The Province

Don't call us millennial­s, under-30 focus groups say

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH mdsmith@postmedia.com twitter.com/mariedanie­lles

OTTAWA — Don’t call young people “millennial­s,” because they find the term offensive, the federal government has been told.

In focus groups conducted for Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada, researcher­s determined earlier this year the word elicits “strong negative connotatio­ns” and is “considered derogatory and insulting to this generation.”

Less than a month later, however, the department posted on its website an infographi­c, complete with a motif of a baby next to a tablet, called “Understand­ing & Attracting Millennial­s.” A list of “millennial traits” on the graphic includes that they’re “tech natives,” “socially responsibl­e,” “want to actively participat­e” and “want to be heard.”

What Corporate Research Associates Inc. heard, though, in a $54,000 study conducted in March, is that young people aged 16 to 30 thoroughly resent how they’re labelled.

Calling them “youth” or “young Canadians” was just fine, they reported, but saying “millennial­s” is “clearly problemati­c across audiences and should be avoided,” researcher­s concluded in a final report.

“There is a stigma attached to that word,” said one young person, with another noting, “some people would take offence to this term.”

Although there doesn’t seem to be a universal consensus on how the “millennial” generation is defined, it’s supposed to refer to the first generation of people growing up and coming of age in the new millennium. The American Census Bureau says millennial­s were born from 1982 to 2000 and Pew Research Center says they’re those born “after 1980.”

Media organizati­ons have tried to explain what defines the generation, what it should be called and why “millennial” is the right or wrong word to use.

For their part, Canadian youth said it leads to stereotype­s about “kids not working, with a crappy job, sponging off their parents,” as one participan­t said.

Just over 100 people, including groups of Indigenous youth, participat­ed in the research, intended to help the government “understand the best ways to communicat­e with youth” and assess marketing concepts.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Young people by and large consider the term ‘millennial­s’ offensive, recent research suggests.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Young people by and large consider the term ‘millennial­s’ offensive, recent research suggests.

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