Schukman: Authenticity is the ultimate currency for millennials
July 8, 2015 | Josh Schukman
The facts are in.
Millennials prefer cause based products, are willing to pay more for them, and demonstrate strong brand loyalty to companies who weave social good into their stories.
On the surface, these stats should be enough for any company to dive head first into branding themselves as social entrepreneurs. But, cause-based marketing is rarely successful when done exclusively for financial benefits. That’s because millennials use a new type of currency, and if you hope to win them (and their $200 billion in annual buying power) over, you need to know what that currency is.
That currency is authenticity. If you build up this currency, you’ll reap the rewards of social entrepreneurship. Try to fake it and your brand will fail to win over millennials in the long run.
To explore this point, let’s take a trip to Jamaica, where my fiancé and I recently traveled for her cause-driven company, Hostel KC.
We first travelled to Harmons, Jamaica, to visit the Harmony House, which launched 30 years ago in the wake of one of Jamaica’s most devastating earthquakes. Lloyd the Harmony House’s director and a Kansas City native, said his group’s mission is to empower Jamaicans by creating sustainable entrepreneurship opportunities. It’s quite a lofty goal considering most homes in Harmons lack running water and electricity.
Lloyd and team have generated sustainable opportunities for countless families in Harmons. For example, they run a thrift store, roast and sell coffee beans, build homes in Harmons, and export beautiful woodcrafts to the U.S. The most touching part of Harmony House, however, is the way it is authentically connected to the community. I was personally moved to tears watching Lloyd walk the grounds paying his local employees for their work. For Lloyd, this was clearly not just business — this was his purpose.
Our next stop brought us to Kingston. We arrived early in the day to meet with Jamaica Volunteer Programs (JVP). JVP brings service groups from the U.S. to volunteer in Jamaica. When groups arrive, they stay in JVP’s mansion overlooking Kingston, and step out for a few hours each day to “serve” such organizations as the Salvation Army.
I was immediately struck by JVP’s lack of authenticity. At Harmony, Lloyd’s motivation was crystal clear: He had been personally touched by the people of Harmons so he built a business aimed at changing their future. As the founder of JVP explained her organization’s mission, I simply could not figure out what her authentic motivation was.
Instead, she spouted out stats like: rich college students pay a premium to pad their resume with service trips, corporate bigwigs pay big bucks to have catered service opportunities, and this all adds up to a great business opportunity for JVP. It was clear JVP didn’t understand the power of authenticity.
I don’t believe there is anything fundamentally wrong with what JVP is doing. Businesses should capitalize on lucrative opportunities; however, I’m critical of the way JVP markets their work. Millennials have too many tools at their disposal to spot companies who lack authenticity, and I believe JVP will feel the repercussions of this in the long run.
Thus, be sure to highlight an authentic and clearly-defined motivation for your cause-based marketing or miss out on the opportunity to build lifelong brand loyalty from the most socially-conscious generation to ever walk the earth.
Josh is the founder of Social Change Nation, whose mission and passion is to provide startup social entrepreneurs with the best possible resources and tools for growing their ventures. He hosts a podcast featuring interviews with the world’s leading change agents and creates online content to help startups make a dollar AND a difference.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
TrueAccord exceeds growth projections, boosting hiring at its Lenexa second headquarters
What began as 12 new employees in an empty office space has now become a booming hub of activity with 118 full-time members — and growing — said Sheila Monroe. “We really blew away our growth projections,” said Monroe, general manager of collections for TrueAccord. “We’ll likely sign a lease for some additional office space…
BacklotCars developer balances work, school and helping recover 33,000 pounds of food for the hungry
Behind the scenes of BacklotCars’ historic $425 million exit deal, one of the Kansas City company’s top developers is feeding innovation in his home country, said Josh Parsons. Pablo Ulguin — a full-time senior software developer at BacklotCars who also is completing night school in Uruguay to earn a degree in computer science and learn…
Passion on paper: How decades-old tech helped ink creative ownership for a trendsetting designer
Kevin Garrison stockpiles canisters of ink like he collects cans of limited edition SPAM flavors — feeding a passion for vintage-inspired design that overflows from his Waldo home studio. “Some men get to a certain age and go buy a motorcycle or boats, and I went out and bought a Risograph printer,” the veteran graphic…
New in KC: Why Jackie Nguyen hit the brakes on acting to open a mobile coffee cafe
Editor’s note: New in KC is an ongoing profile series that highlights newly relocated members of the Kansas City startup community, their reasons for a change of scenery, and what they’ve found so far in KC. Click here to read more New in KC profiles. Lifting the curtain on the region’s first Vietnamese coffee traveling cafe, Jackie Nguyen is…
