The big conundrum these days is how marketers and advertisers can actively appeal to the coveted millennial demographic. After all, millennials hold the power; they set trends, spend money, and boost brands.

Brands are increasingly finding that it's difficult to keep up with a group whose tastes are constantly in flux. Also, the millennial is notoriously snarky and cynical but not negative. In fact, millennials have a great positive energy that they share via social media through good-natured self-deprecation and a knowledge of pop cultural references.

But if you don't engage on social media, you simply aren't part of the conversation, and you don't exist.

Brands have to provide shareability and value to their user base, and even create a platform for the content creators to use. Movement campaigns such as Always' #likeagirl are a great example. The ALS #icebucketchallenge was another.

Allowing the content creator a measure of personal expression while providing branding guardrails such as the appropriate hashtag and the rules of engagement (hold up a sign that says #likeagirl, or shoot a video of an ice bucket being poured over your head) gives your audience the power to engage their own friend groups, which ultimately (and ideally) sets off a viral chain reaction.

Likers, Sharers, and Content Creators

The subsets of millennials are "likers," "sharers," and content creators.

Likers will get behind a movement and show support—but rarely engage their peers. Likers represent the majority of your following and the end consumer that you must ultimately engage to see ROI.

Sharers take their engagement one step further. They will not only engage but also encourage their peers to do so, which is key to a viable and successful social campaign. This particular subset represents a smaller percentage of your audience, but these customers exert influence on the larger groups and are integral to a campaign's measure of virality.

Content creators (or influencers) are often popular millennial figures with their own social media engagements and stand as pillars of taste-making among the rest of their community (and sometimes the world at large). This particular subset may include your brand as part of its lifestyle in an organic way, which really has a tremendous impact on its following (and ultimately that of the brand).

Many content creators have sharers of their own, so they represent the highest rung of the pecking order.

Engaging all three (likers, sharers, and content creators) is critical to brand dissemination in millennial culture. A brand's ability to do that is the perfect gauge to potential success down the line.

Brand Authenticity

Nobody can sniff out a fraud like millennial consumers. They are information bloodhounds and have access to every bad review, every corporate blunder, every negative reference to you and your product.

You can't hide the facts. Trying to cover up your true colors only makes you look phonier. The simple solution: be truthful.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Adam  Padilla

Adam Padilla is CEO and co-founder of BrandFire, a full-service creative agency.

LinkedIn: Adam Padilla