BUSINESS

Meet Generation We

By Mary Meehan, FastCompany
March 16, 2006 13:41 IST

Driving my 4-year-old daughter home from school one day, it crystallized: Innovating for her generation will have to be faster, more personalized, more hyperconnected, more integrated, and more diverse. She couldn't understand why she couldn't make the radio replay a song at will.

"Where's the remote, mama? Skip the commercials." I lament that she and her classmates won't know the freedom of wandering home from school on their own, discovering all those things you only discover when adults aren't around.

She also won't be screamingly frustrated with computer technology (the way I can be). She won't even know a time when the world wasn't at her fingertips through the Internet.

As marketers and innovators, we don't yet have an effective lens on this youngest generation. Many of us are just now turning our attention to the tween and teen market, but take a younger look.

These kids have an estimated $18 billion in buying power also waiting to be tapped, tossed around in cash, gift cards, allowances, and even credit and debit cards. (Here's a shocker: Turns out that some of those Hilary Duff gift cards and Hello Kitty credit cards, originally designed for teens, are ending up in much younger hands.)

Most of us haven't grasped the size of this opportunity or the growing divide between the youngest and oldest Millennials. After all, Millennials are now giving birth to Millennials.

To get a handle on who these kids are, Iconoculture's calling the 0-10 age group as "Generation We." We see them as tech-native, media-smart, artistically inclined, spiritual, pancultural, and culturally identified. With these kids, diversity is a reality, not a goal. They live in a global village where, in spite of world events, they know safety's built in (think of Amber Alerts, nanny cams, GPS bracelets, and even implanted RFID microchips).