel industry fails to understand the Baby Boomers (BBs) is the newest installment of the saga of the ‘zeitgeist blindness’, the same one that made Sony oblivious to iPod, Microsoft oblivious to mobile phones and music industry oblivious to downloads. Variety of Interests The BBs are now expected to change many aspects of the industry, due to the variety and idiosyncrasy of their interests. Both rock ‘n’ roll and flat cap, they break through some long-established category conventions. They think themselves much younger than their biological age, so need products that cater both for the truth and for the perception. Both rock ‘n’ roll and flat cap, Baby Boomers break through some long-established category conventions. They want experiences, more than things: action mixed with relaxation, dirt roads that end in comfy spas, travelling with their family as well as alone. Technologically more literate than their predecessors, they also cherish human contact. They are a tricky bunch to get right. And there are going to be many more of them in the next five to 10 years. According to ONS, the number of 65-74-year-olds in the UK is set to grow by 15.3%, while over- 85s will grow in number by 16.3% – the two fastest growth rates of any age group. Given that "retired" is a bit of a misnomer today, as many 65-plus people will still be employed due to changes in the retirement age, the industry has to respond to their unique blend of interests. Is there an opportunity, therefore, to create new products and services, quite outside of the dull and passive "packages" prevalent in the industry today? Here are a few examples.  According to Traveling.com’s BB r esearch, 86% of BBs see their later years as the time t o actively pursue their interests and set new goals. Why not turn the holiday into a learning experience that may even end up with a basic professional certificate? They also want to leave a legacy of a sort, through emotional engagement with local projects and charities; so, a holiday that combines relaxation and learning with a hands-on charity work at a local community pottery? All of it combined with their advocacy of it through the social media they use. Hard Times Finally, many of them are supporting both their parents and their grown-up kids, due to hard economic times, which creates space for innovative products where both the parents and the kids can go free. A cost that could be offset by providing special paying ‘crèches’ for frail parents, while the (grown-up) kids will constitute good paying customers at the bar anyway.
Transcript
Page 1: Half Rock 'n' Roll, Half Flat Cap: Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation

7/27/2019 Half Rock 'n' Roll, Half Flat Cap: Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/half-rock-n-roll-half-flat-cap-understanding-the-baby-boomer-generation 1/2

 DIGITAS PERSPECTIVE

October2013

 

Half Rock ‘n’ Roll, Half Flat Cap:

Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation

He is 65. He wears a flat cap. He is the lead singer of AC/DC.

The trip I had in mind was not… well, you could guess what may be part of a rock star’s "rider". What Imeant is the journey, the packaged holiday of a sort. Because, it seems, a very few mainstream travelcompanies can envisage that anyone over 60 could be anything else than a flat cap, pipes and slippers

person, happy to go anywhere as far as it is not more than a hundred yards away from a toilet.

The way the mainstream travel industry fails to understand the Baby Boomers (BBs) is the newestinstallment of the saga of the ‘zeitgeist blindness’, the same one that made Sony oblivious to iPod,

Microsoft oblivious to mobile phones and music industry oblivious to downloads.

Variety of Interests

The BBs are now expected to change many aspects of the industry, due to the variety and idiosyncrasy of their interests. Both rock ‘n’ roll and flat cap, they break through some long-established categoryconventions. They think themselves much younger than their biological age, so need products that cater both for the truth and for the perception. Both rock ‘n’ roll and flat cap, Baby Boomers break through somelong-established category conventions.

They want experiences, more than things: action mixed with relaxation, dirt roads that end in comfy spas,travelling with their family as well as alone. Technologically more literate than their predecessors, they

also cherish human contact.

They are a tricky bunch to get right. And there are going to be many more of them in the next five to 10

years. According to ONS, the number of 65-74-year-olds in the UK is set to grow by 15.3%, while over-85s will grow in number by 16.3% – the two fastest growth rates of any age group.

Given that "retired" is a bit of a misnomer today, as many 65-plus people will still be employed due tochanges in the retirement age, the industry has to respond to their unique blend of interests. Is there anopportunity, therefore, to create new products and services, quite outside of the dull and passive"packages" prevalent in the industry today? Here are a few examples.

 According to Traveling.com’s BB research, 86% of BBs see their later years as the time to actively pursuetheir interests and set new goals. Why not turn the holiday into a learning experience that may even end

up with a basic professional certificate?

They also want to leave a legacy of a sort, through emotional engagement with local projects and

charities; so, a holiday that combines relaxation and learning with a hands-on charity work at a localcommunity pottery? All of it combined with their advocacy of it through the social media they use.

Hard Times

Finally, many of them are supporting both their parents and their grown-up kids, due to hardeconomic times, which creates space for innovative products where both the parents and thekids can go free. A cost that could be offset by providing special paying ‘crèches’ for frailparents, while the (grown-up) kids will constitute good paying customers at thebar anyway.

Page 2: Half Rock 'n' Roll, Half Flat Cap: Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation

7/27/2019 Half Rock 'n' Roll, Half Flat Cap: Understanding the Baby Boomer Generation

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/half-rock-n-roll-half-flat-cap-understanding-the-baby-boomer-generation 2/2

 DIGITAS PERSPECTIVE

October2013

 

Clever up-and-coming travel companies are already doing it. Road Scholar is an US-based website thatoperates as a non-profit business and, for many, is cornering the US BB market with the right mix of 

thinking and products.

BBs and "senior" people, professionals, lecturers and customers featured on the site are all mature,vivacious, energetic, educated (some of them look even wise) and exude an air of a life well-lived. Inter-generational travel packages are prominent and well thought-through, as well as the breadth of destinations and topics. The feeling of travelling that at the same time enriches both the travellers and the

place they go to is inescapable.

The site is also feature-packed: product filtering options, participants’ blogs, weekly raffles, photocompetition, donations and even an alumni association! Travel as a sustainable university of life.

Now, that’s something that even Brian Johnson can look forward to.

Contact For More Information

Lazar Dzamic, Planning Director, Kitcatt Nohr [email protected] 

This piece originally appeared in Marketing Magazine UK.


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