Millennials are different in ways large and small — in upbringing, values, beverage and leisure preferences, work habits, social attitudes and more. But perhaps the difference that is most important for marketers is information savvy. Millennials prefer to think of themselves as the Internet Generation. Gen Y members could operate a mouse before they could read. They absorb each new innovation with lightening speed, speeding the innovation cycle to dizzying levels. They don’t value information per se, because information is free. Instead, they value the ability to organize, create and share information. They don’t search, they expect relevant information to come to them. Ultimately, technology may be the underlying driver of all the other differences.
The Journal of Brand Management, in an insightful editorial eloquently described this generational divide:
“The under thirties ‘are more savvy, more materialistic, more media-saturated and more impatient than any generation that’s preceded them. Gen Y– the so-called options generation — wants the freedom to exercise choice. … But the picture is more complicated than this: it isn’t simply that the young are savvy and the old aren’t. Indeed, many in the older generation are savvy and technologically sophisticated. Moreover, older consumers are striving to be younger….Perhaps the real difference between the generations is Gen Y and Gen M take digital, interactive technologies for granted — they are cyberspace natives — whereas older generations are like immigrants who have at differing rates and with differing abilities, had to learn about this brave new world. Superimposed on these generational differences are variations in gender socio-economic status, access to technology, educational attainment and ability — the components that go to create, on the one hand, digital communities, and, on the other hand, digital divides.”
Despite all my attempts to stay technologically current (hey, I use Twitter!), I was reminded of my ‘immigrant’ status yesterday in a conversation with Millennial, Connor McCue of Generation Think Tank in Boulder, CO. Connor had urged me to add an RSS feed to this blog, which I did and thanked him for suggesting. I went on to brag that I had also added bookmarking capability, but rather than being impressed, he asked me a few questions about my own use of technology that made it clear to me that I am still speaking pidgen Internet, relative to Gen Y, regardless of how fluent I may appear to others my age.
Here is the point: even the least technologically sophisticated Millennial is probably well beyond the skill level of the most sophisticated 50 year old. When building brand relationships, it is now critical to use access to and comfort with technology as a segmentation dimension, in addition to the usual behavioral and attitudinal factors. The technological factors may be more important to engaging with brands than demographics. This complicates the marketing challenge, but will lead to more nuanced marketing.