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The Evolving Role of Brands for the Millennial Generation

Date post: 17-Jul-2015
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8095 ® 2.0 SURVEY 4,000 Millennials in 11 countries BRAZIL TURKEY INDIA CHINA UAE US GERMANY CANADA CANADA FRANCE FRANCE AUSTRALIA AUSTRALIA UK UK WHY MILLENNIALS MATTER TO MARKETERS BIG: The largest generation alive today – 1.8 billion globally INFLUENTIAL: Impact purchase decisions of peers & parents and will outpace Boomer earnings by 2018 UNIQUE: The first inherently digital generation that does not know a world without the Internet or smartphones Edelman 8095 ® , named for the years in which the generation was born, 1980 to 1995, is an insights group studying the Millennial generation and their relationship with brands. Following a benchmark study in 2010, Edelman now unveils 8095 ® 2.0, an updated look at Millennials, their new aspirations and the role that brands play in their lives. MILLENNIALS HAVE BEEN SHAPED BY THE GLOBAL RECESSION They are growing up, and so too are their views of success. Coming of age in the global recession has closed many traditional paths to success, forcing them to push back typical stages of adulthood, but has also created a new breed of entrepreneurs. FRIENDS OF BRANDS Millennials are surprisingly open to brand engagement and advertising, but only if brands have the right approach. 8 IN 10 MILLENNIALS EXPECT BRANDS TO ENTERTAIN THEM. HOW DO THEY WANT TO BE ENTERTAINED? MILLENNIALS ARE ALPHA-INFLUENCERS With many Millennials entering parenthood and building careers – their sphere of influence continues to expand – 74% believe they influence the purchase decisions of those around them. And they expect a two-way dialogue: OF MILLENNIALS SAY THAT OWNING THEIR OWN BUSINESS IS A TOP LIFE GOAL INDIA TURKEY UAE 90% CHINA 90% BRAZIL 82% 81% 75% 72% 64% 61% 59% 57% AUSTRALIA AUSTRALIA 67% US GERMANY CANADA CANADA FRANCE FRANCE 66% UK UK GLOBAL AVERAGE 19% ANSWER MY QUESTIONS/ COMMENTS IN REAL TIME IN SOCIAL MEDIA CONNECT ME TO OTHER FANS OF THE BRAND/COMPANY CREATE ONLINE CONTENT SUCH AS VIDEOS, PHOTOS, GAMES AND BLOGS SPONSOR ENTERTAINING EVENTS I DON’T EXPECT BRANDS/ COMPANIES TO ENTERTAIN ME PARTNER WITH A CELEBRITY OR PUBLIC FIGURE I ADMIRE 21% 33% 40% ALLOW ME TO CO-CREATE YOUR PRODUCTS 31% 20% 32% 7 IN 10 MILLENNIALS THINK IT’S THEIR RESPONSIBILITY TO SHARE FEEDBACK WITH COMPANIES AFTER A GOOD OR BAD EXPERIENCE WITH THEM.
Transcript
Page 1: The Evolving Role of Brands for the Millennial Generation

8095® 2.0 SURVEY4,000 Millennials in 11 countries

BRAZIL TURKEY

INDIA

CHINA

UAE

US

GERMANY

CANADACANADA

FRANCEFRANCE

AUSTRALIAAUSTRALIA

UKUK

WHY MILLENNIALS MATTERTO MARKETERS

BIG: The largest generation alive today – 1.8 billion globally

INFLUENTIAL: Impact purchase decisions of peers & parents and will outpace Boomer earnings by 2018

UNIQUE:The first inherently digital generation that does not know a world without the Internet or smartphones

Edelman 8095®, named for the years in which the generation was born, 1980 to 1995, is an insights group studying the Millennial generation and their relationship with brands. Following a benchmark study in 2010, Edelman now unveils 8095® 2.0, an updated look at Millennials, their new aspirations and the role that brands play in their lives.

MILLENNIALS HAVE BEEN SHAPED BY THE GLOBAL RECESSION They are growing up, and so too are their views of success. Coming of age in the global recession has closed many traditional paths to success, forcing them to push back typical stages of adulthood, but has also created a new breed of entrepreneurs.

