On no…it’s
                                Generation X   
Born 1965 – 1981   Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
What is this?
       This presentation is one of five presentations outlining our understanding
       of Generational perspectives



    1. The Theory of Generations

    2. Boomers

    3. Generation X

    4. Generation Y, or Millenials

    5. Applying generational perspectives to Marketing




Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
introduction
       Childhood

       Instability

       Individualism

       Marketing

       What do they look like now?




Born 1965 – 1981        Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
A reminder… Nomads
    Generational X archetype….

    •   ratty
    •   tough
    •   unwanted
    •   diverse
    •   adventurous
    •   cynical

    Childhood was experienced

    •   Without religion
    •   Rising crime rates
    •   Weakening family values


Born 1965 – 1981      Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Why are they called Generation X?

    X refers to the lost, disenfranchised, nihilism felt by this generation

            It was popularised by Douglas Coupland’s book…


                                 “This generation is
                                  underemployed,
                                  intensely private
                                 and unpredictable”




                        Douglas Coupland, Generation X, 1991




Born 1965 – 1981     Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
What has been written about them?

    Symptoms that have long been commonly attributed to
    Generation X


    • Cynicism, alienation, amorality
    • Childlessness, pessimism, distrustful




Born 1965 – 1981    Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Childhood: How were they made to feel this way?

     Generation X children were valued less than Boomer children


     This was manifest in many ways

     • Culture: Film

     • Politics: Social policy

     • Parenting: Detached




Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Childhood: Culture and film
    •   During Generation X childhood, ‘Devil Child’ Films became popular


    •   1965 Children of the damned
    •   1968 Rosemary’s Baby
    •   1973 The Exorcist
    •   1974 It's Alive!
    •   1976 The Omen
    •   1976 Carrie
    •   1978 Halloween
    •   1978 Omen II
    •   1980 Friday the 13th


    In total 22 popular films were made…since 1982 there have been 9        Source: IMBD




Born 1965 – 1981           Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Childhood: Politics
    Tightening UK welfare state measures penalised parents


    •   Benefits were reduced and means testing was increasingly used


    •   The real value of child benefit reduced from 1975 - 1983


    •   In 1980 the Education Act relaxed the provision of milk and meals and
        limited free school meals to children receiving supplementary benefits or
        family income supplement


    •   The UK government was increasingly preoccupied with pensions




Born 1965 – 1981        Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Childhood: Parenting was Detached
    •   Family values deteriorated

            Rising divorce rates (peaked in 1993)
            Delaying birth until later….
            Numbers marrying falling
            Numbers remarrying rising
            Increase in step families (social vs. biological parenting)

    •   For those born in 1970, by the age of 5, 9% had experienced family
        disruption*

    •   Generation X kids childhood was often insecure and unpredictable



                                                                             *Source: Osborne and Milbank 1987




Born 1965 – 1981          Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Instability: Lack of Stability
     •   Cold War kids

     •   Most Gen X remember Ronald Reagan and President Gorbachov

     •   Gen X childhood was full of newspaper headlines that sensationalised the
         nuclear threat

     •   The nuclear mushroom cloud was etched on the mind of every child and
         teenager




Born 1965 – 1981         Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Instability: Emerging world concern
     •   During the early 80’s the Ethiopian famine highlighted African poverty

     •   Gen X-ers were confronted by disaster and parents inadvertently induced
         guilt about their own childhoods
           “eat up your meal, there are children in Africa…”

     •   However, Boomer pop stars and musicians galvanised a suitably reactivist
         response in the form of Live Aid




Born 1965 – 1981        Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Instability: Economic instability
     •   Margaret Thatchers monetary policy had a major impact on the country

     •   The new economy in the square mile was impressive

     •   But it left huge depression in many parts of the country

     •   Key issues were
           Spiralling interest rates
           Unemployment (3 million)
           Industry closure
           Strikes, notably the miners strike




Born 1965 – 1981        Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Instability:Recent BBC Blog on Xer
    coming of age
       ……..Going into the job centre where the cards were yellow with age, asking why they weren't
       taken down and being told that then there would be no cards at all. Unemployment marches,
       anti-nuclear marches and the forlorn chant of Maggie, Maggie, Maggie, out, out, out. Tax cuts
       for the rich, job cuts for the working class. The introduction of cash machines, the rise of aids
       and heroin addiction. Watching the Falklands war on television, the marriage of Charles and
       Di. Riots on the streets, many of which were never reported, supposedly to prevent copycat
       riots. All in all, a decade which served only to induce severe depression in most people.




Born 1965 – 1981           Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Instability: Can we play? No.
      •   In 1985 AIDS was diagnosed

      •   Via a government campaign and media spotlight it soon found its way
          into mainstream consciousness

      •   At school, college and university Xers were warned about unsafe sex
          and needles

      •   However confusion reigned and rumours spread about saliva –
          meaning kissing was a potential threat!




Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Individualism: De-classing
    •   During the 80’s and 90’s the UK became less class focussed


    •   This was a direct influence of Generation X disenfranchised view of society


    •   The fall out was a more democratic view of the population


    Income became the new status indicator




Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
The rise of individualism
    •   Another key aspect of the Xer 80’s environment was the rise of individualism


    •   This was driven by Thatcherism
          “Roll back the frontiers of the state that stifles individual initiative and
           watch the genius of the British people flourish”
            Margaret Thatcher, 1981


    •   Over the decade
          Owning a property became more realisable
          Privatisation meant stock ownership increased
          New business start ups rose by 110% in 1985*

                                                                                  *Source: DTI SME Bureaux




Born 1965 – 1981         Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
The rise of individualism
    •   The fall out on culture over the decade meant…
          Income distribution became increasingly polarised
          A strong work ethic emerged
          Materialism increased



                                    Yuppies!
                                    Dinky’s!



Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Individualism: Music genre!




Born 1965 – 1981   Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
The rise of individualism
    Youth culture was becoming more complex


    •   Music became increasingly fragmented
          Birth of Punk
          Birth of Hip Hop
          Birth of Rave
          Birth of New romantic


    •   Fashion and fashion labels became more accessible
          High street fashion chains
          Sports fashion was born



Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Increasingly tribal behaviour
    •   As influences from other countries became prominent


    •   As previous youth generation trends were revisited


    •   As new trends were forged



    A new, increasingly fragmented marketing
    target emerged



Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
In a word…



    Me, myself and I
    (to quote a popular hip hop group of the 80’s)




Born 1965 – 1981        Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Marketing
     The birth of green marketing       New formats, new tastes




Born 1965 – 1981     Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Marketing
       Levis groundbreaking ad changed relationships with advertising




Born 1965 – 1981    Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Marketing
       Others began to use analogy rather than directs sales messages




Born 1965 – 1981    Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
What do they look like now?




Born 1965 – 1981   Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
What’s an Xer look like now?
    •   Oldest is 46 (Born in 1965)
    •   Xers are about 22% of the population – the smallest group of all
        living generations
    •   Higher social grade than population as whole
          AB 28% (22% UK norm)
          C1 30% (30%)
          C2 18% (15%)
                                            22% Single; 72% in relationship
          D 18% (17%)                      67% have children
          E 5% (16%)                       73% own their home



Born 1965 – 1981      Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Boomers vs. Generation X
  When those born in 1954 reached 30 (Baby Boomers)        *Source: Economic and Social Research Council


                                                                               Gen X
  •   12.5% were single and never wed                                          19.5 %
  •   10% were cohabiting                                                      20 %
  •   70% were married                                                         54 %
  •   81 % of women had a child                                                69%
  •   18 % shared the cooking                                                  29%
  •   21 % shared the cleaning                                                 29%
  •   11 % shared ironing and laundry                                          21%
  •   27 % of women were housewives                                            19%
  •   68 % of women had paid work                                              74%
  •   70 % ate as a family daily                                               63%
  •   23 % of people rate happiness as nine out of 10 or better                26%


Born 1965 – 1981       Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
Cynicism is apparent...

