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The Millennial Generation: We’ve got the power

By Elizabeth Quaglieri | October 19, 2011


redbookCommissioned by the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, author and culture analyst Patricia Martin recently published the report “Tipping the culture: How engaging Millennials will change things.”Her extensive research on marketing to the generation “eclipsing Boomers and GenX” boils down to the following: the Millennials, those between the ages of 15 and 31, are more networked than any other generation and thus have the power to influence and determine the success and future of an organization.

Between blogs, Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and smart phone applications, the Millennials are here, there, everywhere, with everyone, and telling you about it. Because of this, if you can catch them and grab their attention, they will market your product for you. But this is not news. The folks here at Technology in the Arts have offered compelling reasons beyond the obvious (marketing advantages) why not-for-profit arts organizations should tap into these viral networks.

Martin takes a look at the big guys, companies like Google, Ford Motors, and J. Crew, to uncover how they successfully snagged the Millennials. How has J. Crew managed to attract and maintain the 22 to 30 year old Millennials? How did Starbucks gain such a loyal following of 15 to 30 year olds? What techniques are these large, for-profit firms using to advance their brand and secure their position in the future marketplace? Using these case studies, Martin provides insight on marketing to this powerful group of young-adults, divulging what attracts them, how to include them, what they are thinking, what they want and how to engage them.

In her easy-to-digest exposé, Martin sheds light on a generation that seeks to both create and consumer content; a generation that is less interested in sitting passively in the audience than being engaged and having their input heard in the creation of the production. Martin offers the not-for-profit arts sector strategies for effective marketing to Millennials through personalized and engaging social media interactions.

So how do Starbucks and J. Crew do it?

1) Making Millennials the priority, then the brand

2) Increasing the firm’s emotional and lifestyle appeal

3) Creating a sense of belonging for customers through participation

What exactly does this mean to a not-for-profit?

Millennials crave connection, whether through broad networks and communities or through exclusive access to content that creates a sense of intimacy.

Translation: Open your backroom doors by posting video footage to Facebook of a “Day-in-the-life” of your museum director, reveal your “behind-the-scenes” preparations for an upcoming exhibition through Facebook status updates and photo uploads, or tweet from back-stage actors’ excitement moments before the opening act. For those of you theater connoisseurs, break the “fourth wall” to show Millennials you understand their desire for access to content and knowledge. Give Millennials the opportunity, through social media, to discover on their own what you are about. Martin describes this as an “egalitarian social model,” where you (the not-for-profit) and the Millennial become connected as friends and collaborators.

Once you have established a relationship with your users online, your work is only half complete. If you encourage participation online, be sure to reinforce your commitment to the Millennials and their contributions on-site by referencing user generated content in your play-bills, gallery maps, and museum guides.

There is a reason why the Broadway musical Rent and primetime TV shows such as CSI and Gossip Girl have gained momentum among Millennials: they are emotionawhatdotheywantlly charged and engage Millennials in meaningful ways. Creating meaning for Millennials in your not-for-profit could begin with a blog. This forum allows for informal discussion, emotional content, and most importantly, participation. Have your blogger pose questions of substance that encourage meaningful and emotional responses in reaction to a performance or exhibit, such as “Do you agree?”, “What do you think?”, “Tell us how you feel” or “Which character did you relate to most?” By giving Millennials the unadulterated freedom to share their perspective and voice in a dynamic forum, they will have a more personalized experience with your organization.

Fulfilling the emotional desire of Millennials to be connected, heard, and have meaningful experiences will increase the retention rates for this generation in your organization. It does not require the marketing budget or quarterly revenue of J. Crew or Pepsi, just greater attention to the entire customer experience of your cultural brand (think witty videos for downloading, thought-provoking quotes for Millennials to tweet and a survey to remind them they have a stake in your future).

To the Millennials out there, what social media and technological marketing strategies have won you over? And to the not-for-profit arts organizations, how do you use technology and social media to effectively connect with them?

Topics: Art Meets Tech | 4 Comments »

  • Rachael Wilkinson

    I love when I come across something online that has the ability to be “shared” – when I find something cool I want to tell all my friends. It seems like a no-brainer these days to have buttons linking to Fbook or Twitter, but I think they’re important!

  • Elizabeth

    Hi Rachael,

    You are proof of just how contagious the sharing of information via online networks can be! It makes sense as to why we find it so engaging- discovering information, videos, interesting quotes, images, and websites on our own, and then broadcasting our findings to our online communities. Organizations’ Facebook, Twitter and web pages, when well maintained and stocked with meaningful and engaging features, are so effective for marketing to you and the rest of us Millennials. It is a win-win situation for everyone!

    Thanks for reading!
    Elizabeth

  • http://aworldnotyetinexistence.com/ bmwells

    We millennials grew up too young to understand, too old to forget.  The world grew quickly around us—quicker than it ever had before.  Sure the advent of trains, planes, and dial-up must have been amazing to see, but those took years, days and hours.  Today we’re talking seconds.  Twitter revolts, Facebook addictions, and YouTube celebrities.

    We’ve grown up alongside technology, evolving at the speed of broadband. Or the other way around.   Pushed ahead by the world before us, we’ve been stuck on a cusp, the verge of something better.  Life’s been one upgrade after another, a beta-version purgatory that knows no satisfaction.  Disillusioned with who we thought we were.  Never what we thought we’d become.

    I enjoyed you article, but believe we millennials are much more than building better brands.  We can build a better world.

  • Elizabeth

    bmwells,

    Just as my title implies, I too believe Millennials have the power to be socially influential- in shaping the future of marketing and just plain shaping the future. I think our (Millennial’s) level of compassion for cultural, social, political, and economic issues, coupled with our entrepreneurial spirit, make us capable of being societal game-changers. I believe that.

    But the intent of Patricia Martin’s report, and my own post, is to shed light on marketing to the Millennial. The purpose of the report is to provide case studies, advice and strategies for arts marketers to better engage our socially aware and entrepreneurial-minded generation. While these characteristics give us the power to make and sustain change now and in the future, they also present a challenge for marketers!