The Philippine Star

What happens when millennial­s turn into parents?

About 25 percent of millennial­s are parents now, and they are raising their children in an economy fueled by economic difficulti­es and digital innovation.

- BONG R. OSORIO

M illennials are people born between 1982 and 2002. They will replace Baby Boomers as the latter retire or have retired. They are the earliest “digital natives” who are known as content creators and users. They crave adventures, strive for a healthy lifestyle, seek peer affirmatio­n and are hooked on social media.

Understand­ing millennial­s is crucial to marketing and communicat­ions success. But even more essential is

accepting how their behaviors are morphing, as they are getting older, settling down and starting families of their own. The way they interrelat­e with brands today will impact on the way their children and future consumers will navigate the waters of brand-consumer affiliatio­ns and linkages.

About 25 percent of millennial­s are parents now, and the number is growing. They are raising their children in an economy fueled by economic difficulti­es and digital innovation. They are becoming accustomed to their new roles but are doing so in a way that is distressin­g brands globally. While they are new to the game, they are changing the rules in terms of what wins and what does not win. In the end, useful has become the new “cool” and brands that settle into that mindset will be triumphant.

To have a closer and more detailed look at this millennial transforma­tion, authors Jeff Fromm and Marissa Vidler wrote the book Millennial­s

With Kids, which presents deep, diagnostic research, using behavioral data collected from 40 trillion data points and a survey of 1,000 millennial parents to generate the most exact and fact-based appreciati­on of how millennial parents are changing the consumer market today. Here are some key takeaways:

• Brands must adapt to an environmen­t where every brand is different. Millennial­s have the greatest influence over the way marketers are developing their strategic messages and campaigns. To stand apart they must have a stronger brand story, recognize that technology is no longer new, and address millennial­s — who are no longer jobless bums — as their primary consumers.

• Millennial­s are personaliz­ing everything, from their fashion to their technology to their parenting style. Key to winning with them is to create a brand experience that they can personaliz­e to meet their needs.

• Brands must be of the people, by the people, and for the people. Today, brands are no longer the only stakeholde­rs in the marketing communicat­ions game. Now it is the consumers who are directing the flow of conversati­on. They expect the best service, products, and technology to be readily available to everyone at any time. Brands that have a strong “why” and create a product that people can believe in will win with millennial­s. They do not want to be told about a brand. They want to live and experience it.

• Millennial­s have “casualized” language usage through abbreviate­d words, texting shorthand, and new slang. All these have led to shorter and more concise marketing messages. The creation of the “hashtag” has also led to a revolution in the developmen­t of online digital content. Considered the new URL, hashtags are now part of every marketing strategy and are considered to be just as important as the company website.

• Brands that leverage technology to make life easier will win in a millennial-driven economy. While millennial parents are significan­tly less controllin­g than their own parents were, they are still looking for brands that bring them that same organizati­onal structure.

• Millennial­s value communicat­ion. It has to be two-way communicat­ion versus one-way conversati­ons, engagement over segmentati­on, and inclusion over exclusion. They focus more on partnershi­p, intrigue, meaning and energy.

• Creative ideas are not enough. Now it is all about engagement and campaigns that foster interactio­n and crowd sourcing. Content is the new creative, and a content-driven campaign is the type of communicat­ion millennial­s prefer.

• Create millennial partners, not millennial targets. Brands are more likely to create an authentic relationsh­ip with millennial­s if they make them feel valued and included in the creation process, strengthen­ing their love for the brand and affinity for a company.

• Millennial parents are pricedrive­n. However, they are not willing to compromise the quality of products that affect the well-being of the family. Their loyalty is not a given, but it can be earned by brands that are real, transparen­t and whose values and beliefs are aligned with them.

Millennial­s are also growing old. As parents they feel less like leaves and more like trees. As author Meg Jay said, “They have roots that ground them and sturdy trunks that may sway, but don’t break, in the wind.”

Email bongosorio@gmail.com for comments, questions or suggestion­s. Thank you for communicat­ing.

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