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Social Media: What Can We Learn from Gen-Z?

This generation, in particular, holds the key to understanding the best ways to utilize social media.
social media and gen-z

Social media is essential – we know that. We also know that brands must treat social media as a living, breathing thing that will starve if you fail to interact with it or feed it. Just ask Gen-Z. They know this all too well. In fact, they can show us a thing or two about how to treat and evolve your brand on social media.

Gen-Z and post-millennials were born after 1996, which, of course, was an absolute boom in technological advancement. They don’t know life without a smartphone, internet, social media, Wi-Fi, and tons of other technological tools that are available at our fingertips.

This generation, in particular, holds the key to understanding the best ways to utilize social media. So, we wondered: What can marketing and advertising professionals learn from Gen-Z and post-millennials about their behavior on social media?

Be Yourself

Authenticity is very valuable to post-millennials – especially amid their daily dose of heavily filtered pictures, celebrity influencers with airbrushed skin, and forced-feeling sponsored posts that are often splattered across their Instagram feeds. In fact, 80% of Gen-Z consumers say it is authenticity that motivates them to follow and buy from a brand.

Overly produced digital experiences and posts turn post-millennials off as they look for a safe haven among a sea of noise and photoshop. While some brands access authenticity easily, others are not so lucky, and consumers can tell when it’s forced.

SocialMediaToday reports that 57% of consumers think that less than half of brands create content that resonates as authentic. That makes a big difference for brands who face backlash in their comments section and mass unfollowings. In fact, on average, 20% of consumers have unfollowed a brand on social media because they felt their content was inauthentic.

Key Takeaway for Marketers: Value user-generated content and use it to your advantage. Add human elements to apps and websites.

Change the World

Everybody wants to make a change, but post-millennials want to change the world. As consumers and as young adults, these individuals desire a safer, cleaner, more accepting world. Since their birth, this generation has been surrounded by political and social tensions and constant environmental concerns.

So, when they’re looking to make a purchase, chances are they want to buy from a brand who is socially, environmentally and economically responsible.

Key Takeaway for Marketers: Stand for something that is bigger than your products or services. Do good and spread the word.

Make it Quick – but Meaningful

Due to their constant on-the-go mentality, post-millennials have short attention spans. That means that easily digestible content is king – looking at you, TikTok. The video app giant has exploded with success because it takes only seconds to produce laughs, likes, clicks, and other forms of engagement.

According to an article from Business Insider, Gen Z-ers multitask across at least five screens daily. Whether they are conscious of it or not, they’ve likely got a little case of FOMO. This means that posting content to many different channels and platforms is crucial to reach them.

But the impact also matters to post-millennials. While your messaging needs to be short and sweet, it also needs to be significant and relevant to their own lives and personal brand.

Key Takeaway for Marketers: Be an agile marketer – post across many channels and appeal to young consumers with speed, simplicity, and an impactful statement.

Learn it Yourself, Do it Yourself

Largely self-taught, Gen-Z and post-millennials grasp information quickly and learn how to master technology faster than any generation prior. Because of this, they have a do-it-yourself mentality that they demonstrate on their own social media channels, such as their Instagram page or Twitter feed. Post-millennials know that they themselves are a brand – and that it will serve them well to stay on brand. Since their childhood, they’ve cultivated a social media presence – a feat that many brands should envy and take note of. Gen-Z learned early on how to monitor their success on social media; they know what sort of content will do well – in fact, they are even aware of the best times to post.

This presents post-millennials with a unique opportunity: translate their ample technology skills and social-media know-how into a new business venture. You can find many post-millennial YouTubers as young as 9-years-old who have boosted their social media to make them millions.

Key Takeaway for Marketers: Encourage the post-millennial do-it-yourself mindset by utilizing tutorial videos – and don’t underestimate this generation’s business ventures and ideas.

What We’ve Learned

The way that Gen-Z and post-millennials behave on social media offers a wealth of opportunity, resources, and information for marketers and advertisers. Let’s review a quick recap of the takeaways:

  • Value user-generated content and use it to your advantage. Add human elements to apps and websites.
  • Stand for something that is bigger than your products or services. Do good and spread the word.
  • Be an agile marketer – post across many channels and appeal to young consumers with speed, simplicity, and an impactful statement.
  • Encourage the post-millennial do-it-yourself mindset by utilizing tutorial videos – and don’t underestimate this generation’s business ventures and ideas.

Now is the time to recognize this generation as the next largest consumer group in the United States, meaning now is the time for brands to adapt and react appropriately.

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Rhea Zigmund

Rhea Zigmund brings experience helping organizations advance business objectives through strategic communications marketing.