           I feel that my generation has had a good impact on the world

                         1 - Strongly agree        2    3    4        5 - Strongly disagree




      Boomers           20                    28                 24            15            10




   Generation X     9          20                      37                    21               12




   Generation Y    8              28                    30                    23               10




                                                                               Source: Logistix IQ800 August 2007 data




Born 1965 – 1981        Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
What’s an Xer look like now?

                       Single lives predominate

                          Few large families

                       Gender roles are blurred

                                Wealthy




Born 1965 – 1981   Currently 30yrs – 46yrs

Presentation 3 Generation x

  • 1.
    On no…it’s Generation X  Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 2.
    What is this? This presentation is one of five presentations outlining our understanding of Generational perspectives 1. The Theory of Generations 2. Boomers 3. Generation X 4. Generation Y, or Millenials 5. Applying generational perspectives to Marketing Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 3.
    introduction  Childhood  Instability  Individualism  Marketing  What do they look like now? Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 4.
    A reminder… Nomads Generational X archetype…. • ratty • tough • unwanted • diverse • adventurous • cynical Childhood was experienced • Without religion • Rising crime rates • Weakening family values Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 5.
    Why are theycalled Generation X? X refers to the lost, disenfranchised, nihilism felt by this generation It was popularised by Douglas Coupland’s book… “This generation is underemployed, intensely private and unpredictable” Douglas Coupland, Generation X, 1991 Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 6.
    What has beenwritten about them? Symptoms that have long been commonly attributed to Generation X • Cynicism, alienation, amorality • Childlessness, pessimism, distrustful Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 7.
    Childhood: How werethey made to feel this way? Generation X children were valued less than Boomer children This was manifest in many ways • Culture: Film • Politics: Social policy • Parenting: Detached Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 8.
    Childhood: Culture andfilm • During Generation X childhood, ‘Devil Child’ Films became popular • 1965 Children of the damned • 1968 Rosemary’s Baby • 1973 The Exorcist • 1974 It's Alive! • 1976 The Omen • 1976 Carrie • 1978 Halloween • 1978 Omen II • 1980 Friday the 13th In total 22 popular films were made…since 1982 there have been 9 Source: IMBD Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 9.
    Childhood: Politics Tightening UK welfare state measures penalised parents • Benefits were reduced and means testing was increasingly used • The real value of child benefit reduced from 1975 - 1983 • In 1980 the Education Act relaxed the provision of milk and meals and limited free school meals to children receiving supplementary benefits or family income supplement • The UK government was increasingly preoccupied with pensions Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 10.
    Childhood: Parenting wasDetached • Family values deteriorated  Rising divorce rates (peaked in 1993)  Delaying birth until later….  Numbers marrying falling  Numbers remarrying rising  Increase in step families (social vs. biological parenting) • For those born in 1970, by the age of 5, 9% had experienced family disruption* • Generation X kids childhood was often insecure and unpredictable *Source: Osborne and Milbank 1987 Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 11.
    Instability: Lack ofStability • Cold War kids • Most Gen X remember Ronald Reagan and President Gorbachov • Gen X childhood was full of newspaper headlines that sensationalised the nuclear threat • The nuclear mushroom cloud was etched on the mind of every child and teenager Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 12.
    Instability: Emerging worldconcern • During the early 80’s the Ethiopian famine highlighted African poverty • Gen X-ers were confronted by disaster and parents inadvertently induced guilt about their own childhoods  “eat up your meal, there are children in Africa…” • However, Boomer pop stars and musicians galvanised a suitably reactivist response in the form of Live Aid Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 13.
    Instability: Economic instability • Margaret Thatchers monetary policy had a major impact on the country • The new economy in the square mile was impressive • But it left huge depression in many parts of the country • Key issues were  Spiralling interest rates  Unemployment (3 million)  Industry closure  Strikes, notably the miners strike Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 14.