FRIENDS OF BRANDSMillennials are surprisingly open to brand engagement and advertising, but only if brands have the right approach.

8 IN 10 MILLENNIALS EXPECT BRANDS TO ENTERTAIN THEM. HOW DO THEY WANT TO BE ENTERTAINED?

MILLENNIALS ARE ALPHA-INFLUENCERSWith many Millennials entering parenthood and building careers – their sphere of influence continues to expand – 74% believe they influence the purchase decisions of those around them. And they expect a two-way dialogue:

OF MILLENNIALS SAY THAT OWNING THEIR OWN BUSINESS IS ATOP LIFE GOAL

INDIA

TURKEY

UAE

90%

CHINA

90%

BRAZIL

82% 81%

75% 72%

64% 61% 59% 57%

AUSTRALIAAUSTRALIA

67%

US

GERMANY CANADACANADAFRANCEFRANCE

66%

UKUKGLOBALAVERAGE

19%

ANSWER MY QUESTIONS/COMMENTS IN REAL TIME IN SOCIAL MEDIA

CONNECT ME TO OTHERFANS OF THE BRAND/COMPANY

CREATE ONLINE CONTENT SUCH AS VIDEOS, PHOTOS, GAMES AND BLOGS

SPONSOR ENTERTAINING EVENTS I DON’T EXPECT BRANDS/COMPANIES TO ENTERTAIN ME

PARTNER WITH A CELEBRITY OR PUBLIC FIGURE I ADMIRE

21%33%

40% ALLOW ME TO CO-CREATEYOUR PRODUCTS

31%

20%32%

7 IN 10 MILLENNIALS THINK IT’S THEIR RESPONSIBILITY TO SHARE FEEDBACK WITH COMPANIES AFTER A GOOD OR BAD EXPERIENCE WITH THEM.

Page 2: The Evolving Role of Brands for the Millennial Generation

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR MARKETERS For brands to matter to Millennials, “average” is no longer enough. A whole new level of engagement, authenticity and purpose is necessary. Here are seven implications for marketers coming out of the 8095® study.

• MILLENNIALS AREN’T KIDS ANYMORE. The oldest are 33, the youngest 18. They are not the next frontier, they are the here and now generation with spending power, careers and families. As the world’s top alpha-influencers, every company needs to see Millennials as influencers for the purchase of their products or services. And we mean EVERY company.

• SHIFT AWAY FROM TRADITIONAL SEGMENTATION. Wake up, people! The world has changed. “Minority” births now outnumber Caucasian births in the U.S. and the world is more diverse than ever before. Gender lines are being blurred, and more men are taking over traditional female roles, and vice versa. It’s time to lessen the focus on gender and other specifics and think about messages that appeal to the blurring of the masses.

• ENGAGE MILLENNIALS IN SURROUND SOUND. While inherently digital and dominant in social media, they crave face-to-face engagement and in-real-life (IRL) experiences. To successfully engage them, you need to reach them from all sides, and make sure your brand story is being told in many of the sources of information they use to make brand purchase decisions.

• IT’S NOT YOUR BRAND ANYMORE. It belongs to your customers. Marketers must be willing to give up some brand control. Millennials want to co-create with you, and have two-way dialogue 24/7/365. Be agile, collaborative and prepared to support the Action Consumers promoting your brands.

• EXPERIENCES OVER STUFF. Focus on how your product or service enables life experiences. Millennials want to buy into new ideas and be able to share those ideas and experiences with friends and family. Be social, and enable social experiences.

• HELP MILLENNIALS BECOME AN EXPERT ON YOUR BRAND, PURPOSE AND STORY. Millennials have a strong desire to share and learn from each other. They want brands to entertain them. Share your back-story, your history, the reasons why you make the products you make or deliver the service you deliver. It’s not enough for brands to be great storytellers. You need to enable your consumers to be powerful storytellers on your behalf. Be authentic, transparent and communicate your larger purpose.

• “SMART AND FUNNY IS THE NEW ROCK AND ROLL.” This quote from Nick Shore at MTV summarizes an approach more marketers need to take. When we asked Millennials what brands need to do to capture their attention, their #1 answer – use humor. While business is often serious, you don’t always need to take your message so seriously. Find opportunities to be humble and witty.


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