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Generation Ageless

How Baby Boomers Are Changing the Way We Live Today…And They're Just Getting Started

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Generation Ageless—an authoritative and eye-opening look at the past, present, and future of Baby Boomers

Think Baby Boomers are all alike? Think again. This dynamic generation is nearing the traditional age of retirement, but is in no mood to slow down. Learn how to market, sell to, do business with, or just understand this remarkable generation, from Yankelovich, Inc., the organization that knows them better than anyone else.

Yankelovich actually coined the term "Baby Boomer" back in the late 1960s, when they first started collecting data on this influential generation. Now, more than thirty years later, they have the most complete information on Boomers ever assembled. And they have put it all together in this groundbreaking look at America's largest and most powerful generation.

In Generation Ageless, Yankelovich president J. Walker Smith, Ph.D., and senior partner Ann Clurman, Boomers themselves, dig deep into what makes this generation tick. With fresh, original data and a wide-ranging look at everything about Boomers, they dissect Boomers into six major segments—Straight Arrows, Due Diligents, Maximizers, Sideliners, Diss/Contenteds, and Re-Activists—to provide new insights into the world's most talked-about generation. The results show key imperatives invaluable to anyone selling a product, service, or idea to this 78-million strong group.

Boomers are the dominant generation in America. Their values and aspirations set the tone for everyone. Advances in medicine and health mean that this youth-obsessed generation is now focused on an everlasting prime of life. They are literally middle age–less: holding onto their position at the top of the pyramid for as long as possible, and not fading away to their golden years. Today's fifty- and sixty-year-old Boomers are not eagerly anticipating lives of disengaged retirement. Instead, middle age–less Boomers expect another twenty or thirty years of impact and influence—albeit in a variety of ways reflective of a surfeit of agendas and ambitions they have yet to fulfill.

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    • Library Journal

      September 15, 2007
      Its been said that yesterdays 50 is todays 40, and it appears to be true: no one seems quite as old as they used to be. This book helps explain why this is true and what smart entrepreneurs and business leaders will need to take into consideration as they plan for the future, drawing on research performed by Yankelovich Partners Inc., where both authors work. The firm has studied consumer values and lifestyles since 1958 and coined the term "baby boomers" to represent the 78 million people born between 1946 and 1964. Smith and Clurman explain that the overarching values and priorities of the boomers are to remain youthful and play a vital role in society throughout their lives; they divide boomers into six major segmentsstraight arrows, due diligents, maximizers, sideliners, discontenteds, and re-activistsand explain that boomers will continue to move markets and spark change as they refashion retirement and redefine what it means to get older. Highly recommended for all libraries.Wendy Wendt, MarshallLyon Cty. Lib., MN

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 1, 2007
      The authors, experts in social trends as they affect business, describe our 78 million baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1964) and their impact on society. Boomers want to be ageless, not old people, reinventing everything they encounter and seeking to change the world for the better with more time, money, and fewer distractions, whichallow them to do whatever they want. People within a generation have differences and change over time with maturity. However, they share common experiences during formative years, and for boomers these were economic prosperity and the spirit of self-expression as they came of age between the mid-1950s and the late 1970s with an emphasis on self, less-structured lifestyles, and an enriching personal environment. Smith and Clurman contend that boomers will stay involved and continue to profoundly affect social values, financial issues, family, home styles, leisure, work, and retirement. This is an excellent, thought-provoking book that will appeal to a wide range of library patrons.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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