Generation Y is Generation We

An article on CNet.com suggests that children born since 1981 are doing more com­mu­nic­ating than ever before — albeit through dif­ferent channels than their pre­de­cessors. They’re also used to being in control of their media intake. There’s no evidence cited, and I cringe at the jargon, but I can see the point they’re making about children’s rela­tion­ship with technology.

“What we’re talking about is a gen­er­a­tion that has the ability to be in touch with each other imme­di­ately at earlier and earlier ages,” said Nancy Robinson, vice pres­ident and consumer strategist at Iconoculture, a Minneapolis company that tracks consumer trends for consumer giants like Nestle and Sony. “If you asked someone 10 years ago about the neces­sity of a cell phone for a 5-​​year-​​old, they would have laughed and walked away; now you can buy that at Target.”

Think of Generation We kids as a product of Generation Xers–a demo­graphic born roughly between the years of 1961 and 1981 whose influ­ence over pop culture peaked in the ‘90s. Parents of Gen We are not only savvy about media and advert­ising, they’re also com­fort­able with tech­no­logy. They’re taking those skills into par­enting, encour­aging their off­spring to under­stand that with tech­no­logy, the kids can be in control.

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1 comment to Generation Y is Generation We

  • Ivan Cohen

    Generation y is being taking over by media and tech­no­logy. The more new items that come out the more gen y con­tinues to live on.

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