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A Marketers’ Guide to Reaching Gen Z and Bridging the Trust Gap

Businesses face unprecedented challenges in today’s fiercely competitive market landscape, where consumer trust is the currency of success. Customer trust levels have plummeted to their lowest point since before the pandemic—only 50% of consumers actually trust brands in 2023, according to recent thinktank data from XM Institute. Compounding this challenge is Generation Z (Gen Z), being forecasted to become the largest consumer group by 2026, presenting a unique conundrum for businesses. According to NRF data, they are the generation with the lowest brand loyalty in history and notoriously elusive for marketers to engage with despite their omnipresent digital footprint.

More than ever, loyalty and retention matter just as much as new customer acquisition. So, how do you capture the attention span of younger audiences, thoughtfully engaging them to ensure they return to your brand?

Who is Gen Z?

Born between the mid-1990s and early 2010s, Gen Z represents a seismic shift in consumer behavior and preferences. Raised in the digital era, Gen Z consumers are digital natives, fluent in the language of social media, and adept at navigating the online world. As consumers, Gen Z places greater importance on authenticity, social responsibility, and purpose-driven brands over traditional markers of success valued by previous generations, and the data reflects this. According to Intuit Mailchimp’s Science of Loyalty report, 23% of Gen Z consumers prioritize brands that reflect their values. With a heightened awareness of social and environmental issues, Gen Z consumers demand transparency, ethical practices, and meaningful engagement from the brands they support.

Marketing Technology News: MarTech Interview with Pete Bradbury, Chief Commercial and Growth Officer @ VideoAmp

Emotional Drivers

At the heart of Gen Z’s purchasing decisions lie their deeply held values and beliefs. Conscious consumers, Gen Z gravitates towards brands that mirror their ethical stances and contribute positively to society. From sustainable sourcing to fair labor practices, Gen Z scrutinizes every aspect of a brand’s operations, seeking alignment with their moral compass. One in three young adults reportedly would switch brands altogether due to environmental impact or unethical manufacturing. To capture the hearts and wallets of Gen Z consumers, businesses must position themselves as champions of social and environmental causes, leveraging their platform to effect meaningful change and resonate with this socially conscious demographic.

Underscoring the importance of genuine values-based marketing, businesses that feign activism without taking tangible action to support social or environmental causes aren’t going to draw more Gen Z consumers and might even get brands blocked. According to data from Forrester’s Technographics, almost a third of Gen Z say they unfollow, mute, or block brands on social media every week. Steer clear of rainbow-washing, like tokenizing employees of color in content or claiming a product is made sustainably when it’s really not because Gen Z consumers can see right through it.

Rewards Systems

In an era of rampant consumerism and fleeting attention spans, reward systems have emerged as a powerful tool for customer acquisition and retention. However, the traditional carrot-and-stick approach may no longer suffice for Gen Z consumers. Beyond discounts and freebies, Gen Z craves rewards that transcend transactional value, opting for experiences, recognition, and social impact. A successful rewards program framework should be rooted in authenticity, offering personalized incentives that resonate with Gen Z’s values and lifestyle. By embracing innovation and creativity in rewards design, businesses can forge deeper connections with Gen Z consumers and foster long-term loyalty.

Social Interactions

As digital natives, Gen Z consumers are deeply entrenched online, where social interactions and peer recommendations hold sway. Gen Z exhibits a paradoxical preference for real-world connections and authentic relationships despite their digital fluency. While half of Baby Boomers trust online shopping advice, 72% of 18-24-year-olds said recommendations from friends or family help them decide what to buy. While Gen Z relies on social media for product discovery and inspiration, they place greater trust in recommendations from friends, family, and online communities.

They are the demographic most likely to have digital-only friendships, according to recent research from Talk Shoppe. Businesses must navigate this delicate balance, leveraging social media platforms to amplify their brand message while fostering genuine connections and community engagement. By cultivating a loyal tribe of brand advocates and ambassadors, businesses can harness the power of social influence and build lasting relationships with Gen Z consumers.

Facing the Future

In an age of unprecedented disruption and change, businesses must adapt and evolve to meet Generation Z consumers’ evolving needs and preferences. By understanding the unique drivers and motivations of Gen Z, businesses can position themselves as authentic, purpose-driven brands that resonate with this influential demographic. From embracing sustainability and ethical practices to reimagining rewards programs and fostering genuine connections, businesses can bridge the customer trust gap and cultivate enduring relationships with Gen Z consumers. As the torchbearers of future consumer sentiment, Gen Z and subsequent generations represent a vanguard of change in the ever-evolving marketing landscape. By embracing innovation, empathy, and authenticity, businesses can navigate the generational divide and chart a course toward sustainable success in the dynamic world of commerce.

Marketing Technology News: From Insights to Impact: How Predictive Analytics Gives Data a Voice

Also catch- Episode 202 of the SalesStar Podcast: The Importance of Soft Skills in B2B sales with Thomas Hansen, President at Amplitude

Michael Mitchell
Michael Mitchellhttps://martechseries.com
Michael Mitchell, is Senior Brand Director at Intuit Mailchimp

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