麻豆传媒 partnered with Cvent to deliver a mid-April webinar that explored fresh data on what Gen Z looks for and expects from events, including incentive travel rewards.
With Gen Z predicted to make up in OECD countries by 2025, it鈥檚 critical for incentive professionals to understand what this generation expects from their incentive travel programs 鈥 from the moment the qualification period begins, up through what Gen Z earners expect to experience onsite.
Greater generational emphasis on work-life balance
Cvent presenters Carisa Bartelt and Denise Sutter began their session by stressing the value Gen Z (defined by the speakers as anyone born from 1996-97 on) places on work-life balance.
This is a generation that does not have the same mentality as past generations when it comes to working overtime or banking PTO, both women explained. This is prompting employers to get creative with how they structure workplaces, leaning on benefits like a four-day work week or the ability to work from anywhere to attract young talent to their teams.
For companies using incentive travel to motivate Gen Z professionals, it makes sense to tout the benefits of an incentive trip (time off to relax, that rewards employees for the time they spent in the office) but also means new pressures to get creative with qualifying criteria.
If this is a generation that is more reluctant to put in extra hours purely to meet highly ambitious goals, qualification schema and models used with generations past may not motivate this cohort if they don鈥檛 understand or inherently value trying to meet an overly high bar.
Sincere, authentic touches are a must
Carisa and Denise highlighted during the webinar how Gen Z merge individual values into their professional identities, citing a study that found 44 percent of Gen Z employees have rejected an assignment due to ethical concerns.
This is a generation that sees themselves as more accepting and open-minded, the speakers said. They鈥檝e been surrounded by loud, active social movements for most of their lives, and feel an innate responsibility to 鈥渄o something.鈥
These are behaviors strategic incentive travel professionals will find ways to reward and motivate, and is also a preference planners can bake into the onsite program design. Adding CSR or volunteer opportunities are great ways to channel Gen Z鈥檚 passion to make a difference.
Flexibility throughout
A final theme permeating the webinar discussion was the need for flexibility when marketing, communicating, and working with Gen Z.
Whether it鈥檚 adapting how you reach out 鈥 like swapping text messages or DMs for 鈥渙ld-fashioned鈥 phone calls 鈥 or appreciating the 鈥渟ide hustle鈥 nature Gen Z often brings to their work, this is another important generational trait to keep in mind.
For incentive organizers, Carisa and Denise said, this Gen Z-driven expectation for flexibility means meeting participants where they鈥檙e at when marketing your incentive program (with a pro tip to bring Gen Z team members into the content creation process and let them act as natural influencers or spokespeople to amplify your message further); finding ways to reward behaviors that promote, or at least allow for, flexible working arrangements; and giving plenty of free time on programs so Gen Z winners can customize itineraries to deliver experiences that truly suit them and what they want.
麻豆传媒 members can watch the full webinar replay via 麻豆传媒鈥檚 .