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Instead of just analyzing data, building a brand for a youth audience requires an "out-of-office culture." Marketers must actively participate in the culture—attending concerts, using platforms, and making content—to gain genuine inspiration.
Instead of using demographics, Coach conducted ethnographic research to understand Gen Z's core tensions, like craving self-expression while valuing sustainability. This insight into their "dualities" and "emotional trade-offs" was the foundation for their "Expressive Luxury" positioning, which resonates on a deeper human level.
Involve people from outside the marketing team and across different demographics (e.g., Gen Z) in the content ideation process. Their diverse perspectives and awareness of different trends can surface novel ideas that marketing-focused teams might otherwise overlook.
Brands can no longer rely on loyalty being passed down from parents to children. Each new generation gravitates towards brands that represent its own values. Incumbents must constantly reinvent their approach to engage new youth cohorts or risk fading into obscurity as new challengers emerge.
Snap's CMO posits that previous generations were just as creative but were culturally encouraged to conform. Gen Z, by contrast, is raised in an environment where creativity is valued and fostered as a desirable skill by parents and schools.
Marketers are sprinting to learn AI but are failing to deeply understand Gen Z, the primary audience they're trying to influence with it. With $12 trillion in buying power by 2030, ignoring this generation's nuances is a fundamental strategic flaw.
Gen Z users are themselves prolific creators. For brands to resonate, their marketing creative must meet or exceed the standard set by the audience itself, not just traditional advertising benchmarks.
Consumers now expect brands to be active participants in culture, not just observers who use insights for campaigns. This requires brands to move beyond their comfort zone of brand safety guidelines and take a stance on relevant social issues, which is difficult but necessary to win consumer hearts.
Gen Z consumers curate different personas across various social channels (e.g., TikTok vs. LinkedIn), making brand positioning exponentially more complex. A brand's purpose must serve as a connective tissue, agile enough to be tweaked for different channel-specific identities while maintaining a core consistency.
Gen Z possesses valuable business skills learned outside of formal education, such as creating viral videos, building online communities, and strategic thinking from gaming. Leaders should actively seek to "unlock this technological genius" as it directly relates to modern customer engagement and marketing.
Public metrics like likes and shares are secondary. According to Snap's CMO, the ultimate test of brand resonance with younger audiences is whether they are organically discussed in private group chats.