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Tuesday, February 08, 2011

What should we name the next generation?

When we got our new puppy last year, we named her during the car ride home.

But the next day, Marti and I looked at each other and confessed, “We don’t like the puppy’s name.” 

So we changed it to something we liked slightly better. Four hours later, we looked at each other and said, “Meh, still not quite right.”

The puppy went nameless for three days while we scoured books and websites for a name that met our criteria: it had to have one syllable, it couldn’t sound like “sit,” and it had to fit her personality.

Our puppy - now 17 months old - is named “Ru.” Ru is Sansrit for “light.”

Names are helpful. They’re implicit agreements. When I say “Ru,” she faces my direction. When she barks, I face hers.

When we talk about generations, we use names, too. They’re implicit agreements; when I say “Baby Boomers,” you think of a gigantic generation that will be “forever young.” When I say “Generation X,” you think of the Breakfast Club, Kurt Cobain, or flannel shirts and coffee houses.

Generational labels are not perfect, but they are helpful.

In our work, we use the names that Strauss and Howe use in their book Generations:

  • Lost Generation (1883-1900)
  • G.I. Generation (1901-1924)
  • Silent Generation (1925-1942)
  • Boom (a.k.a. Baby Boom) Generation (1943-1960)
  • 13th Generation (a.k.a. Gen X) (1961-1981)
  • Millennial Generation (1982-2000)
  • ????? (2001-)

Can you see the problem here?

Since 2001, we’ve given birth to a new, next generation that - to this point - remains nameless.

Our puppy, Ru, was nameless for thirty-six hours. Our next generation - whose oldest member entered sixth grade this fall - has been nameless for  ten years.

This is driving me bonkers, and I need your help.

Wouldn’t it be cool if we - this community of four readers, plus my staff - picked and popularized the name for America’s next generation?

There’s no pressure; the bar has been set pretty low. Here are some of the contenders that have been published so far:

  • “The Homeland Generation” by Strauss and Howe in this article. Feels a little too “George W.” to me. A little too terrifying. I’m used to hearing the word “security” after “homeland,” as in “the department of homeland security…” I would hate for our next American generation to be so tightly connected to terrorism or security.
  • “Generation Z” by many, many unimaginative people. This label even has its own wikipedia entry here .
  • The “New Silents.” This is Strauss and Howe (again) from their book The Fourth Turning . Their rationale is that every fourth generations’ archtype repeats itself. And since “Silents” were the archtype four generations ago (see list above), “New Silents” could work for the current version.
  • A couple years ago, Harvard Business Review blogger (and past client) Tammy Erickson suggested “Re-Gen.” Again, this feels too related to previous generations. Recycled. Reused.

The next generation deserves its own name that can stand independent from other generations, even while it is in relation to them.

What do you think? What should America’s next generation be called?

 

 

 

Comments

1
By Molly Foley — 02/08/2011

Here are my ideas…
* “Generation 247” (connected 24-7)
* “Generation ADA” (psychologists suggests there will be high rate of Attention Deficit Disorder because their dependency on technology is high and attention span is much lower)
* “Dreamers” - I read somewhere that some people are referring to them as “Dreamer Generation “.

 

2
By Charlie Grantham — 02/08/2011

“Celestial” generation because in their lifetime humans will 1) obtain conclusive proof of Extraterrestrial life and 2) have a permanent residence on a non-Earth object.

 

3
By Vee Jevremovic — 02/10/2011

Transformation Generation - this world is going through some major changes right now - budgets are crashing, technology is booming.

 

4
By Clif McCrady — 04/25/2011

How about Generation MM.

 

5
By Nicia Bottini — 10/12/2011

How about the techo generation?

 

6
By Ambrose — 10/27/2011

Marijuana generation.
Its so popular now a days.

 

7
By David — 03/16/2012

The Anonymous Generation. Due to their time spent in annonymity on the internet while growing up

 

8
By Monica — 04/14/2012

Anything referring to technology or Social Netorking would be a good name. People born after 2001 are the first generation to be archived on Social Networks (My Space / Facebook)

 

9
By Isabelle — 04/14/2012

How can you define that which hasn’t developed? Personally, I believe every generation should define themselves. For instance, as a member of “Generation Y”, we should be re-named as the “Social Networkers”, for obvious reasons. But who knows what will happen in the future? For all we tech-heads know, the next generation may rebel against the now traditional use of technology. Something entirely different can come to define them, like WW3 or something…

 

10
By Joanna — 04/18/2012

I think that this generation is going to pick their own name when the time comes.  I personally like the name Millenials for my generation, also called Generation Y.  For Generation Z, I vote they be called the Digital Generation, or the Digitals.  I could see that catching on.

 

11
By Courtney — 04/23/2012

It will problebly end up as the Facebook generation or the cell phone generation

 

12
By Spot — 05/19/2012

I think the Jetson Generation sums it up.  All of the technological advances and information they now have leaves them to just push buttons and the world is at their fingertips.

 

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Author
Rebecca Ryan
Rebecca Ryan

Date
02/08/2011

Tags
millennials, boomers, generations, the fourth turning, generation x

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