We like this mini site at the BBC - gives a good global view about many of the issues we looked at facing young people in society.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16158913
Interesting to see how similar issues manifest themselves in different guises in different countries and how governments and organisations are looking to tackle some of the issues.
Tuesday, 15 April 2014
Wednesday, 29 January 2014
Graffiti removal challenges stereotypes of youth

spotted today a great project in the North West of the UK run by young people for the benefit of the whole community.Another fantastic example of young people challenging stereotypes.
Not only does the project ensure graffiti is removed, it creates great work experience opportunities for those engaged with the Youth Offending Service.
For more details please click on the link below:-
http://www.cheshire-today.co.uk/24221/cheshire-youth-project-recognised
Friday, 24 January 2014
Youth keen to be involved in European politics

For us this is
more evidence that young people do care about their society and want a say in
what happens. It also shows that this willingness to get involved is not just
limited to the UK but is being seen right across Europe.
Thursday, 23 January 2014
Young People are Future-Focused, Which is Good News for Us All
The newspapers are full of it; stories about how savings rates have declined over time, about how young people aren’t buying cars, aren’t buying homes, aren’t putting money into pension schemes. This is worrying stuff. If the millennial generation don’t plan for the future, what will their children do? How will things move forward?
There has always been a tension point between the thrill that living young contains and the instability it dictates. Perhaps that is why ever since young people emerged as a cohort with their own money and agenda, society has focused on the potential for them to destabilise the status quo and has worried accordingly. Even now, numerous studies show that the media depicts an inaccurately negative picture of young people’s behaviour.[1]

In light of this, the fact that our research showed that this generation of young people are future-focused should give cause for relief and incentive for brands to take action to help them forge the kinds of lifestyles they want to lead.
In opposition to the common vision of young people as interested in fame, flightiness and the XFactor, this generation of young person think about the future, worry about the future and plan for it in practical terms.
Fixated on their careers, their education and their finances, getting a good education and finding a job/progressing in their career was something that 60% of 16-24 year olds we surveyed said they spent most of their time thinking about.
Overwhelmingly, their top aspirations were to put down roots by owning a house (42%) and having a solid career (39%) rather than to escape through travel (7%) or realising dreams of fame (2%).
More interestingly still, this generation are under no illusions over how difficult it will be to do so. 46% felt worried about their future and 70% of those surveyed did not see their future incomes exceeding that of their parents. Over half of those surveyed said they were cautious with their money and tried to save where possible.
There is an appetite among this generation to put their money toward long term goals and on the back of that, there is an opportunity for brands to help them do so and by doing so, to secure the next consumer base of the future.
[1] Wells, M., ‘Media Casts Youth in a Constant Bad Light’ The Guardian 12 Oct, 2004 http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2004/oct/12/pressandpublishing.broadcasting [Accessed Again 03/05/2013]
Thursday, 12 September 2013
Challenging the stereotype of Youth on a night out at 3am
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Source - www.metro.co.uk |
For more details please visit the story on the Metro website.
It's great to see positive stories re-enforcing the fact that most younger people are not out to live up to the stereotype of them created by society.
What good actions have you seen young people undertaking in your community?
Friday, 30 August 2013
Our Youth report makes it to the pages of Marketing magazine
Yes it's true, our work is featured in the September edition of Marketing, with a particular focus on the subject of Social Media.
To see a pdf of the article, please click here.
Thursday, 29 August 2013
What do young people actually think about social media?
Q: “How do you think your generation will be defined by other generations
to come?”
A: “Maybe people will say we were more creative, more driven, definitely
more competitive…more willing to create different identities just for social
media... the creation of fake people, probably not genuine people either”
A: “Like you can live your life with Facebook, you can be a completely
different person, you can be whoever you want to be as long as you are on the
internet and you have got a Twitter account and you know how to say the right
things. You have got Facebook and you can make your life look fantastic.”
What do young people actually
think about social media?
Today, they are linked inextricably
to the phenomenon of social media and attaching a virtual component to their
lives is done almost without thought by brands who seek to define them and to
engage them. And why wouldn’t brands do that? When we spoke to over 1,500 young
people this year, 78% of them said they were using social media ‘often’ or ‘all
the time’. It makes sense to attach a digital arm to this generation and it
makes sense for brands trying to connect with them, to reach them via these media
channels.
Or does it?
The thing is, social media has
exploded onto the scene and the uptake of social media by people has happened
so fast that we’re still reeling. Brands have scrambled to climb atop the wave
and push out their message via this new platform using a ‘tick box’ kind of
approach. Reach target number of ‘likes’ on Facebook? Tick. Adapt core
advertising message to 140 character nugget? Tick. Try and “have a
conversation” with consumers online? Tick. Sort of.
The thing is, by using this ‘tick
box’ approach to show that you “get” social media in the most elementary way,
you may be missing the point. Are these ticks actually useful at engaging your
target audience beyond surface value recognition? To determine that, you need
to unpack why young people are using social media and to understand how they
see it fitting into their lives.
Why you ask? Let us tell you.

