Gen z-gen-alpha-infographic-cm-mc crindle-single-page
markmccrindle
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Aug 06, 2014
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About This Presentation
The launch of the iPad in 2010 coincided with the beginning of our current generation of children, Generation Alpha – and there are now 2.5 million Gen Alphas being born around the globe each week. They were born into a world of iPhones (in fact the word of the year in 2010 when they were first bo...
The launch of the iPad in 2010 coincided with the beginning of our current generation of children, Generation Alpha – and there are now 2.5 million Gen Alphas being born around the globe each week. They were born into a world of iPhones (in fact the word of the year in 2010 when they were first born was “app”), YouTube (there are now 100 hours of YouTube videos uploaded every minute, and in this environment they are more influenced by the visual and the video than the written and the verbal), and Instagram (where life is photographed and shared instantly and globally).
It’s a world where for the first time in history the average age of first marriage (29.7) is older than the average age of first birth (27.7) across OECD countries.
It’s a world of Screenagers where not only do they multi-screen and multi-task, but where glass has become the new medium for content dissemination and unlike the medium of paper, it is a kinaesthetic, visual, interactive, connective and portable format.
It’s truly the millennial generation, born and shaped fully in the 21st century, and the first generation that in record numbers will see in the 22nd century as well.
And that’s why we’ve called them Generation Alpha. And so, after Generations X, Y and Z, it’s not a return to the beginning but the start of a whole new nomenclature for an entirely new generation, in this new millennium.
See our latest infographic on Gen Z and Gen Alpha below. To find out more about these Generations, order your copy of Mark McCrindle's newly updated book, the ABC of XYZ.
9
%
M F
Favourite takeaway food
Pizza / PastaChips / friesHamburgers
1 2 3
21%
16%
10%
1 2 3 1 2 3
9
6
%
o
f
G
e
n
Z
househo
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MOBILITY
IN A LIFETIME*
JOBSCareersHomes
17515
1 2 3 4 5
Charlotte Olivia Ava Emily Mia
Oliver
William
Jack
Noah
Jackson
TOP NAMES
OECD
CHILDHOOD TEENAGER ADULTHOOD
CHILDHOOD TEENAGER ADULTHOODTWEEN YOUNG ADULT KIPPERS CAREER-CHANGER DOWNAGER
20
th
CENTURY
TO DAY
REDEFINED LIFESTAGES
WORKFORCE of 2025
BB 13% X 29% Y 31% Z 27%
slanguage
Cray cray
Defs
FOMO
YOLO
Global generation
2,000,000,000
2 BILLION GEN Zs
COUNTRIES WITH LARGEST NUMBER1 2 3
EFFECTIVE ENGAGEMENT
Visual Try & see Facilitator Flexibility Collaborating Learner centric Open book world
Verbal
Sit & listen
Teacher
Job security
Commanding
Curriculum centred
Closed book exams
1996 1997 1998 1999 20002001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20102011 2012 2013 2014
Google.com domain
registered
Portable MP3 players
USB flash drives
Nokia 3310
Wikipedia
MySpace
YouTube
Facebook opens
to the public
Twitter
Dropbox
iPhone
Whatsapp
iPad
Instagram
Facebook: 1 billion
active users
Google glass
1,000,000,000
Keep Calm
& Carry On
Double
Rainbow
Planking
Gangnam
Style
Harlem
Shake
Twe e tApp CloudHashtagSelfie
Meme of the year
Word of the year
D
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G
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A
TORS • THE ZEDS • DO T C OM
K
ID
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A T I O N CONNECTED • iGEN
•
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GEN
ZED
EST. 1995 α
GEN
ALPHA
EST. 2010
G
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GEN • multi-moda l s
U PAGERS • Generatio
n
g
l
a
s
s
Gen Alphas born
globally each week
2,500,000
α
Total Fertility
Rate: 1.7
Age of first
marriage: 29.7
Age of first
birth: 27.7
GEN Y
PARENTS
Life expectancy:
^
M 77.3 F 82.8