Gen Alpha Poised To Reshape Retail

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Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader? was a 2007 quiz show that pitted an adult contestant against a panel of 10- and 11-year-olds with questions a grownup should have learned the answers to in elementary school. Out of the first 3,000 participants, only three adults managed to outwit the kids and win the million-dollar grand prize.

Branding experts have lately been posing an analogous question to their clients about Generation Alpha, roughly defined as anyone under the age of 15. As these 50 million or so American youngsters (about 2 billion globally) begin to make their mark on the culture, Is your marketing department at least as savvy as an 8th grader?

The most likely answer so far: probably not.

In much the same way that Gen Z was a unique marketing puzzle as the first cohort weaned on the Internet, Gen Alpha is the first to be shaped by artificial intelligence, social media, and frictionless e-commerce. Brands that fail to show up on gaming platforms and streaming services risk becoming invisible.

Those who haven’t been paying attention may be surprised to learn that Alphas are already a force in the consumer economy. A report last year by DKC, a public relations shop, estimated it at about $100 billion in annual direct spending. More recently, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) pegged the role in annual family spend at $500 billion.

For a deep dive report published in March, PwC surveyed more than a thousand seven- to 14-year-olds, concluding that, “Kids in this generation have become some of the most influential consumers in their households.” More than any other single driver of that influence, the explosive growth of AI stands out.

According to DKC, “For Gen Alpha, window shopping occurs on a browser,” and half of parents “pay more attention to ChatGPT and other AI tools due to the influence of their Alpha child.” Technology is evolving so rapidly that children know more about it than their parents, who at least want to know what their kids are up to and want to keep up with the times.

Another major factor when it comes to actual spending influence is the shared online shopping cart. According to PwC’s report, about half of 7- to 14-year-olds have added items to shared carts.

In an essay recently published on industry news site CustomerExperienceDive.com, PwC executive Ali Furman explained, “In some cases, kids add a product to the shared family cart before a parent even sees it … using a shared account or saved payment method. Generation Alpha,” she adds, “was born with the buy button at their fingertips.”

It may be years before the full impact of Gen Alpha’s behavior is fully understood and decoded. In the meantime, consumer-facing companies face the daunting task of figuring out the new shape of product discovery and e-commerce. Experts seem to agree that linear is dead.

Furman warns that Alphas, “are not just adapting to change. They are questioning it … open to redefining systems like work and education. They’re not just accepting the way things were.”

Companies need systemic approaches to stay in touch with this very dynamic environment so as to understand and interpret the demand signals for their products and services or risk obsolescence.

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