    Instability:Recent BBC Blogon Xer coming of age ……..Going into the job centre where the cards were yellow with age, asking why they weren't taken down and being told that then there would be no cards at all. Unemployment marches, anti-nuclear marches and the forlorn chant of Maggie, Maggie, Maggie, out, out, out. Tax cuts for the rich, job cuts for the working class. The introduction of cash machines, the rise of aids and heroin addiction. Watching the Falklands war on television, the marriage of Charles and Di. Riots on the streets, many of which were never reported, supposedly to prevent copycat riots. All in all, a decade which served only to induce severe depression in most people. Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 15.
    Instability: Can weplay? No. • In 1985 AIDS was diagnosed • Via a government campaign and media spotlight it soon found its way into mainstream consciousness • At school, college and university Xers were warned about unsafe sex and needles • However confusion reigned and rumours spread about saliva – meaning kissing was a potential threat! Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 16.
    Individualism: De-classing • During the 80’s and 90’s the UK became less class focussed • This was a direct influence of Generation X disenfranchised view of society • The fall out was a more democratic view of the population Income became the new status indicator Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 17.
    The rise ofindividualism • Another key aspect of the Xer 80’s environment was the rise of individualism • This was driven by Thatcherism  “Roll back the frontiers of the state that stifles individual initiative and watch the genius of the British people flourish” Margaret Thatcher, 1981 • Over the decade  Owning a property became more realisable  Privatisation meant stock ownership increased  New business start ups rose by 110% in 1985* *Source: DTI SME Bureaux Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 18.
    The rise ofindividualism • The fall out on culture over the decade meant…  Income distribution became increasingly polarised  A strong work ethic emerged  Materialism increased Yuppies! Dinky’s! Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 19.
    Individualism: Music genre! Born1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 20.
    The rise ofindividualism Youth culture was becoming more complex • Music became increasingly fragmented  Birth of Punk  Birth of Hip Hop  Birth of Rave  Birth of New romantic • Fashion and fashion labels became more accessible  High street fashion chains  Sports fashion was born Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 21.
    Increasingly tribal behaviour • As influences from other countries became prominent • As previous youth generation trends were revisited • As new trends were forged A new, increasingly fragmented marketing target emerged Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 22.
    In a word… Me, myself and I (to quote a popular hip hop group of the 80’s) Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 23.
    Marketing The birth of green marketing New formats, new tastes Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 24.
    Marketing Levis groundbreaking ad changed relationships with advertising Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 25.
    Marketing Others began to use analogy rather than directs sales messages Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 26.
    What do theylook like now? Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 27.
    What’s an Xerlook like now? • Oldest is 46 (Born in 1965) • Xers are about 22% of the population – the smallest group of all living generations • Higher social grade than population as whole  AB 28% (22% UK norm)  C1 30% (30%)  C2 18% (15%) 22% Single; 72% in relationship  D 18% (17%) 67% have children  E 5% (16%) 73% own their home Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 28.
    Boomers vs. GenerationX When those born in 1954 reached 30 (Baby Boomers) *Source: Economic and Social Research Council Gen X • 12.5% were single and never wed 19.5 % • 10% were cohabiting 20 % • 70% were married 54 % • 81 % of women had a child 69% • 18 % shared the cooking 29% • 21 % shared the cleaning 29% • 11 % shared ironing and laundry 21% • 27 % of women were housewives 19% • 68 % of women had paid work 74% • 70 % ate as a family daily 63% • 23 % of people rate happiness as nine out of 10 or better 26% Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 29.
    Cynicism is apparent... I feel that my generation has had a good impact on the world 1 - Strongly agree 2 3 4 5 - Strongly disagree Boomers 20 28 24 15 10 Generation X 9 20 37 21 12 Generation Y 8 28 30 23 10 Source: Logistix IQ800 August 2007 data Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs
  • 30.
    What’s an Xerlook like now? Single lives predominate Few large families Gender roles are blurred Wealthy Born 1965 – 1981 Currently 30yrs – 46yrs