Born Zillennial/Facebook
ByAndrew Adam Newman
Source: www.retailbrew.com, July 2023


Older Gen Zs and younger millennials who feel mislabeled have claimed a new moniker as their own, and marketers are taking note of their wads of disposable income.

It can be lonely on the cusp.

If you’re an older Gen Z, for example, maybe there’s a pair of skinny jeans that still look so cute on you, or you still part your hair on the side rather than the middle, despite your fellow Zoomers berating millennials for these supposed aesthetic aberrations.

So it should come as no surprise that some older Gen Zs and younger millennials who don’t feel at home in either group have coalesced under a new banner: zillennials. (Portmanteaus to the rescue!)

Millennials are generally defined as being born between 1981 and 1996 and Gen Z between 1997 and 2012. Zillennials tend to identify as roughly the middle of that timeline. Deborah Carr, a sociology professor at Boston University, told CNN they were born from roughly 1992 to 2002, making them about 22 to 32 today, though there is no academic consensus about the timeline.

Born Zillennial, a private Facebook group that began in 2020, has more than 209,000 members. You might be a zillennial, the group’s about page suggests, if you remember “accidentally clicking the Internet on your flip phone and trying to close it before it starts charging you for surfing the web,” if you prized “the bright orange rugrats VCR tape,” or if you “nearly broke your ankles with a Razer scooter.”

In 2020, the year he graduated from college, the group’s founder, Matt Duffy, said in an introductory video that he launched the group because he “felt lost between two rigidly defined generations.” Thanks to the popularity of the group, Duffy continued, “I feel seen because you guys feel seen right now.”

Now brands increasingly are seeing zillennials, too, and assessing what makes them tick…and what makes them shop.

Middle ages: “Not quite the Myspace generation, but not the TikTok generation either, zillennials spent their tween and teen years in the 2010s, when social media was on the rise but not yet in its heyday,” USA Today wrote in May.