
Understanding Gen Zs in India
Gen Zs are shaping the future of commerce, technology, and the workplace in India—and they’re not here for surface-level hype.
Born between the mid-1990s and early 2010s, they are pragmatic, perceptive, and purpose-driven. For B2B brands—whether in marketing, recruitment, tech, or education—understanding what matters to this cohort is no longer optional.
A recent ET–Snapchat Gen Z Index reveals how they behave, think, and consume. Three key themes emerge: the 3 Rs—Relatability, Realness, and Results.
1. Relatability: Influence Isn’t About Follower Count Anymore
“85% prefer influencers who are real—15% more than those who follow high-profile accounts.”
Flashy numbers don’t guarantee attention. Gen Z values relatability over popularity. They’re drawn to creators who feel like peers—people who share their values and reflect their daily lives, not those on a pedestal.
Relatability extends beyond who delivers the message to how it’s delivered. First-person POV filming makes content feel personal, as if the viewer is inside the story. Netflix’s Adolescence exemplifies this with one-take shots that immerse viewers in the character’s real-time journey.
B2B Takeaway:
Choose ambassadors who look and sound like your audience. Use relatable delivery, grounded messaging, and immersive formats in employer branding, recruitment videos, or product marketing. Relatability is the new currency of attention.
2. Realness: AI Is Great—But Only If It Serves a Purpose
“Gen Z values AI tools that ‘save time’ and reduce mental effort, not just flashy gimmicks.”
Even rice cookers are branded with ‘AI’ now—but that doesn’t impress Gen Z. They’re not anti-technology, but they are skeptical of empty buzzwords.
What they want is functionality. If AI is involved, it must do something useful: automate repetitive tasks, organize content, or enhance productivity. For Gen Zs juggling multiple responsibilities and career pressures, tech must serve a clear, immediate purpose.
B2B Takeaway:
Lead with value, not vocabulary. Explain the problem your AI-powered tool solves, show how much time it saves, and highlight outcomes. Empty “AI-powered” slogans won’t cut it—you need proof of impact.
3. Results: Ambition Over Adventure
“Indian Gen Zs study abroad for better job prospects, not lifestyle experiences.”
While some foreign students prioritize the full overseas experience—hall life, immersion, extracurriculars—many Indian Gen Zs view studying abroad as a means to an end.
What they seek is clear: career advancement, higher employability, and a better financial future. The ET–Snapchat findings reflect a strong preference for practical outcomes over lifestyle perks. Young professionals in India are laser-focused on ROI-driven decisions.
B2B Takeaway:
Focus on results. Highlight success stories, placement data, salary growth, or tangible skill gains. Gen Z isn’t sold by abstract promises—they want a clear path to outcomes.
Final Thoughts: Rethinking What Matters
Gen Z in India isn’t easily swayed by prestige or polish. They expect honesty over hype, utility over vanity, and connection over campaign-speak.
For B2B brands recruiting talent, marketing enterprise tools, or selling to startup founders in their twenties, embrace the 3 Rs:
Relatability – Communicate like a peer, not a brand.
Realness – Show value, not just features.
Results – Lead with outcomes, not intentions.
The brands that win Gen Z won’t be the ones shouting the loudest. They’ll be the ones speaking the most truthfully—and delivering what they promise.
At Vintage Management, we provide consultation services to business owners looking to expand into India. If that’s you, contact us here.
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