Houston Chronicle

Gen Z prefers shopping in stores over going online

- By Ellie Silverman

The youngest adult consumers still prefer shopping in stores over using their laptops, Instagram feeds or Amazon’s Alexa, according to a recent Morning Consult study.

“Gen Z is on track to be the largest, most ethnically diverse, best-educated and most financiall­y powerful generation ever,” the report states. “In the coming years, their distinctiv­e habits will play an outsized role in shaping American culture and commerce.”

This younger generation, which the report defined as Americans born between 1997 and 2012, began spending money when two-day delivery was common, “driving high expectatio­ns about convenienc­e,” according to the report, based on a May survey of about 3,000 U.S. adults, including about 1,000 ages 18 to 21.

Still, 55 percent of Generation Z women said they preferred going into stores. That number is lower for Gen Z men, at 40 percent, and is 53 percent for all other adults. Twothirds of the younger generation shoppers go shopping for fun at least once a month.

“Gen Z adults are enamored with major technology and social media brands but also enjoy shopping inperson,” the report concludes.

Gen Z shoppers are aware of the technology brands they are buying from.

Google, Google Search, YouTube, Gmail and Instagram are the top five brands Gen Z survey respondent­s said they are most likely to use daily. The next five are Google Chrome, Snapchat, Netflix, Apple iMessage and Apple iPhone.

The top three most critical threats that Gen Z sees as facing the U.S. are terrorism, climate change, and racism, sexism and other forms of discrimina­tion. The top three political issues to Gen Z are health care, civil rights and the price of education.

“This filters into how they view politics, interact with brands and approach personal life decisions,” the report says.

Thirty-seven percent of Gen Z adults identify as Democrats, compared with 14 percent identifyin­g as Republican.

Almost 40 percent of Gen Z adults who say they are liberal boycotted a brand in the last year for political reasons, according to the report.

When they do shop online, 41 percent of Gen Z adults said consumer reviews and ratings are important when deciding to make a purchase. That percent is even higher for Gen Z women.

Few Gen Z adults use credit cards to pay for groceries or gas, compared with about a quarter of all other adults. Almost half, 47 percent, of this younger generation opts to use a debit card as their primary payment method, and 30 percent use cash.

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