Zconomy
How Gen Z Will Change the Future of Business—and What to Do About It
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- 209,00 kr
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- 209,00 kr
Utgivarens beskrivning
The most complete and authoritative guide to Gen Z, describing how leaders must adapt their employment, sales and marketing, product, and growth strategies to attract and keep this important new generation of customers, employees and trendsetters.
Gen Z changes everything. Today’s businesses are not built to sell and market the way Gen Z shops and buys, or to recruit and employ Gen Z the way they find and keep jobs. Leaders need answers now as gen Z is the fastest growing generation of employees and the most important group of consumer trendsetters.
The companies that quickly and comprehensively adapt to Gen Z thinking will be the winners for the next twenty years. Those that don’t will be the losers or become extinct. Zconomy is the comprehensive survival guide on how leaders must understand and embrace Generation Z.
Researched and written by Dr. Denise Villa and Jason Dorsey from The Center for Generational Kinetics, the insights in Zconomy are based on their extensive research, they’ve led more than 60 generational studies, and their work with more than 500 companies around the world.
In Zconomy, Dr. Villa and Dorsey answer: Who is Gen Z? What do employers, marketers, and sales leaders need to know? And, most importantly, what should leaders do now?
This is the critical moment for leaders to understand and adapt to Gen Z or become irrelevant. Gen Z is already reshaping the world of business and this change is only going to accelerate. Zconomy is the definitive manual that will prepare any executive, manager, entrepreneur, HR or marketing professional to successfully unlock the powerful potential of this emerging generation at this pivotal time.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A discussion of the buying and working habits of Generation Z arrives in this puzzlingly obvious guide from Dorsey and Villa, respectively president and CEO of the Center for Generational Kinetics. They describe having conducted, for the past four years, an annual "State of Gen Z" study, leading to the "key conclusion" that "the ways in which leaders typically recruited, managed, and marketed to older generations will not work with Gen Z." It's genuinely difficult to imagine which businesspeople might still need to hear this, and the effect is that this guide comes across like a missive from 10 years ago. The authors delve into how Gen Zers spend money (mostly online and largely on-demand), how to win their brand loyalty (they cite Nike's ad with Colin Kaepernick as a success story), and their strong work ethic and independent attitude as employees. The familiar observations, such as of young peoples' affinity for their phones, fall flat, and the authors' fascinated tone strikes a slightly creepy note, as if they're marveling at animals in zoos rather than analyzing the buying habits of human beings. The resulting primer is outdated and safe to skip.