So, we decided to try to expose
those codes and to unpack what young people actually think and feel about their
social media use. This is where it got interesting.
Our research exposed a sense of
ambiguity among young people over the role they feel social media has to play
in their lives. They were inclined to be disdainful of over-reliance on social
media and of people who showed that over-reliance by sharing too much
personal information online.
They did not like addressing the
extent to which social media impacted their social lives. Even though most of
them are on it all the time and 47% agreed that they use it to stay in touch
with friends, only one in five of them agreed ‘if you don’t use social media,
you’re missing out on socialising’ and 27% strongly disagreed with the
statement.
Similarly, while only 18% agreed
with the statement “I use social media to showcase who I am and what I care
about” 64% of those surveyed felt that other young people share too much
information on social media and 51% felt that other people show a fake version
of themselves online. Virtually nobody felt that they were doing it, but
over half felt that other people were doing it.
Brands that try to mimic the
behaviours young people exhibit online might be missing the mark. Young people
might not like being confronted with those behaviours and it might not make
sense to them, for a brand to try and occupy their social media space. We know
young people use social media, but until we “get” how they think and feel about
this channel, we’re shooting blind trying to reach them through it.
An area for exploration, we think…
Wednesday, 7 August 2013
Understanding the Trend Towards Customisation
When we spoke to over
1,500 young people, two key stories emerged across the board.
The first story these people were telling us was that they don’t feel a connection to big companies or societal institutions. The financial sector, the government, school, universities, media, religious institutions, companies, brands… you name it, most of the young people we spoke with said that could not trust at least one, if not all of them.
The disconnect ran deep; only 30% of them said felt proud of Britain. This story links in with other research; the ONS for example, revealed that in 2012, young people’s belief in British democracy as one of the strongest in the world was lower than all other age groups!
The first story these people were telling us was that they don’t feel a connection to big companies or societal institutions. The financial sector, the government, school, universities, media, religious institutions, companies, brands… you name it, most of the young people we spoke with said that could not trust at least one, if not all of them.
The disconnect ran deep; only 30% of them said felt proud of Britain. This story links in with other research; the ONS for example, revealed that in 2012, young people’s belief in British democracy as one of the strongest in the world was lower than all other age groups!
The second story is a
well-known one. Everyone is talking about it; today’s young people are
increasingly self-reliant, individualistic and willing to take risks to forge
their own destinies. When
we spoke with young people, they confirmed this story with us; 54% believed
that it is ultimately down to you as to whether you succeed in life and 40%
said that to be successful, you have to take risks. Very few of them actively
disagreed with this standpoint and most of them keenly felt a greater need to
distinguish themselves from the crowd in some way or another.
A way in which these two
stories have manifested themselves in their consumer habits is the almost
zeitgeist trend towards customer-customisation of products. Today’s young people want to craft
their own clothing, coffee, shoes, cars and general experiences.
Look at Nike ID shoes, and the popularity of vintage
clothing and vegetable allotments for it; look to the BBC
mobile website; Look to Barclays
LifeSkills campaign and HSBC’s First Direct option for it; Look at Coke putting
people’s names on their bottles , Starbucks
writing names on cups and McDonalds
eschewing their logo on posters for it; the brands with their
ear to the ground are finding new ways to distance themselves from large scale,
corporate behaviour and to make their products ‘personalisable’ for people who
want to get away from big institutions and create their own niche life; while
continuing to use big names.
Understanding the back story to what our young people are feeling about the ‘big issues’ helps contextualise them as a target audience. Don’t forget the big stuff, when looking to the little stuff. If you want to know how to reach them, first, you need to get where they’re coming from.
Understanding the back story to what our young people are feeling about the ‘big issues’ helps contextualise them as a target audience. Don’t forget the big stuff, when looking to the little stuff. If you want to know how to reach them, first, you need to get where they’re coming from.
Substantial Opportunity for Brands to Connect with Young People
When we asked if they knew a brand or company which could
help people like them in an area of their lives they spent most of their time
thinking about, 50% of the young people we spoke to said they couldn’t name
one!
The aspect of their lives that they spent most of their
time focusing on and trying to improve included:
Which of the following are you spending most time thinking about or
spending time trying to succeed at?
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(Some brands they did mention included Nike, Guardian Jobs,
Superdrug, Weight Watchers, Topshop, Timeout, Kayak, Student Finance, The NHS,
YouTube, Thomas Cook, Apple and others. These brands are helping young people
live their lives.)
To connect, brands must understand. Successful brands
have connected with young people by listening to their interests, listening to
what they care about and filling the void left by traditional institutions, be
it by providing sports training like Nike does, equipment for learning new
skills like Apple does or pointers on future careers like Guardian Jobs does.
Our exploration threw up exactly what it is our young
people are looking for today…
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