Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook


Globally, millennials have outnumbered baby boomers


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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit

Globally, millennials have outnumbered baby boomers 
for more than a quarter of a century
Generation by proportion of global population (%)
Source: UN Population Division, American Community Survey
0
10
20
30
40
1985
90
95
2000
05
10
15
18
Boomers
Millennials
Generation X
Italy
16.9%
Millennials in the US and 
China are marrying less 
than baby boomers when
they were young
Proportion of population married at 
least once, by age group (%)
20-24
25-29
30-34
0
20
40
60
80
100
20-24
25-29
30-34
0
20
40
60
80
100
US
China
Boomers in 1984
Millennials in 2016
Millennials overtake Generation X
to become the largest generation
Millennials overtake
baby boomers
Boomers in 1982
Millennals in 2010
The first
millennials
are born
The last
millennials
are born
Millennials
Boomers
Millennials
make up 
24.7% of
the global
population
Millennials
overtake
baby
boomers
In both advanced and developing economies millennials 
are the most urban generation to date
Each line represents the proportion of a five-year birth cohort
living in urban areas over their lifetime (%)
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
0
20
40
60
80
Advanced economies
Millennials
Millennials
Advanced economies
Developing economies
Developing economies
Age
Urbanisation among 20 to 24 year olds
born in 1991-1995 is higher than those 
born 1956-60 when they were the same age


228
CHAPTER 8 SEGMENTATION AND POSITIONING RESEARCH 
parents’ fortunes. They are highly educated: 39 per 
cent of British 25 to 39-year-olds are graduates, com-
pared with 23 per cent of those between 55 and 64. 
But their sophistication and ambition is not matched 
by security.
This is largely an accident of history. Older mil-
lennials entered the workforce in the mid-2000s, and 
many lost jobs after the 2008 crisis. They were also 
caught by rapid inflation in house prices as inter-
est rates fell and remained low. The milestones of 
leaving home, getting a job, marrying and having 
children have been delayed — 45 per cent of 18 to 
34-year-old Americans had done all four in 1975, but 
only 24 per cent had in 2015.
It has spawned widespread distrust, both in 
organisations and individuals. A Pew study in 2014 
found that only 19 per cent of millennials believed 
that others could be trusted, compared with 40 per 
cent of boomers and 31 per cent of the generation 
Xers born between 1965 and 1980. Millennial faith in 
institutions is also low. ‘This generation is incredibly 
sceptical of governments and big corporations,’ says 
Keith Niedermeier, professor at the Wharton busi-
ness school.
Malcolm Harris, author of Kids These Days, a 
book about ‘why it sucks to have been born between 
1980 and 2000’, says distrust is only natural among 
a generation that has to struggle for security. ‘If 
competition is the main feature of your world, you 
would be a fool to find people trustworthy,’ he says. 
The preference for local, organic and craft products 
is also logical, in his view: ‘You want to be part of 
a circle of production and consumption that is not 
centred on enriching the 1 per cent.’

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