Recently, I read an interesting column written by Emily Anatole that addresses how the Millennial generation is reshaping the concept of “news” and how it is consumed.
Anatole notes that Millennials are criticized for not being news consumers, but she argues against this point.
In her view, the younger generation is simply getting their news in a different way. She writes: “Milleninials’ approach to consumer news reflects how they differ … they perceive the ‘power of the pack’ – or Facebook updates, tweets and trending topics as we know them – as more valuable than the fact-checked, overly polished POV of one reporter.”
Anatole’s company, research firm Youth Pulse, Inc. (YPulse), conducted a survey in October 2012 of ~1,800 people aged 14-34, which found that television remains the top way in which this age group gets the news, with more than 70% reporting that they turn to TV to stay informed.
However, two-thirds of the respondents also reported that they get their news from Facebook, while approximately one-third get news from Twitter.
If these stats seem a bit unusual for those of us in the over-40 or -50 set, consider this: Today’s 17-year-old was barely twelve when the iPhone first came out.
So an environment in which comments, updates and opinions aren’t part of the “standard media mix” isn’t just a quaint memory; for Millennials, it never existed!
For the younger generation, becoming part-and parcel of “journalism” in its broadest sense is an integral part of the equation. Uploading or sharing videos, tweeting a comment, updating a social status … it’s all part of a “co-created experience” where the lines are blurred between the media industry and consumers of the news.
Impatience has always been a trait of the young — as far back as the Children’s Crusade or even before. So it shouldn’t come as much surprise that Millennials would tend to go for “immediacy” over “credibility.”
Given the choice of learning something “first” — even if the details or veracity of the story are sketchy — versus waiting around for a well-curated 5:00 pm news broadcast … well, it’s not even a fair fight anymore.
And here’s another important point to consider: Whereas we older generation-types were trained to seek out news by buying the daily paper or tuning in to a radio or TV broadcast, today’s younger generation can afford to be less perspicacious. The news comes to them without barely lifting a finger because of friends and others in their social sphere sharing stories, leaving comments, and tweeting.
Some believe it’s yet another “e-volution” that’s turning out to be more “re-volutionary” than we could have imagined.
What’s your take?