Millennials Don’t ‘Do’ Direct Response (and Other Lies)

Millennials Don’t ‘Do’ Direct Response (and Other Lies)

Wow! According to recent population data, Millennials have officially overtaken Baby Boomers as the largest living generation in North America.

Speaking as a direct marketer, this is great news.

But based on all the gibberish written about the difficulties of marketing to Millennials, it’s clear that most marketers don’t share my enthusiasm. Everywhere you turn, there are articles describing this cohort as being elusive, invisible, and reluctant anti-consumers.

I’ve read how they crave ‘experiences’ instead of ‘things’; that they leapfrog social media platforms without rhyme, reason or loyalty, and – my personal favorite – that they are immune to conventional advertising mediums.

I even heard one well-respected marketing professional (who shall remain anonymous) proclaim,“Millennials don’t do direct response!”

Nonsense. And here’s 3 reasons why:

1. Millennials are people, too

Although millennials certainly have their own generational eccentricities, those differences don’t override the fact that they also living, breathing human beings. They too have the same aspirations and fears that all people harbor, from Bombay to Burbank.

Just like you and me, they want to make their lives easier (convenience); they want to be accepted and appreciated by others (vanity); they want to make or save money (security/greed); and they want to avoid real or perceived dangers (fear).

Such emotional needs make them a cohort that can be marketed to very effectively — by using the same emotionally-focused direct response techniques that have worked (and continue to work) so well with the Gen Xers, Gen Yers and Baby Boomers who came before them.

2. Digital: The great equalizer

If Millennials don’t ‘do’ direct response, they most certainly respond to it.

In fact, our experience is that marketing to Millennials through direct response is actually easier than marketing to almost any other group.

The one main thing that sets Millennials apart from previous generations — the fact that they are the first generation to grow up in the digital age — actually makes them easier to find, target and track from a direct response POV.

These are consumers who navigate the digital domain with abandon and agility. The internet is, after all, the greatest direct marketing medium imaginable.

As a case in point, Facebook recently introduced a slew of adaptations that make it easier, cheaper and more effective for direct marketers to use their platform.

And please, don’t tell me that millennials have abandoned Facebook, or that they move between social media platforms so often and with such unpredictability that they are impossible to target.

A recent survey by the American Press Institute found that an astounding 88% of millennials surveyed use Facebook to gather news and information. Of course, they also use Pinterest (36%), Twitter (33%), Reddit (23%), and Tumblr (21%), but so what?  Virtually all the social media platform millennials use are becoming easier and easier to leverage as direct marketing vehicles.

3. The more things change, the more they stay the same

Perhaps most shocking to those who claim that Millennials are somehow inherently different from consumers that came before is that they also watch TV and are receptive to that most maligned of all direct marketing mediums: DRTV.

A recent Neilsen report titled, Q4 2015 Total Audience Report, looked at the TV viewing habits of 3 Millennial sub-groups. The survey found that adult Millennials living in someone else’s home watch 2.32 hours of live TV per day. Millennials living on their own but with no children watch 2.06 hours of live TV per day. Those starting a family watch the most live TV, at over 3 hours a day.

While these numbers indicate that Millennials are watching less TV than their parents, the data clearly shows that as they get older, buy homes, start families and enter their prime earning (and spending) years, their TV watching increases dramatically, closing the gap on previous generations.

Clearly, those companies who have abandoned TV under the assumption that Millennials are only online are the ones missing out.

It’s time to end the inane chatter about the difficulty reaching and selling to Millennials and embrace the power of direct response. Tap into digital and re-focus your DRTV marketing tactics to reach this coveted demographic.

Yes, they move around. Yes, they are cynical. And yes, you have to ‘sell’ to them.

So what? The direct marketing tools you need are right at your fingertips.

And by the way, isn’t that our job?

Posted by Robert Ian French, President | Read on the

Northern Lights Direct is a brand-based direct response advertising agency specializing in digital and DRTV marketing for clients across North America.

Contact us to discover how we can help you grow your business today. 

Stephan Brüninghoff

Vertriebs- und Marketingspezialist bei selbstständig

8y

That's it exactly. Those who start discussions with how difficult it is didn't really understand this generation. Is it drastic to then say we have to change the campaign managers?

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Nadia Bojkova

Business Development Manager at Canada Post / Postes Canada

8y

The more things change, the more they stay the same!!!

Marc McVey

Vice President of Sales & Business Development at Oliso Inc.

8y

Very thoughtful. One data set that is not clear is how much tv watching is done by dvr, giving the viewer the option of by-passing commercials. This means that as marketers, you need to consider making visuals that are compelling enough to a viewer that is zapping by the commercials at 2x or3x want to stop, back up and see your product. The other point is that if you are trying to market true rubbish products with poor support or ripoff continuity programs, the Millennials have better tools to research you and avoid your products in the first place.

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Errol Davis

Senior Consultant, Customer Engagement, Response & Contact Center Performance Review & Enhancement Consulting

8y

I totally concur with your article, Ian. And, from a pure response perspective, when you add Millennial friendly" response options that are also mobile friendly (like live chat, for example) you have all the benefits of the higher conversion and revenue-per-average contact that a well trained contact center agent brings to a program.

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