She leads the delivery of integrated programs and projects, including strategy, planning, research, creative, internal and external communications, earned media, paid media, social media, celebrity and influencer partnerships, events and experiences, and measurement.

Prior to joining The Partnership, Rhea was Vice President at Edelman where she specialized in Healthcare and Business Transformation. She led large-scale communications marketing programs for national health organizations. She also supported partners through change and transformation, such as mergers and acquisitions, rebrands, repositionings, restructurings, and workforce challenges.

Rhea holds a Masters in Business Administration (MBA) from Georgia State University with a specialization in organizational management. She is a Prosci® Certified Change Practitioner. Originally from Kentucky, Rhea earned her Bachelor of Science in Integrated Strategic Communications from the University of Kentucky.

Living in Atlanta, GA with her husband and two dogs, Rhea spends her spare time exploring the city and working with her local foster care community.

Jeremy Hill

Over the past 20 years, I’ve specialized in digital innovation within healthcare marketing, leading efforts to enhance web development and UX/UI design. My career highlights include spearheading significant projects such as the redevelopment and replatforming of the Naples Comprehensive Health (NCH) website—a six-month initiative involving a dynamic team of 16 professionals. Additionally, I managed the digital aspects of fundraising campaigns for the Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Foundation and tackled crisis communications during hacking incidents at Northside Hospital.

I guide my teams with a philosophy centered on trust and transparency, creating an environment that encourages autonomy and bold ideas. This approach has been crucial in navigating the complex challenges of the healthcare sector and driving digital transformations that improve patient engagement and operational efficiency. As a storyteller and strategist, I am committed to leading digital service transformations and optimizing web experiences to foster growth and enhance user journeys in the healthcare industry.

Sela Missirian

Sela is a strategic brand marketer who helps brands grow through modern forms of engagement. With deep digital roots at multiple tech startups, international assignments and significant consulting expertise, she develops solution-based marketing strategies for clients to achieve their business goals.
 
Sela’s healthcare work spans pharmaceuticals Allergan and Pfizer, healthcare systems NCH, Piedmont Healthcare and Southwell, specialty group Dentistry for Children and medical device Kinas Medical Technologies. Other industry work includes Citrix, SAP, Voya Financial, Chick-fil-A, The Dairy Alliance and Equifax.
 
Sela graduated with a Bachelors in Science from Cornell University and is a regular marketing lecturer at GA Tech’s Scheller College of Business Executive MBA program. 

Julie Crow

Julie Crow, SVP of Partner Services and Program Management, oversees partner relationships, including managing current partner relationships and workflows, new partner onboarding and discovery, strategic leadership of projects, operations and program management. Julie oversees the account management and project management teams.
 
Julie has spent her entire career as a brand strategist and marketer with leadership experience in many categories including consumer products, beauty, entertainment, wellness and non-profit.
 
She started her career in New York City at Colgate Palmolive and Estee Lauder, managing marketing and advertising for a variety of their signature brands. After moving to Atlanta, Julie spent her first decade working for Turner Broadcasting (now Warner Discovery) leading marketing for networks such as TBS, TNT,and Turner South. Following her Turner days, Julie ran her own marketing consulting business, focusing on brand development and marketing strategy for clients across diverse categories. Before joining The Partnership, Julie ran marketing and communications for a private high school in Atlanta and led a large economic development client team for another marketing agency.
 
Julie is also a certified health coach and wellness advocate and has dedicated time over the past decade to helping companies and families build programs and habits for good nutrition and healthy living.

Alex Loehrer

Bio coming soon.

Amanda Lucey

Amanda has been a communications leader, providing strategic public relations, branding and corporate communications for over 20 years. She’s the CEO of The Partnership, Atlanta’s oldest privately held agency, and an accomplished entrepreneur, having first founded Moxie Media and Marketing in 2012 (DBA M3 Effect).

The company grew tremendously within its first five years, doubling growth in 2017. To accelerate growth in 2018, Amanda acquired The Partnership in 2018. Her goal? To make The Partnership one of the fastest-growing female-owned agencies in the Southeast and a top-10 advertising agency in Atlanta and Southwest Florida. Her passion is to engage and empower her team to produce the best possible product – work that makes an impact and drives results.

She has held executive roles in both the U.K. and U.S. governments, as well as the Southeast United Dairy Industry Association. She was the Vice Consul, Head of Political, Press and Public Affairs for the British Consulate General, in which she managed all media relations strategies and delivered the UK’s policy and public diplomacy priorities. She also served as a media correspondent and director of communications for the U.S. government and has extensive public affairs experience. Prior to working in D.C., Amanda worked for the Georgia General Assembly House of Representatives.

Amanda is an accomplished public speaker, business owner and volunteer. Her motto: be hungry, keep hustling, and stay humble.