As the future of luxury, marketing to millennials has never been more important. Here, FutureCast provides an exclusive excerpt of its latest research deciphering the millennial mindset for both brands and marketers.
Millennial Marketing 101: Understanding The New Millennial Mindset
Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.
PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.
In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”
The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris
As the future of luxury, marketing to millennials has never been more important. Here, FutureCast provides an exclusive excerpt of its latest research deciphering the millennial mindset for both brands and marketers.
As the future of luxury, marketing to millennials has never been more important. Here, FutureCast provides an exclusive excerpt of its latest research deciphering the millennial mindset for both brands and marketers.
Who are millennials? The answer depends on whom you are talking to.
Statisticians will tell you millennials are young adults born after 1980 and that there are more than 80 million of them living in the United States today with a direct spending power of $200 billion.
However, I have a found a more evolved story to be true. Millennials are digital natives at their core and their desire to change the world is impacting the way companies are doing business.
“ As the majority generation in the US, millennials have the greatest influence on market trends and behaviours ”
Top 5 millennial trends
1. Millennials are content creators and curators
2. Millennials seek peer affirmation
3. Millennials fuel the experience economy
4. Millennials are redefining affluence and luxury in the United States
5. Millennials are the biggest instigators and influencers on new market trends
No surprise that as the majority generation in the United States, millennials have the greatest influence on market trends and behaviours. Today, millennials are 2.5 times more likely to be early adopters of digital, social and mobile trends. As a result, millennial behaviours permeate older and younger generations creating an overarching mindset that is determining brand health and financial performance.
Marketers and business leaders are already well aware of all that has been written on the millennial generation. I have certainly written my fair share of reports and articles. But beyond just the facts, the question is truly how can brands begin to navigate and, more importantly, prioritise and quantify that coveted millennial influence?
“ Whether your brand wants to connect with boomers or Gen Z, it is important to recognise that many behaviours stem from millennial trends and mindsets ”
In the latest research we have conducted at FutureCast, we found that the answer to this question lies in what we call the Millennial Mindset.
Last year, millennials became the largest generation of consumers living in the U.S. Beyond just the sheer size of this generation, their impact lies in their ability to influence an entire market of consumers who may or may not be their millennial peers. Whether your brand wants to connect with boomers or Gen Z, it is important to recognise that many of the behaviours these non-millennial consumers are carrying out stem from millennial trends and mindsets.
For example, a 50-year-old man is not a millennial as defined by his age, but he is just as dedicated to wearing his Nike FuelBand every day as his 23-year-old son. Similarly, we are already seeing the impact millennial parents are having on their Gen Z children.
Defining the Millennial Mindset
Social Circle
When brand marketers hear the word “social” they instantly turn to social media. This is not always the case. Yes, social media is a powerful tool but the real value of a social circle is so much more than just activity on social media. The Social Circle refers to the team of advisors modern consumers have built for themselves and it is without question the most influential and impactful pillar within the Millennial Mindset. The more brand fans who advocate for the brand, the bigger the social circle. This will directly impact future profits.
Self
It is no secret that the key to great brand performance is to build an emotional connection with your audience. Consumers who feel that a brand understands them on a personal level and provides opportunities for greater self-exploration develop the kind of loyalty that leads to brand dominance. This pillar also mirrors current trends we are seeing take shape across the board. Utility has become the new currency and the brands that help consumers have more fulfilling lives through customised experiences are winning big.
Innovation
Millennial Mindset consumers want the novelty, efficiency, and effectiveness that come with product innovation and identify innovative brands as ones that are constantly improving and reinventing themselves. More than that, they are looking for brands that streamline utility and are constantly re-inventing and re-creating new ways that make consumer’s lives easier, more efficient, better, etc. Brands that are constantly in beta will drive interest and engagement across generations that absolutely prefer increased usefulness.
“ Consumers today have more access to brands than ever before, so keeping secrets is no longer an option ”
Trusted
Building trust is the first step to any great relationship. The same is true for brands aiming to connect with Millennial Mindset consumers. The most trusted brands are the ones that put consumer needs first and follow through with their promises. Consumers today have more access to brands than ever before with the Internet and social media so keeping secrets and important information hidden behind red tape is no longer an option.
Accessible
Accessibility is key. Consumers today are looking for access to brand across both physical and digital channels and for brands to create a seamless transition between those two worlds. This all boils down into one big idea: Useful is the New Cool®. Consumers today are looking to brands to create more ways to make their lives easier and that comes from greater accessibility to the products and services they use every day.
Purposeful
Millennial Mindset consumers are looking to brands that add good to the world and are committed to making our planet a better place. Today, brands must acknowledge the triple bottom line that exists – people, planet and profit. Businesses cannot exist in a modern market if they are only focused on the numbers in their P&L.; Consumers look to their favourite brands to help them make their communities better and provide them with the tools they need to impact their world.
“ Respondents in our survey said that “Accessible” and “Trusted” were the mindsets that mattered most to them when making a purchase decision ”
What mindsets matter most?
Which Millennial Mindsets matter most? It depends: what respondents said was important was quite different than what was actually important. Respondents in our survey said that “Accessible” and “Trusted” were the mindsets that mattered most to them when making a purchase decision.
However when we mapped the mindsets against actual spending data we found a different story. “Social Circle,” the lowest-rated attribute in stated importance, was the factor that most drove spending behaviour when looking at derived importance. “Self” and “Innovative,” were both ranked relatively low in stated importance but were the next most important factors in spending behaviours considering actual consumer spend.
Clearly, what consumers say tends to be different than what they actually do. Brands that can actually identify what their consumers are doing and what is influencing that action will be the disruptor brands that guide the future. Connecting with consumers based on this new market paradigm is essential for brands aiming to win big. Remember, we are living in a new consumer market where a target audience does not exist. Rather, a group of like- minded consumers who may range in demographics and backgrounds but are within the same mindset will be what drives brand performance across industry verticals.