National Post

Big Oil tries to convince millennial­s it’s cool

AD CAMPAIGN TARGETS FRESH TALENT

- Polly Mosendz in New York

‘This ain’t your daddy’s oil,” the commercial proclaims, cutting to shots of spray paint being made and a wall covered in fanciful graffiti.

“Oil strikes a pose. Oil taps potential. Oil pumps life.”

Oil, in short, is cool, the industry’s branding brain trust has declared. The 30- second spot rolled out this year is part of a broader American Petroleum Institute campaign to “raise awareness about the role natural gas and oil has in economic growth, job creation, environmen­tal stewardshi­p, and national security.”

Dubbed Power Past Impossible, the ads by the lobbying arm of America’s oil giants are all about millennial­s, the generation of roughly 21-to35-year-olds that out-sizes any other and makes up the largest chunk of the American workforce.

“It’s a shift in our messaging and our target that’s been in the works for several years,” says Marty Durbin, the institute’s chief strategy officer. “There isn’t a company out there that isn’t chasing the elusive millennial­s.”

That may be true, but there are few with the kind of uphill battle the oil industry faces in catching them.

Millennial­s often frown on companies whose main products play a key role in global warming. A 2016 poll by the University of Texas found that 91 per cent of those under the age of 35 said climate change is occurring and just over half supported a carbon tax. About two- thirds of millennial- aged voters said energy issues influenced how they vote and that they plan to buy an alternativ­e fuel vehicle.

The spray paint ad, it turns out, got a decidedly mixed a reaction.

“What exactly were you guys thinking making a commercial aimed at young people,” tweeted one viewer. “Every time I see it I’m reminded of how ( expletive) of a resource petroleum is ecological­ly and how dumb it was to advertise … that way.”

Millennial­s prefer brands that come across as “conscious capitalist­s,” explained Jeff Fromm, an expert in marketing to younger Americans. “Any mature industry has to think about the fact that there’s a new sheriff in town with new values, new spending habits,” he added, referring to millennial­s. “Legacy brands often have that challenge.”

Beyond reintroduc­ing the brand, the Big Energy ad blitz has a more daunting task: convincing millennial­s to work for the industry. In the coming years, fossil fuel companies expect “to see a big turnover, sometimes called ‘ the big crew change,’” Durbin says.

“We started to reach out to different demographi­cs — women, veterans, minorities — to educate them on what the industry does and to learn what would pique their interest.”

Getting millennial­s to take these jobs, which tend to pay well but come with their own risks, won’t be easy for an additional reason. U. S. unemployme­nt is at a 16- year low and talented engineerin­g graduates are flocking to Silicon Valley for internship­s and first jobs that pay more than the median national wage. This adds even more pressure on the oil industry to spiff up its image, insofar as it can, to lure young workers with lots of choices.

“Oil and gas companies may need more profound changes to meet demands for meaningful work and social responsibi­lity to attract the next generation of top engineerin­g and leadership talent,” McKinsey & Co. wrote in a 2016 report on the future of the oil sector. Asking a millennial to choose between a green-tech company like Tesla Inc., which makes cars that don’t pollute, and an oil company, which fuels those that do, is a difficult propositio­n.

The consulting firm found 14 per cent of millennial­s would reject a career in oil because of the industry’s image. That’s the highest of any industry polled by McKinsey. Only two per cent of American college graduates list the oil and gas sector as their first choice for a job, according to research by Accenture, a profession­al services company.

Even among those unsure of their path, the news isn’t good. Less than half of millennial­s without a set career find appeal in oil and gas, according to the recently released EY U. S. Oil and Gas Perception poll. Women were more likely to reject the industry than men. And it’s only going to get worse as time goes on: The generation after millennial­s, commonly referred to as ‘ Z’, turned their nose up at oil jobs even more frequently.

Part of the issue, EY found, was a disconnect between what millennial­s want from a job and what oil executives think they want — and it has nothing to do with the environmen­t.

Asked what they prioritize in a job, 56 per cent of millennial­s said salary, followed closely by work- life balance, job stability, and job happiness.

Industry executives thought far more millennial­s were driven primarily by salary, an anachronis­tic viewpoint that may illustrate the generation­al challenge faced by their branding campaign.

Millennial­s have a similarly dated outlook, it turns out.

EY found they view the oil industry as packed with roughnecks, and the work as “blue- collar, dangerous, and physically demanding,” despite much of the sector being office-based and engineerin­g-focused.

Accenture, in a recent report, said most sectors facing a profession­al talent crunch can rely on new college graduates to fill vacancies.

“That’s not the case for oil and gas operators,” Accenture said.

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