For years, we marketers have taken for granted that we know kids today. We have known that the youth of this country is comprised of Millennials. We’ve known that kids like their parents and have a close relationship with them. In fact, their parents are friends, even confidants. We’ve known they are smart and brought test and achievement scores up. We’ve known school is cool and being a “good” kid is even cooler. We’ve known they have “dates” to play with their friends and they get a trophy just for being on the soccer team. We’ve known they are optimistic, confident and happy. We’ve known they weren’t rebellious in the way their older siblings, Generation X, were. In short, we’ve known they are more “High School Musical” than “The Breakfast Club.” But, what about now? Has anything changed? The answer is yes. The key change, one that marketers often overlook, is that Millennials just aren’t kids anymore. In fact, according to our Millennial Life Stage Segmentation, only one in ten Millennials (11% of Millennials or approximately 10 million) isn’t an official adult (i.e., is under the age of 18). Approximately 13 million, or 15%, are college students and about 12 million, or 14%, are in flux – not working or married, but don’t have kids. The majority of Millennials are “grown-ups” in the way society tends to define them—they are working (36% or 31 million) or parents (24% or 21 million). Millennials are no longer the youth population in this country, which means there’s a new generation of youth for marketers to know. Presenting the Pluralist Generation. The oldest Plural is 14, turning 15 in 2012. The youngest is a newborn. Their name has meaning, just as all generational names do. It reflects the lack of majority in today’s American society and the increased fragmentation sure to come. This is felt in nearly all facets of life—families, media, communication, religion, politics and especially demographics. Plurals are America’s last generation to have a Caucasian majority, and based on immigration projections, they will also be America’s first generation to be pluralistic, or have no majority race. Their own ethnic composition is a catalyst for the overall ethnic transition in our country. In 2019, less than 50% of live births in this country will Caucasian. In 2042, just 30 years from now, our entire population will be less than 50% Caucasian. Plurals are being raised in the environment of change and, in their 30s and early 40s, they will be the ones managing the transition into a truly pluralistic society. Add in the following, and there is a remarkably different environment of upbringing for this generation of youth than the one Millennials experienced: