People like to be catered to, but they tend not to like being pandered to. That's doubly so when they're being marketed to. A campaign that leaves people feeling like they're being talked down to or patronized is not going to inspire a lot of brand loyalty.
We Millennials are especially quick to notice when advertisers are pandering to us. We've grown up surrounded by advertising, and we've seen the dozens (hundreds?) of think pieces written about us and our buying habits.
So this Millennial is here to give some advice on how to actually reach the young customers you want to attract.
Segmentation of Millennials
The first and most important step is to remember your market segmentation. Millennials are no more a monolithic group than any past generation of 18-34-year-old consumers has been. What appeals to one group of us may outright offend others.
Let's look at two segments of Millennials. We'll call them "Trendy" and "Eco-Conscious."
Trendy Millennials...
- Are looking for what's new and hot
- Love fast fashion and shopping
- Have to have the newest phone with the best camera for taking selfies
- Follow their favorite celebrities on social media
- Enjoy trying out new social media platforms for chatting with friends
- Have fast-evolving slang
- Want to try the newest food crazes
Eco-Conscious Millennials...
- Are always looking for ways to reduce their ecological footprint
- Love clothes that are timeless and will last for years.
- Upgrade their phone only when it finally stops working
- Follow their favorite activists on social media (OK, and probably celebs too!)
- Use social media as a platform for their preferred causes
- Are steeped in the latest social-justice terminology
- Are often locavores or vegans, or eat organic
Both of those groups are pretty common in my age group. You can see how you'd want to market differently to each one.
If you were trying to sell a sandwich to Trendy Millennials, you'd want to tell them about the exciting new super-fruit chutney spread. To the Eco-Conscious Millennials, you'd tout that your bread was baked locally this morning using organic whole-grain flour.
You might be selling them the same sandwich, but each group wants different things from it.
And that's before we even break things down along gender lines, education level, household income, relationship status...
Millennials contain multitudes. We're students and entrepreneurs, swinging singles and young parents, introverts and extroverts, planners and free spirits. You can't shove us into a single box based on our age group and expect to market to us based on that fact alone.
Engagement of Millennials
The second big thing to keep in mind is that because we've grown up surrounded by more advertising than any previous generation since we spend all day being inundated by advertising on our social media accounts, Millennials are much more savvy about advertising tricks—especially when so many of us have tried our hands at advertising our own Etsy shops, Twitch channels, crowdfunding campaigns, and whatever other endeavors we've turned our hands toward to pick up some money on the side. A lot of us work in advertising ourselves, running the social media accounts for whatever company we work for or are interning for in college.