For three decades, marketing has sorted people by when they were born. The research in this book says that assumption is wrong.
When asked what drives their daily purchasing behavior more, their generation or their current life situation, 66% of consumers choose life situation. Only 9% choose generation. Nearly four in five would trust advice from someone in the same life stage over someone in the same age group. Nearly nine in ten say their shopping is defined more by where they are in life than when they were born.
These findings come from original primary research across all four major generational cohorts. And they raise an uncomfortable question for an industry that has built campaigns, agency practices, and entire research departments around generational segmentation:
What if birth year was never the right variable?
In Not Your Generation, marketing consultant, researcher, and professor Caleb Roche makes the case that life stage, whether someone just bought a home, became a parent, changed careers, or retired, is a far more accurate predictor of purchasing behavior than the generational labels the industry has relied on since the 1990s. Drawing on a 500-respondent survey and case studies from Apple, Pepsi, Glossier, Patagonia, and Bud Light, the book offers a research-backed argument and a practical replacement framework for marketers who have quietly sensed that something about generational targeting wasn't working.
Inside this book, you'll learn: