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Article 6: Generation Y
They may be young, but their
impact is already profound. Members of this
generation not only have more of their own money
to spend than previous generations, but also
wield unprecedented power in influencing their
parents’ purchasing decisions.
These are the kids of the boomers, “forever
young” parents who envision a healthy family as
a democratic body in which children have a vote
and help sway decisions—from what cereal and
jeans to buy to where to vacation and which
family car to choose.
Gen Y kids also benefit from boomer parents’
guilt over lack of quality time, which
translates into more material goods, spending
money and voting power.
The members of this generation illustrate a
phenomenon Anne Sutherland and Beth Thompson,
the authors of
Kidfluence (McGraw-Hill, 2003)
call KAGOY: “kids are getting older younger.”
Exposure to a highly diverse mass media and the
Internet means kids learn about adult situations
and lifestyles much earlier, and they’re heavily
influenced by the style of older teens.
Kids now move beyond dolls and action figures at
age 6 (a decade ago that transition occurred at
age 7 or 8). Puberty begins almost a full year
earlier than it did 50 years ago, likely as a
result of better nutrition as well as obesity.
Gen Y is a true media cohort: The average child
spends 5.5 hours a day outside school engaged in
media—television, computers, movies, video
games, music and print. Two-thirds of U.S.
children over age 8 have a TV in their bedroom.
Computers are second nature.
This is an ethnically diverse generation: 16
percent Hispanic; 15 percent black,
non-Hispanic; 4 percent Asian/Pacific islander;
and 64 percent white, non-Hispanic.
For Gen Y kids, TV is a primary arbiter of style
that shows them what’s cool. They’re highly
aware of labels and brands, but they view
marketing skeptically and aren’t especially
gullible.
If boomers were the “Me Generation,” members of
Gen Y are the “More Generation.” Consuming is a
hobby, and the line between wants and needs is
seriously blurred. Gen Y kids ask their parents
for what they want, and it’s often hard for
boomer parents to resist. The size of the kid
influence market—purchases others make as a
result of their persuasion—is estimated at $200
billion to $300 billion.
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Concerns: being
accepted by peers; not having enough money;
hassles from parents; not being respected
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Turn-offs: store
clerks who dis them or don’t take them
seriously; phony pitches; technology that
disappoints
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Hot buttons:
exciting Web sites; color and design;
e-commerce opportunities that don’t require a
credit card; humor and irony; feeling older
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